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Amtrak Cascades

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Amtrak Cascades consist in Portland, Oregon with NPCU at head of train
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Amtrak Cascades consist in Portland, Oregon with NPCU at head of train

Tilting Cascades passenger cars made by Talgo
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Tilting Cascades passenger cars made by Talgo

The Amtrak Cascades is a passenger train route operated by Amtrak in partnership with the states of Washington and Oregon in the Pacific Northwest of the United States and Canada. The corridor runs 156 miles (251 km) from Vancouver, British Columbia south to Seattle, Washington, continuing 310 miles (499 km) south via Portland, Oregon to Eugene, Oregon. Track capacity in British Columbia does not yet allow for through travel between the two ends, but Thruway Motorcoach connections in Seattle allow for trips between Vancouver, BC and Eugene.

Cascades service on the Seattle-Portland route began in 1993. Total Amtrak Cascades ridership for 2005 was 636,892.[link]

Equipment

The Amtrak Cascades is a unique train that is painted in a special scheme. The train is operated in a push-pull configuration with an EMD F59PHI at one end, and a de-motored EMD F40PH locomotive called a Non-Powered Control Unit (NPCU), or Cab Control & Baggage Car (CCB), nicknamed "Cabbages" on the other end. The NPCU/CCB contains a cement weight, possibly to meet FRA weight requirements.

The passenger cars themselves are produced by Talgo, the only cars by that company in operation in the United States. These cars are designed to passively tilt into curves, allowing the train to pass through them at higher speeds. The Talgo trainset is articulated – each passenger car in the Talgo set actually shares a single axle with the next, such that they cannot be decoupled without lifting one car onto a support. This design can also reduce jackknifing in a derailment.

Funding

Funding for the route is provided separately by the states of Oregon and Washington, with Union Station in Portland serving as the dividing point between the two. As of July 1st 2006, Washington State will fund four daily round trips between Seattle and Portland. Washington State also funds two daily round trips between Seattle and Bellingham, with one of them extending north to Vancouver, BC. Oregon funds two daily round trips between Eugene and Portland. The five trainsets are organized into semi-regular operating cycles, but no particular train always has one route.

Local partnerships

As a result of Cascades service being jointly funded by the Washington and Oregon departments of transportation, public transit agencies and local municipalities can offer a variety of discounts. Please note that companion ticket coupons do expire, have blackout dates, and must usually be presented at a staffed station to purchase a ticket. The Cascades service also benefits from Sound Transit's track upgrades for Sounder service, notably the upcoming Point Defiance Bypass project.

Future plans

The [WSDOT Rail Office] plans for eventual service of 13 daily round trips between Seattle and Portland and 4-6 round trips between Seattle and Bellingham, with four of those extending to Vancouver, BC. Due to a vote by the Washington State Legislature in 2005, the fourth round trip between Seattle and Portland is scheduled to begin operating on July 1st, 2006.

These reductions in travel times are also planned:

In order to increase train speeds and frequency to meet these goals, a number of incremental track improvement projects must be completed. Gates and signals must be improved, some grade crossings must be separated, some track must be replaced or upgraded and station capacities must be increased. In order to extend the second daily Seattle to Bellingham round trip to Vancouver, BNSF must make track improvements north of the US-Canadian border, to which the government of British Columbia has been asked to contribute financially.

Vancouver to Seattle projects

[
  • Adds a siding to allow freight trains to move off the mainline for Customs inspections; increases reliability for Vancouver to Seattle trains.
  • Construction begins in Fall 2007 with expected completion in Summer 2009.
[
[
[
  • Adds a siding to allow southbound trains from Bellingham to pass northbound trains from Seattle; allows for earlier southbound departure.
  • Construction began in 2005 with expected completion in 2007.
[
  • Lengthens and repairs siding to ensure freight trains are accommodated; increases reliability for Vancouver and Bellingham to Seattle trains.
  • Construction begins in 2007 with expected completion in 2009.
[
[

Seattle to Portland projects

[

  • Partnership with Sound Transit to bypass BNSF Railway Puget Sound shore track for an alignment between Tacoma at the north end and the Nisqually River at the south.
  • Increases train speeds in this corridor with a straighter track alignment.
  • Eliminates the need for Cascades trains to use the single-track Nelson Bennett Tunnel, although Coast Starlight trains will likely continue to use the coastal alignment due to the steep grade from Tacoma to Lakewood.
  • First phase decreases travel time through the corridor by 6 minutes; second phase decreases travel time by at least another 5 minutes.
  • Sound Transit [construction] was originally scheduled to be complete in late 2007 or early 2008, but was delayed: The F59PHI locomotives used by Sounder Commuter Rail cannot climb the steep grade south of Tacoma in wet weather, so a different design to level the incline must be used. Funding for WSDOT's portion of the project has been moved forward by four years to 2007 so their construction may coincide with Sound Transit's. As a result, WSDOT construction is scheduled to begin in 2007 with an anticipated completion date in 2009.
[
[
High-speed crossovers
These projects allow trains to switch mainlines at higher speed, reducing time lost when passing another train.
Grade separations
These projects remove a crossing by creating either a rail or road bridge, allowing for higher train speeds and the best possible crossing safety.

Station stops

Northbound trains are even-numbered; southbound trains are odd.

All station stops are made.

British Columbia
Washington
  • Bellingham
  • Mount Vernon
  • Everett
  • Edmonds
  • Seattle
  • Tukwila
  • Tacoma
  • Olympia-Lacey
  • Centralia
  • Kelso-Longview
  • Vancouver
  • Oregon
  • Portland
  • Oregon City
  • Salem
  • Albany
  • Eugene
  • {| class="toccolours" border="1" cellpadding="4" style="margin: 0 auto; border-collapse: collapse; text-align: center;" width=50% |- style="background:#F0F0F0;" ! Amtrak routes |- style="text-align: center;" |Northwest

    Amtrak Cascades - Coast Starlight - Empire Builder

    References

    External links

     


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