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Orange Line (MBTA)

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Inbound Train at North Station
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Inbound Train at North Station

Outbound Train at North Station
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Outbound Train at North Station

The old Main Line Elevated and related lines
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The old Main Line Elevated and related lines

The Orange Line is one of the four subway lines of the MBTA. It extends from Forest Hills in Jamaica Plain, Boston in the south to Oak Grove in Malden, Massachusetts in the north. It meets the Red Line at Downtown Crossing, the Blue Line at State, and the Green Line at Haymarket and North Station. It connects with Amtrak and Commuter Rail service at Back Bay and North Station, and just the commuter rail at Ruggles station in Roxbury.

Originally known as the Main Line of the Boston Elevated Railway and later the Forest Hills-Everett Elevated Line, the current name is derived from Orange Street, an old name for the section of Washington Street immediately south of downtown under which the Washington Street Tunnel, forming the center of the line, still runs. (Cars throughout the Boston rapid transit network were formerly painted orange or with orange stripes by MBTA predecessors, and restored streetcars on the Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line wear their historical orange livery, but this is largely coincidental.) In 1975, the Charlestown Elevated to Everett was shut down and replaced with a rerouting to Malden. In April 1987, the Washington Street Elevated south of the Essex (Chinatown) station was closed; service along part of the line was ultimately replaced in 2002 with the Silver Line. The line was rerouted into a modern subway running along the Amtrak right-of-way (the Northeast Corridor) from Back Bay to Forest Hills.

During the conceptual stages of the modern Orange Line in the 1970s, extensions to the beltway Route 128 were proposed, with termini at Reading in the north and Dedham in the south.

The old Orange Line El was the train seen in the opening sequence of the television program St. Elsewhere.

Stations

Station listing

Station Time to Downtown Crossing Opened Transfers and notes
Accessible.png Oak Grove March 20, 1977
Accessible.png Malden Center December 27, 1975 Commuter Rail Haverhill/Reading Line
Accessible.png Wellington September 6, 1975
Accessible.png Sullivan Square April 7, 1975
Accessible.png Community College April 7, 1975
Accessible.png North Station April 7, 1975 Green Line and Commuter Rail north side lines
Accessible.png Haymarket November 30, 1908 Green Line
originally Friend-Union until January 25, 1967
Accessible.png State November 30, 1908 Blue Line
originally Milk-State until January 24, 1967
Accessible.png Downtown Crossing November 30, 1908 Red Line, Green Line and Silver Line
originally Winter-Summer until January 22, 1967, then Washington until May 3, 1987
Accessible.png Chinatown November 30, 1908 Silver Line
originally Boylston-Essex until February 10, 1967, then Essex until May 3, 1987
Accessible.png New England Medical Center May 4, 1987 Silver Line
Accessible.png Back Bay May 4, 1987 Commuter Rail Attleboro/Stoughton Line, Framingham/Worcester Line, Franklin Line and Needham Line
also called Back Bay/South End
Accessible.png Massachusetts Avenue May 4, 1987
Accessible.png Ruggles May 4, 1987 Commuter Rail Attleboro/Stoughton Line, Franklin Line and Needham Line
Accessible.png Roxbury Crossing May 4, 1987
Accessible.png Jackson Square May 4, 1987
Accessible.png Stony Brook May 4, 1987
Accessible.png Green Street May 4, 1987
Accessible.png Forest Hills May 4, 1987 Commuter Rail Attleboro/Stoughton Line, Franklin Line and Needham Line

Trains/Equipment

The Orange Line's current fleet is the 01200 series, built 1980-1981 by Hawker Siddeley Canada Car and Foundry (now Bombardier Transportation) of Fort William, Ontario, Canada. They are 65 feet (20 meters) long and 111 inches (2.8 meters) wide, with three pairs of doors on each side. They are based on the PA3 model used by PATH in New Jersey. There are 120 cars, numbered 01200-01319. These units are expected to remain in service until 2015.[link]

Accessibility

All stations on the Orange Line are handicapped accessible, though State is not fully accessible on the Blue Line.

[http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ]
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority ([official site])
Red Line AlewifeAshmont / Braintree ––– Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line: AshmontMattapan
Green Line LechmereBoston College ("B") / Cleveland Circle ("C") / Riverside ("D") / Heath Street ("E") ––– Watertown ("A")
Orange Line Oak GroveForest Hills ––– Charlestown ElevatedAtlantic Avenue ElevatedWashington Street Elevated
Blue Line WonderlandBowdoin
Buses Silver Line: Dudley SquareDowntown Crossing; South Station – various points ––– ListCrosstown busesFormer streetcarsTrackless trolleysKey routesEast Boston areaSouth BostonUrban Ring
Commuter Rail GreenbushPlymouth/KingstonMiddleborough/Lakeville – New Bedford/Fall River – FairmountProvidence/StoughtonFranklinNeedhamFramingham/WorcesterFitchburgLowellHaverhill/ReadingNewburyport/Rockport
Miscellaneous AccessibilityBoat serviceCharlieCardNomenclature
Predecessors Boston Elevated RailwayEastern Massachusetts Street RailwayMiddlesex and Boston Street Railway


Currently operating heavy rail rapid transit systems in the United States
MBTA Blue, Orange, and Red Lines | MTA New York City Subway and Staten Island Railway | PATH | SEPTA Market-Frankford and Broad Street Lines | PATCO Speedline | Baltimore Metro Subway | Washington Metro | MARTA | Miami Metrorail | Tren Urbano | RTA Rapid Transit Red Line | Chicago 'L' | BART | LACMTA Red Line

External links

 


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