Washington Metro
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The Washington Metro, or simply Metro, is the public transportation system of Washington, D.C. and neighboring suburban communities in Maryland and Virginia, both inside and outside the Capital Beltway. In Maryland service is provided in Prince George's County and Montgomery County; in Virginia it's in Fairfax County, Arlington County, and the City of Alexandria.
Both the Metrorail (subway) system as well as Metrobus (bus) services are owned and operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) — a multijurisdictional, quasi-governmental agency. WMATA also operates a paratransit service for the disabled called MetroAccess. However, the expression "Metro" usually refers to Metrorail exclusively.
Unlike the subway systems in cities such as Boston or New York, Metrorail fare is not fixed, but instead varies based on the distance traveled and the time of day. Riders enter and exit the system using a stored-value card in the form of a paper magnetic stripe farecard or a proximity card known as SmarTrip. Both methods track the balance paid to Metro, as well as the rider's entry and exit points.
Since opening in 1976, the subway network has grown to five lines, consisting of 86 stations and 106.3 miles (171 km) of track. The original plan of 83 stations on 103 miles (165.5 km) was completed on January 13, 2001. There were 195 million trips on Metrorail in 2005, meaning about 535,000 passengers use the system every day.[WMATA Facts] (PDF) The system is the second busiest in the nation, behind only the New York City Subway, with about 700,000 trips taken on a typical weekday.[WMATA press release — Metrorail records four consecutive high ridership days last week]
Washington's Metrorail is well known for its design by Chicago architect Harry Weese. Weese's design is an exemplar of late-20th-century modern architecture. With its heavy use of concrete, and the repetitive nature of its design motifs, it demonstrates aspects of Brutalism, which, in Washington, is also exemplified by the FBI's J. Edgar Hoover Building. Simultaneously, with its coffered groin and barrel vaults, it reflects the neoclassical style of architecture that can arguably be described as the closest thing to an "official" federal style in Washington, as demonstrated in such buildings as the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the former U.S. Patent Office building (now the Smithsonian American Art Museum), by Robert Mills, the White House, by James Hoban, and the Beaux-Arts Lincoln Memorial, by Henry Bacon.
Metrorail network
The network was designed with a spoke-hub distribution paradigm, which makes the subway ideal for getting from a suburb to any part of the city, or vice versa, but unattractive for suburb-to-suburb travel; groups have proposed a Purple Line to remedy this. The system is also noteworthy as a system with a limited number of lines that nevertheless makes extensive use of interlining (running more than one line on the same track).
There are five operating lines and one planned line, described from the south or west towards the north or east:
- Red Line: Runs from Shady Grove in Montgomery County, through downtown Washington, and back into Montgomery County ending at Glenmont. This is the busiest line and the only one which does not share its track with another line.
- Orange Line: Runs from Vienna/Fairfax-GMU in Fairfax County, through Arlington County and central Washington, ending at New Carrollton in Prince George's County. Shares the same tracks as the Blue line from Rosslyn (Arlington County) through Stadium-Armory (Washington). It will also share tracks with the planned Silver Line from East Falls Church to Stadium-Armory.
- Blue Line: Runs from Franconia-Springfield in Fairfax County, through Alexandria, Arlington County, and Washington, ending at Largo Town Center in Prince George's County. Shares the same tracks as the Yellow line from King Street (Alexandria) to Pentagon (Arlington), then shares the same tracks as the Orange Line from Rosslyn (Arlington) through Stadium-Armory (Washington). It will also share tracks with the planned Silver Line from Rosslyn to Stadium-Armory.
- Yellow Line: Runs from Huntington in Fairfax County, through Alexandria and Arlington, ending in Washington at Mount Vernon Square/7th St-Convention Center. Shares the same tracks as the Blue Line from King Street (Alexandria) through Pentagon (Arlington), then it crosses the Potomac River into Washington where it shares the same tracks as the Green Line from L'Enfant Plaza through the end of the line at Mount Vernon Square/7th St-Convention Center. There is a proposal to extened the Yellow line service to Fort Totten during off-peak hours. This will allow the Red line passengers to transfer to the Yellow line, in addition to the Green Line, at Fort Totten.
- Green Line: Runs from Branch Avenue in Prince George's County, through eastern Washington, where it crosses the Anacostia River, and back out into Prince George's County ending at Greenbelt. Shares the same tracks as the Yellow Line from L'Enfant Plaza through Mount Vernon Square/7th St-Convention Center.
- Silver Line: Planned to run from Route 772 to Stadium-Armory. It will share track with the Orange Line from East Falls Church to Stadium-Armory, and with the Blue Line from Rosslyn to Stadium-Armory. The Silver Line will open in two phases, with the section from Wiehle Avenue to Stadium-Armory opening in 2011, and to Route 772 in 2015.
The system is not centered on any single station, but Metro Center is considered the hub, as it is the busiest station, located at the intersection of the three busiest lines, and the Metro Information Center and Gift Shop are located there. Other notable transfer stations include Gallery Place/Chinatown, which is located by the Verizon Center, Stadium-Armory, which is located by RFK Stadium where the Washington Nationals and DC United play, and L'Enfant Plaza, the only station in the system with four lines and which supplies easy access between downtown Washington and Virginia.
Smithsonian station lies under the National Mall and is the busiest station for tourists. Other stations of note for tourists are Capitol South, just three blocks from the United States Capitol, and McPherson Square, which is just two blocks from the White House. Even though Woodley Park-Zoo/Adams Morgan's name claims that it's the proper station to use to visit the National Zoo, Cleveland Park is not only a few feet closer, but uphill from the zoo, making it easier to arrive at the Zoo via Cleveland Park and leave via Woodley Park-Zoo (Adams Morgan is in fact half a mile away and actually closer to the Columbia Heights station.) The Pentagon station once offered direct below-ground access to the Pentagon. This direct entrance was eliminated as part of the Pentagon Renovation Program, and was replaced with a new above-ground entrance facility.
Numerous colleges and universities are accessible through the Metro, including the University of Maryland, College Park from College Park-U of Md, Georgetown University from Rosslyn (via shuttle bus), Georgetown University Law Center at Judiciary Square and Union Station, George Washington University at Foggy Bottom-GWU, American University frem Tenleytown-AU, Howard University at Shaw-Howard Univ, George Mason University from Vienna/Fairfax-GMU (Main Campus) and Virginia Square-GMU (Arlington Campus), Catholic University and Trinity University at Brookland-CUA, Gallaudet University from New York Ave-Florida Ave-Gallaudet U, and the University of the District of Columbia at Van Ness-UDC.
Since 1999, Metro has run a special service pattern on July 4 to accommodate movements into and out of the city for Independence Day activities on the National Mall. This generally involves switching the southern terminals for the Blue and Yellow Lines (i.e., Blue Line trains terminate at Huntington, while Yellow Line trains terminate at Franconia-Springfield), terminating the Blue Line at the Rosslyn upper level, and sending Orange Line trains to both Largo Town Center and New Carrollton. Since 2002, Smithsonian station has been closed all day on July 4 due to both of its entrances being located within the secured perimeter established around the Mall.[MetroRail 4th of July Service Patterns] from Oren's Transit Page
See also: List of Washington Metro stations.
Intermodal transport
WMATA has a stated goal of integration of its rail and bus networks. In 2004, SmarTrip readers were installed on all buses, enabling paperless transfers between lines and with the rail system.[WMATA press release — Entire Metrobus fleet now equipped with new SmarTrip fareboxes] Metro also offers numerous connections to other transit systems and modes of transportation.
History
During the 1960s, there were plans for a massive freeway system in Washington. However, opposition to this freeway system grew and the funds to construct it were reallocated toward construction of the Metro system.#redirect
Construction on the metro began in 1969, with groundbreaking on December 9. The system opened March 27, 1976 with 4.6 miles (7.4 km) available on the Red Line with five stations from Rhode Island Ave to Farragut North. The final 103 mile (166 km), 83 station system was completed with the opening of the Green Line segment to Branch Ave on January 13, 2001. This does not mean the end of the growth of the system: a 3.22 mile (5.18 km) extension of the Blue Line to Largo Town Center and Morgan Boulevard stations opened on December 18, 2004, the first in-fill station (New York Ave-Florida Ave-Gallaudet U on the Red Line between Union Station and Rhode Island Ave-Brentwood) opened November 20, 2004, and planning is underway for an extension to Dulles Airport.[WMATA History] (PDF)
The system's first segment opened in the District of Columbia, with Arlington, Virginia being linked to the system on July 1, 1976; Montgomery County, Maryland on February 6, 1978; Prince George's County, Maryland on November 20, 1978; and Fairfax County, Virginia and Alexandria, Virginia on December 17, 1983.
The highest ridership for a day was June 9, 2004, with 850,636 trips; thousands of people went to Washington to view the funeral procession of Ronald Reagan, and to the U.S. Capitol to view his body as it lay in state. The previous recordholding day was January 20, 1993, President Bill Clinton's first inauguration. March, April and June of 2006 have broken records in terms of ridership, with seven of the ten highest ridership days occurring in these months.[WMATA press release — Metrorail records four consecutive high ridership days last week] March holds the single-month ridership record with 18,716,654 total riders,[WMATA press release — March Metrorail Ridership Shatters Records] and April holds the record for highest average weekday ridership with 739,525 weekday trips. USA Today attributes the high ridership of the Washington Metro and other transit systems around the country to rapidly rising gasoline costs during that time.
Rolling stock
Metro's rail fleet consists of 952 75-foot (23 m) rail cars, delivered in five shipments.
The original order of 300 rail cars was manufactured by Rohr Industries, with delivery in 1976. These cars are numbered 1000-1299, and were rehabilitated in the mid-1990's by Breda Costruzioni Ferroviarie and Metro at the Brentwood Shop in Washington. The second order, of 76 cars, was through Breda Costruzioni Ferroviarie (Breda), with delivery in 1982. These cars are numbered 2000-2075, and were rehabilitated in 2003 and 2004 by Alstom in Hornell, New York. The third order consisted of 290 cars, also from Breda, with delivery in 1987. These cars are numbered 3000-3289 as originally delivered, and are currently undergoing rehabilitation by Alstom in Hornell, New York. The fourth order consisted of 100 cars from Breda, numbered 4000-4099. These cars were delivered in 1991. The fifth order consisted of 192 rail cars from a joint venture of Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF) of Spain and AAI Corporation of Hunt Valley, Maryland. These cars are numbered 5000-5191, with delivery from 2001 through 2004. Most recently, Metro has ordered 184 rail cars from Alstom, the same company that is rehabilitating the Breda cars. Delivery is expected to begin in late 2005, with initial service expected in 2006. These cars are currently undergoing acceptance testing. The new cars will have their body shells built in Barcelona, Spain and have assembly completed in Hornell, New York.[Information on the cars] from The Schumin Web Transit Center
Metrorail signaling and operation
During normal operation on revenue tracks (used for passenger services), trains are controlled by an automatic train control system (ATC) which accelerates and brakes the train automatically without operator intervention. However, all trains are manned with train operators who close the doors (they can optionally be set to open automatically), make station announcements, and supervise their train. The operator can switch a train into manual mode and operate the train manually as needed.#redirect
Safety and security
Metro Transit Police
The Metro Transit Police Department is charged with ensuring the safety of Metro customers and employees. Transit Police officers patrol the Metrorail system and Metrobuses, and have jurisdiction and arrest powers throughout the 1,500 square mile Metro service area for crimes that occur on or against Transit Authority facilities, or within 150 feet of a Metrobus stop.
Accidents
There have been three collisions reported on the Metrorail system since its opening.
- On January 13, 1982, a train backed up and derailed at a malfunctioning interlocking between the Federal Triangle and Smithsonian stations. In attempting to restore the train to the rails, the supervisors backed it up, but they did not notice that another car had also derailed. In attempting to reverse the train, the other rail car slid off the track and slammed into a tunnel support, killing three people and injuring many others, becoming the worst accident that has ever occurred on the Metrorail system in over 25 years of operation. Coincidentally, this accident occurred at the same time as Air Florida Flight 90 crashed into the 14th Street Bridge during a major snowstorm, producing probably the worst transit situation in Washington history. The train accident was compounded by lack of availability of ambulances, which at the time were all trying to reach the 14th Street Bridge disaster.
- On January 6, 1996, during the Blizzard of 1996, a train operator was killed when a train overran the Shady Grove station and crashed into a parked train. An NTSB investigation found the following factors that contributed to the accident:
- * at the time of the accident, there was a policy then in effect that prohibited supervisors from granting employees permission to operate trains manually (even in inclement weather), and
- * the parked train was located on the same track that was being used by inbound trains, instead of in a safer location. [Report of the 1996 crash] from the NTSB
- On November 3, 2004, an out-of-service train lost its brakes, rolled backwards into the Woodley Park-Zoo/Adams Morgan Station, and hit a revenue train servicing the station. No one was killed, but 20 people were injured. The 2004 accident reinforced the finding from the 1996 accident of the tendency of Metro rail cars built or rehabilitated prior to 2001 to telescope when involved in a head-on collision. A 14-month investigation on the accident concluded that the train operator was most likely less-than-fully alert as the train rolled backwards into the station, on the grounds that the train had rolled backwards for over 78 seconds and that the train operator was at the end of an overtime shift that had been preceded by a night of interrupted sleep. Safety officials estimated that had the train been full, at least 79 would have died. Since the findings of the investigation, the train operator was dismissed from Metro, and Metro officials plan to add rollback protection to 300 cars.
Accountability and controversy
Since the turn of the 21st century, Metrorail has been plagued with deteriorating quality of service and excessive delays, caused in part by the system's aging infrastructure and in part by lack of proper oversight regarding various Metrorail systems. In addition to the November 2004 accident, other serious incidents included an electrical fire on March 18, 2004 during morning rush hour. The fire occurred deep underground, on the Red Line between the Woodley Park-Zoo and Dupont Circle stations. This caused a major disruption in service that sent thousands of stranded passengers onto Connecticut Avenue, with no good plan by authorities to deal with the situation. Occurring just days after the Madrid train bombings, this incident highlighted Metro's shortcomings when it comes to emergency preparedness.On July 27, 2004, rainstorms flooded a control room located at the Silver Spring station, damaging electronic equipment used for operating Red Line trains between the Takoma and Forest Glen stations. As a result, Red Line trains were manually operated for two weeks, reducing the speed of the trains through the affected area, causing significant delays for passengers.
With aging infrastructure and rail cars, the Metrorail system has experienced numerous incidents of rail cracks that have required single-tracking (trains in both directions sharing the same track) during rush hour. Unlike the New York City Subway and other systems, the original design of the rail system provides just two rail tracks (one in each direction) throughout the entire system; the Metrorail system has no "side tracks" for disabled trains to which to move. Therefore, when an incident occurs, no matter how minor (such as a sick passenger), there is no way for subsequent trains to go around the affected train, causing trains to back up behind the affected train, resulting in quite significant delays. When this happens, the trains will be "single-tracked" (trains going in both directions sharing the track on the same side), which, again, results in significant delays. Another cause for delays is the frequent mechanical break-down of Metrorail trains while they are in service (due to the age of some of the rail cars and lack of repairs). This causes the entire train to be offloaded, with passengers attempting to reboard onto subsequent trains, which often become packed with the extra passengers.
Further controversy surfaced in 2004, when it became known that employees of Penn Parking, the company contracted by Metro to collect parking fees at Metrorail stations, had stolen substantial amounts of cash. Metro terminated the contract with Penn Parking, and on June 28, 2004, implemented a cashless parking system, where customers are required to pay for parking with SmarTrip cards.
The parking lots typically fill up quickly on weekdays due to the appeal both for tourists and for commuters from outer suburbs to drive their cars to the outlying stations and take the train in. The cashless parking system created a problem because full, unmanned parking lots trapped drivers who were unable to park and leave without paying $10.00 - the minimum cost of a SmarTrip card. This is $7.50 more than they would have to pay under the old, manned system. If drivers planned to purchase the SmarTrip cards in the station, as signs warned them was required, they would not be able to park legally to do so. On January 2, 2006, Metro implemented a change in parking lot revenue hours, so that on weekday mornings, the exit gates from the parking lot would remain open until 10:30 AM. [WMATA Press Release — Metro's new system-wide time change for paying to exit Metrorail parking facilities takes effect Monday, January 2]
In 2005, WMATA General Manager Richard A. White led efforts to improve accountability and dialogue with customers. This included independent audits, town hall meetings, online chats with White and other management officials, and improved signage in stations. Despite these efforts, however, the Board of Directors announced White's dismissal on January 11, 2006. Dan Tangherlini replaced White as interim General Manager, effective February 16, 2006.
SmarTrip
The SmarTrip card (a stored-value card or debit card) costs five dollars and is available at Metro sales facilities. They are also sold for ten dollars (five dollars for the card and five dollars in fare) at special vending machines near the farecard machines. Customers can add additional money to the cards using SmarTrip-equipped farecard machines (which accepts cash, coins and credit/debit cards). SmarTrip cards can also be used to pay fares for both Metrorail and Metrobus, making for more efficient transfer times.
Funding
While fares and advertising provide some revenue for Metro, the bulk of funding is contributed by each jurisdiction that it serves, as well as by the states of Maryland and Virginia. Fares and other revenue fund 57.6% of daily operations while state and local governments fund the remaining 42.4%. Washington Metro is unique among major public transportation systems in having no dedicated source of funding. Instead, each year WMATA must ask each local jurisdiction to contribute funding, which is determined by a formula that equally considers three factors: (1) population density, as of the 2000 Census; (2) average weekday ridership; (3) number of stations in each jurisdiction. Under this formula, the District of Columbia contributes the greatest amount (34%), followed by Montgomery County (18.7%), Prince George's County (17.9%), Fairfax County (14.3%), Arlington County (9.9%), the City of Alexandria (4.7%), the City of Falls Church (0.3%), and the City of Fairfax (0.3%).[WMATA Subsidy Allocation Methodology] (PDF)It is often argued that this formula places disproportionate burden on District of Columbia taxpayers. WMATA and District officials have pleaded that the Federal government should contribute more funding, reflecting the fact that a substantial portion of the Federal workforce use Metro to commute from the suburbs. Tourists also comprise a significant portion of ridership and Metro provides an instrumental role in transporting people during special events, such as presidential inaugurations. As well, a substantial number of stations located in the District serve these purposes rather than serving local residents.
In 2005, U.S. Rep. Tom Davis, Republican of Virginia, introduced a bill in Congress that offers WMATA a ten-year federal funding infusion worth $1.5 billion. This offer is contingent upon WMATA implementing more accountability measures, providing the Federal government two seats on its board of directors, and on enactment of legislation by the District of Columbia and the states of Maryland and Virginia to permanently provide WMATA with dedicated sources of revenue worth $150 million per year. The fate of the Davis proposal, however, hangs in doubt; in February 2006 in the Virginia House of Delegates, Republican members of the House Finance Committee opposed to new taxation blocked WMATA funding legislation.
Future expansion
Silver Line
Rumors have abounded for years about transit service out to Dulles and points west either by Metro or other systems. There was even a study in the early 1990s that proposed a series of civil tiltrotor stations as a possible commuting option from places such as Reston, Manassas, Leesburg, Columbia, and other points in the greater Washington area.[Civil Tiltrotor Feasibility Study for the New York and Washington Terminal Areas] (PDF) Like many other plans, this stopped at the initial assessment stage for fiscal and political reasons.#redirect Light rail systems and express bus lines have also been floated as a possibility within the District or Northern Virginia. Plans to extend Metrorail to Dulles have been in the works since the beginning of the system's construction. A test station was built at the airport around 1970 and was located some 28 feet below the parking lot area[Metrorail Track and Structures] at Clouse.org, but until recently, rail transport there was not a reality.
Finally, in 2002, plans were formalized to bring a 23-mile extension to the Orange Line from near the West Falls Church station to Route 772 in Loudoun County, Virginia. This would mean a mass transit connection from Washington proper to the important business centers of Reston and Tysons Corner, and most importantly, provide a link to Dulles Airport. On June 10, 2004, the Federal Transit Administration approved the first phase of the project to begin. It is scheduled to reach Wiehle avenue in 2011 and VA route 772 (beyond Dulles Airport) in 2015.[Dulles Corridor]
Bi-County Transitway
Controversy has attended proposals to build a Purple Line, now designated the Bi-County Transitway by state planners, linking Bethesda and Silver Spring, Maryland, thereby connecting the two branches of the Red Line to the north of Washington by rail. It would later be possibly extended to New Carrollton, Maryland, thus also connecting branches of the Green and Orange lines, and eventually around the entire Capital Beltway, linking all the Metro endpoints together, as seen in a proposal from the Sierra Club.[Purple Line proposal] from the Sierra Club This line has been conceived as a light rail line traveling along a private right-of-way for at least some portion of its length, as an elevated monorail, and also as a rapid bus line. The proposal has met fierce opposition from some of the residents along the certain areas of the line (see NIMBY). Others have noted difficulties in obtaining the funds to build it.[Bickering over Purple Line could cause funding woe] — Gazette.net
Light rail and other extensions
Metro broke ground on a light rail line in the Anacostia area on November 13, 2004. The project is a demonstration to examine the usefulness of building a light rail line that would help people who live too far away from subway stations by ferrying them to the main Metro network. The line consists of 2.7 miles (4.3 km) of track and six stations. Service is expected to begin in autumn 2006.[WMATA press release — Metro and the District of Columbia break ground on the Anacostia light rail demonstration project]Maryland has proposed extending the Green line from the current northern terminus in Greenbelt to connect with Baltimore-Washington International Airport via Fort Meade, home of the National Security Agency. The link would be built in the next two decades to accommodate some of the growth expected in the Howard and Anne Arundel County regions as jobs move in with the recent military reorganization.
To increase travel capacity through downtown DC, a proposal was floated in the early 2000's to reroute the Blue line between Rosslyn and Stadium-Armory, so that it would no longer share tracks with the Orange line. Instead, from Rosslyn, it would pass through a new station in Georgetown (which the residents rejected originally, but now desire), cross the Red line at Dupont Circle and again at Union Station, then rejoin its existing eastward branch at Stadium-Armory. The current status of the proposal is unknown.[NARPAC - Metro Long Range Planning]
On January 20, 2006, the District of Columbia Department of Transportation announced that it would begin building a streetcar line on H Street, NE, from Union Station to Benning Road as part of its [Great Streets initiative]. This is the same route established by the Columbia Railway Company in 1870.
In conjunction with Arlington and Fairfax counties, Metro has proposed to build a streetcar line on Columbia Pike in Arlington. See the project's [website] for further details.
A light rail system for the Southern Maryland counties of Charles and St. Mary's is being discussed, growing out of the southern terminus of the Green Line (Branch Avenue) and connecting to the rapidly growing area of Waldorf and other towns along MD Route 5.
Trivia
- Huntington is the only station equipped with an "inclinator," an elevator-like device that travels diagonally up and down what would have been an escalator in order to allow the disabled to use both sides of the station.[Intramural Transit Systems]
- The Wheaton station has longest single-span uninterrupted escalator (508 feet long, 154.8 m; 230 feet vertical depth) in the Western Hemisphere. It takes 2 minutes and 45 seconds to ascend or descend. This record has been held by Metro since 1977, by (in order of opening) the Rosslyn, Woodley Park-Zoo, Bethesda, and now Wheaton stations. The longest escalator in Europe is in the Park Pobedy station in the Moscow Metro. There are several escalator "systems" of greater length in Hong Kong.#redirect
- The automated messages of "doors opening," "doors closing," and the more insistent "please stand clear of the doors, thank you" were recorded in 1996 by District resident Sandy Carroll. In February 2006, following an open contest, Metro officials chose Randi Miller, a car dealership employee from Woodbridge, Virginia, to record new announcements.
- Metro operates 588 escalators and 230 elevators in its stations.
- Forest Glen Station is so deep (196 feet) that it has no escalators to its platform and is serviced only by elevators.[Pipeshaft - Forest Glen] Because of the depth of the Forest Glen Station and lack of escalators, it is the only station equipped with a special trackbed fire supression system and smoke doors to protect customers during a train fire and evacuation.#redirect
- Huntington is the only station in the system whose name contains none of the letters in the word 'mackerel', just as there is only one station in the London Underground whose name contains no letters in 'mackerel', St John's Wood.
- The Metro Transit Police Department is the only American police agency that has local police authority in three different "state" jurisdictions (Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia).[Metro Transit Police Department]
- Unlike say on the New York City Subway, it is not the custom to pass between cars through the end doors. Large red notices on the doors forbid it, and only transit police are seen to do it.
See also
- Congressional Subway
- List of rapid transit systems
- List of Washington Metro stations
- Metrobus
- SmarTrip
References
External links
- [Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority] Official site
- [Metro Transit Police] Official site
- [StationMasters Online] Neighborhood maps and panoramic photographs of each station
- [MetroRiders.Org] Metro Customer Advocacy Group
- [Metro Compact]
- [Building the Washington Metro]
- [Pipeshaft] Infrastructure of the Washington Metro
Transit enthusiast sites
- [world.nycsubway.org Washington Metro]
- [The Schumin Web Transit Center (Washington Metro)]
- [Oren's Transit Page (Washington, D.C.)]
- [UrbanRail.net Washington Metro]
- [Various Documents, Pictures and Maps of Washington Metro]
- [The Pipeshaft: Infrastructure of the D.C. Metrorail]
- [GP Bus Gallery]
Maps
- [MetroMapr.com | Interactive Google Maps of the DC Metro with address search.]
- [DCRails.com | Google Maps representation of Metrorail with address lookup.]
- [An alternate Google Maps representation showing all lines drawn in]
- [Technical map of the Washington Metro, showing rail yards, track numbers, and route designations]
Equipment
- [Document describing line nomenclature, operation and signaling]
- [Swiger Coil Systems]
- [Cast Solutions, Inc.]
| 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 |
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