West Santa Ana Branch Transit Corridor

The West Santa Ana Branch Transit Corridor is a planned light rail line, mostly following the historic Pacific Electric West Santa Ana Branch, connecting Downtown Los Angeles to the City of Artesia and other cities in southeastern Los Angeles County.

 West Santa Ana Branch Transit  
Overview
TypeLight rail
SystemMetro
StatusPlanned
LocaleLos Angeles
Downey
Paramount
Artesia
Route map

Union Station       
*new platforms at Union Station Forecourt
or behind the Metropolitan Water District Building
Little Tokyo    
7th Street/Metro Center    
South Park/Fashion District
Alternative E
Alternative G
Arts/Industrial District
Slauson  
Pacific/Randolph
Florence/Salt Lake
Firestone
I-710
Rio Honda Channel
Gardendale
I-105/C Line  
Paramount/Rosencrans
Bellflower
Pioneer

Overview

The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) has $4 billion[1] in funds available for construction planned to begin in 2022. The plan included in the Measure M transportation funding measure is to build improvements in two stages. In June 2017, Metro issued a Request for Proposals to study alternatives for this new LA Metro Rail route.[2] Metro has narrowed the options to two alternatives and are currently preparing to publish the Draft EIS/EIR for public comment.[3] The draft EIS/EIR is planned to be released in 2020.[4]

The project's timeline is expected to be accelerated under the Twenty-eight by '28 initiative.[5]

Proposed routings and modes

The West Santa Ana Branch Transit Corridor project is proposed as a 20-mile light rail transit line that would connect downtown Los Angeles to Artesia. Along the route, it would also serve the communities of Vernon, Huntington Park, Bell, Cudahy, South Gate, Downey, Paramount, Bellflower, and Cerritos in the southeast area of the county.[3] The southern portion (south of Florence/Salt Lake proposed station) route will use the old Red Car right of way owned by Ports of Los Angeles/Long Beach and Metro. The northern alignment through Downtown Los Angeles is being studied as possible underground light rail transit route. Six options were proposed.[3] As of summer 2018, two options were being considered (both of which would connect to the southern alignment by paralleling the A Line between Washington and Slauson stations, and part of an existing freight rail line along Randolph Street):[4]

  • Alameda Street (Alternative E): A subway under Alameda, passing through the Arts District and connecting to the L Line at Little Tokyo before continuing on to Los Angeles Union Station.
  • Downtown Transit Core (Alternative G): Would deviate westward from the Alameda route in the Arts District and continue downtown via a subway, terminating at either 7th Street/Metro Center or Pershing Square.
Station[3] Location Connecting
rail services[6]
Alternative E Alternative G
Union Station (existing) Downtown Los Angeles Amtrak
Metrolink
  B Line
  D Line
  L Line
× -
Little Tokyo/Arts District station (existing) Little Tokyo   L Line × -
7th Street/Metro Center station Financial District   B Line
  D Line
- ×
9th/Main St. station aka South Park/Fashion District station Fashion District - ×
4th/Alameda station aka Arts District South station Arts District × ×
7th/Alameda Station Arts District × ×
Slauson station (existing) Florence-Graham   A Line × ×
Pacific/Randolph Station Huntington Park/Walnut Park × ×
Florence/Salt Lake Station Bell/Cudahy × ×
Firestone Station South Gate × ×
Gardendale Station Downey × ×
I-105/Green Line transfer station Paramount   C Line × ×
Paramount/Rosecrans Station Paramount × ×
Bellflower Station Bellflower × ×
Pioneer Station Artesia × ×
Cerritos Station Cerritos × ×

In November 2018, Metro removed the Blue Line stations north of Slauson from the study area, citing redundant service and expedited travel times as the prime reasons.[7]

In 2019, Metro announced that as part of its design analysis, it would study opening the line in two stages, with the initial opening $1 Billion dollar segment running from Pioneer Station in Artesia north to Slauson Station on the Blue Line, with the remainder of the $3 billion route into downtown built as phase two. Metro staff were "optimistic" that it would be feasible to build the line to Slauson by 2028 with existing Measure M funds. Metro was also studying public-private partnerships that could accelerate the construction schedule of the entire line. The service is not planned to interline with the A Line to 7th Street/Metro Center due to operational constraints.[8] Under the proposed plans, design for the initial segment would be complete by 2021 and construction would begin in 2022.[9]

Extension into Orange County

Metro is evaluating an optional station in Cerritos at Bloomfield Avenue (just north of the Los Angeles-Orange county line) to facilitate a possible future extension into Orange County; it would eventually connect to the under construction OC Streetcar, which also uses part of the Pacific Electric WSAB right-of-way.[4]

References

  1. https://www.metro.net/projects/west-santa-ana/
  2. "Metro West Santa Ana Branch Rail Recommended Route(s) To Go To Metro Board This Month". Streetsblog Los Angeles. May 2018. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
  3. "West Santa Ana Branch Transit Corridor". Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
  4. "Project Alternatives". Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Retrieved 2018-12-02.
  5. Sharp, Steven (27 November 2018). "Here are the 28 Projects that Metro Could Complete Before the 2028 Olympics". Urbanize. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  6. "Bus and Rail System Map" (PDF). Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Retrieved 2018-12-03.
  7. (PDF) https://media.metro.net/projects_studies/westSantaAnaBranch/images/board_report_WSAB_2018-11.pdf. Retrieved 7 May 2020. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. (PDF) http://media.metro.net/projects_studies/westSantaAnaBranch/images/wsab_Board_Report.pdf. Retrieved 7 May 2020. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. https://thesource.metro.net/2019/09/18/metro-staff-studies-building-initial-operating-segments-on-west-santa-ana-branch-project/
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