Semi-metro

Muni Metro Forest Hill station
Sound Transit Airport station

Semi-metro is a form of urban rail transport in which trams run partly on a conflict-free track,[1][2] by using tunnels and viaducts.[3][4] These stretches of track are designed to function like a regular metro or rapid transit line.[5][6] Semi-metro lines run with tram cars because they are usually developed from an existing tram network.[7][8] Semi-metro is a concept also known as a subway–surface[9][10][11][12][13] line/system, tram subway[14] line/system, trolley subway[15] system or a hybrid[16] streetcar / light rail line)

One key difference from metro lines (rapid transit) is that semi-metro lines only partially run in tunnels and on viaducts.[17] A metro line has an entirely conflict-free track, often completely grade separated. Semi-metro routes are operated by regular trams (with or without low floor) or with specially developed tramcars (light rail vehicles), such as the Stadtbahn-car 'type B'.[18]: 55  In the United States most semi-metro systems are operated with larger vehicles than those on streetcar systems.[19]

Features

The semi-metro sits between rapid transit (with higher investments and a higher capacity and speed) and buses and tram in city streets (with lower investments and a lower capacity and speed). It combines advantages of greater speed (from rapid transit) with a better coverage in suburban areas (from busses and trams).[20] The term semi-metro falls under the umbrella term light rail,[21][22] which includes many kinds of modern tram transport. Semi-metro is in itself a container concept in which premetro and Stadtbahn fall. Although cheaper than a metro line, the construction of infrastructure for semi-metro routes was often still too expensive. Therefore sections were sometimes not constructed or realised in phases. The entanglement with the existing tram network is an advantage compared to constructing a separate light metro line.[23][24] Often several tram branches at grade are needed in order to make fully use of the high capacity tunnels.[25]

Right-of-way category

A rail transit system is firstly determined by its main right-of-way category and secondly by other parameters like power supply and operating speed.[18]: 6  There are three major right-of-way categories, having been labelled A, B and C. Category A: independent right-of-way, without level road or pedestrian crossings resulting in conflict free sections. Catergory B: reserved right-of-way to avoid traffic congestion, but with level road or pedestrian crossings. Category C: street running lines in mixed traffic. Typically, a tram/streetcar line has mostly category C, a light rail line has mostly category B and a semi-metro line has some of category A (combined with category B and sometimes C).[26] Whenever light rail vehicles operate only using category A, it is defined as Light rail rapid transit (LRRT) and is part of the greater light metro class.[27]

Tremont Street subway in 1897

History

In the Murray Hill Tunnel in New York, which was completed in 1850,[28] a streetcar station was opened in 1870.[29] Streetcars continued to run until 1935, and the tunnel was reopened as a road tunnel in 1937 after reconstruction. The first city in Europe to carry a portion of a streetcar line through the city center in a tunnel was Marseille, France, in 1893, with its Noailles subterranean station (see Marseille tramway). It was initially operated by horse-drawn wagons. A prominent example is the Tremont Street subway (1897) in Boston,[30][31] today part of the MBTA Green Line. Brussels, Cologne and Frankfurt pioneered in Europe with long tunnels with multiple stations in the 1960s.

Subtypes

STIB/MIVB Simonis station
üstra Marienstraße station

Besides regular semi-metro networks, two subtypes exist. Both terms refer to tram networks where tram vehicles use viaducts and/or run through tunnels under city centres, but with key differences:

Premetro

Premetro is largely similar to semi-metro: a type of public transport in which trams run partly grade separated, by using tunnels and/or viaducts. However, there is one clear distinguishing factor: premetro uses infrastructure that has been explicitly constructed with the ambition to transfer to use metro trains in the future.[18]: 9 [32][33] It is usually also developed from an existing classic tram network. One prominent example is the premetro in Brussels, where several premetro lines have been or will be converted into full heavy rail metro lines.

U-Stadtbahn

The U-Stadtbahn is also an intermediate transportation form between metro and tram. It has originated in Germany, adapting the existing tram networks. Here specially developed trams run underground through tunnels in central urban areas.[18]: 10 [34][35] Stadtbahn lines can be subdivided by looking at the types of rolling stock.

  • There are lines where full-fledged (i.e. 2.65 m (8 ft 8 in) wide) express trams run, with long wagon bodies: Cologne, Frankfurt and Stuttgart, among others.
  • There are networks where at the start of operation narrower Stadtbahn trams with shorter wagon bodies were used: Hannover (TW6000) and Bielefeld (Düwag M/N).
  • From the end of the 20th century Stadtbahn lines with low-floor trams also appeared: Dortmund (U43 & U44), Düsseldorf (Wehrhahnlinie) and Cologne (1, 7, 9, 12 and 15).
HTM Beatrixkwartier station

Examples

There are many regions with forms of light rail, but only few where light rail uses tunnels and/or viaducts. In the United States, the most prominent examples are the San Francisco Muni Metro and Green Line in Boston.[36][18]: 9  The Buffalo Metro Rail, Seattle's Link light rail,[37] the light rail lines in Cleveland[38] and the MetroLink in St. Louis[39] are also considered semi-metro. A clear example in Canada is the Edmonton LRT.[18]: 77 

Notable examples in Germany are the Hanover Stadtbahn,[40] Essen Stadtbahn,[41] Bonn and Cologne Stadtbahns, and the Frankfurt tramways.[18]: 9 [42]: 36  In the United Kingdom, the Tyne and Wear Metro is by definition a semi-metro system due to eight level crossings.[43] Over several decades a semi-metro system was constructed in the Dutch city of The Hague.[44][45] The Brussels premetro is sometimes also referred to as semi-metro,[42]: 36  as the term was originally coined there; this was before switching to the concept of pre-metro. More recent examples are the Madrid Metro Ligero, the Málaga Metro and Alicante Metropolitan-Tram in Spain and the Porto Metro in Portugal.[46]

References

  1. ^ International Study Week in Traffic Engineering: Reports pt.2 (in French). O.T.A. / Northwestern University. 1972. p. 44. Retrieved 3 September 2024.
  2. ^ Zaborowski, dr Łukasz (2018). Tramwaj dla polskich miast (in Polish). Instytut Sobieskiego. p. 32, 33. Retrieved 3 September 2024. Do lekkiej kolei zaliczymy także systemy pośrednie między metrem a tramwajem. Bezkolizyjność trasy oraz kolejowy system sterowania w połączeniu z taborem tramwajowym to semi-metro. System taki może działać jako semi-metro w obszarze śródmiejskim, a w dzielnicach zewnętrznych jako szybki tramwaj. — Light rail also includes intermediate systems between the metro and the tram. The collision-free route and the railway control system combined with the tram rolling stock are called semi-metro. Such a system can operate as a semi-metro in the city center, and in the outer districts as a rapid tram.
  3. ^ Weigelt, Horst; Weiss, Helmut H.; Götz, Rainer E. (1977). City Traffic: A Systems Digest. Van Nostrand Reinhold. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-442-29259-1.
  4. ^ Haring, Leonardus H. 13th National Light Rail and Streetcar Conference: Transforming Urban Areas. p. 401. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  5. ^ Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (1973). The Automobile and the Environment. Retrieved 9 February 2023. descending into tunnels in the style of conventional underground mass transit
  6. ^ Norley, Kym (2010). Light rail: The semi-metro concept. p. 4. Semi-metro: Light rail on reserved right of way over congested parts of line typically in tunnel or viaduct for grade separation designed to Metro standards, with priority surface light rail in other sections
  7. ^ Implementation of Transportation Controls: Hearing, Ninety-third congress. Washington, D.C. 1974. p. 492. Retrieved 17 January 2023. In essence, a semi-metro consists of light rail cars operating on exclusive tracks, generally on the surface but descending into tunnels in the style of conventional underground mass transit in city centres{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  41. ^ "Regional editors". International Railway Journal: IRJ. (15). Simmons-Boardman Publishing Company: 18. 1975. Retrieved 3 May 2024. brake equipment to be fitted to 90 two-car articulated semi-metro trainsets, under construction by Duwag, for service in the municipal areas of Bonn, Cologne and Essen.
  42. ^ a b El Tráfico rodado y peatonal en Zaragoza: Una propuesta para su reestructuración (in Spanish). April 1982. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
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