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==2005 return of trolley==
==2005 return of trolley==
The 15 line has been reopened as a trolley service in September 2005 after having been served by buses for thirteen years. To prepare for the resumption of trolley service, SEPTA spent a total of [[US dollar|$]]88 million, including rehabilitating the tracks and repairs to the [[overhead lines|overhead wires]]. The rolling stock for Route 15 consists of '''PCC II''' cars, which are [[1947]] [[PCC streetcar]]s that had been completely rebuilt by the [[Brookville Locomotive Company|Brookville Equipment Company]] as a cost of $1.3 million per trolley. The rebuilt trolley includes the addition of air conditioning and regenerative braking.<ref>"Philadelphia's PCCs Return to Service." ''Railway Age.'' Vol. 205, No. 10, p. 30. October 1, 2005.</ref>
The 15 line has been reopened as a trolley service in September 2005 after having been served by buses for thirteen years. To prepare for the resumption of trolley service, SEPTA spent a total of [[US dollar|$]] million, including rehabilitating the tracks and repairs to the [[overhead lines|overhead wires]]. The rolling stock for Route 15 consists of '''PCC II''' cars, which are [[1947]] [[PCC streetcar]]s that had been completely rebuilt by the [[Brookville Locomotive Company|Brookville Equipment Company]] as a cost of $1.3 million per trolley. The rebuilt trolley includes the addition of air conditioning and regenerative braking.<ref>"Philadelphia's PCCs Return to Service." ''Railway Age.'' Vol. 205, No. 10, p. 30. October 1, 2005.</ref>


The restoration of trolley service was delayed because of a long fight with local residents on 59th Street, which the trolleys needed travel down in order to access the Callowhill Depot, over parking on the street.<ref>[http://citypaper.net/articles/2004-09-30/cb5.shtml citypaper.net] Amy L. Webb (2004). "Communication Breakdown." ''Philadelphia City Paper.'' September 30, 2004.</ref>
The restoration of trolley service was delayed because of a long fight with local residents on 59th Street, which the trolleys needed travel down in order to access the Callowhill Depot, over parking on the street.<ref>[http://citypaper.net/articles/2004-09-30/cb5.shtml citypaper.net] Amy L. Webb (2004). "Communication Breakdown." ''Philadelphia City Paper.'' September 30, 2004.</ref>


Controversy continues to surround daily operations of the trolley line.<ref>[http://septawatch.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html septawatch.blogspot.com]</ref> Shuttle busses have replaced inoperable trolleys more often than not due to alleged mismanged regular maintenence on the restored trolleys.<ref>[http://www.blogcatalog.com/blog/septablog/5737b72b39c8647a82ac146c4630a5b3 blogcatalog.com]</ref><ref>[http://www.blogcatalog.com/blog/septablog/7b1b8e011273ec1daefa6bcf172252d5 blogcatalog.com/blog]</ref>
Controversy continues to surround daily operations of the trolley line.<ref>[http://septawatch.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html septawatch.blogspot.com]</ref> Shuttle busses have replaced inoperable trolleys more often than not due to alleged regular maintenence on the restored trolleys.<ref>[http://www.blogcatalog.com/blog/septablog/5737b72b39c8647a82ac146c4630a5b3 blogcatalog.com]</ref><ref>[http://www.blogcatalog.com/blog/septablog/7b1b8e011273ec1daefa6bcf172252d5 blogcatalog.com/blog]</ref>
In addition, the trolley has not generated new ridership since its reopening, a point of contention for supporters of resumed [[R3 (SEPTA)#Elwyn to Wawa Rail Service Restoration|R3]] Elwyn-Wawa and [[R8 (SEPTA)#R8 Fox Chase|R8]] Fox Chase-Newtown regional rail service in suburban areas lacking alternate public transport.<ref>[http://www.r8newtown.com/history.html r8newtown.com]</ref>
In addition, the trolley has not generated new ridership since its reopening, a point of contention for supporters of resumed [[R3 (SEPTA)#Elwyn to Wawa Rail Service Restoration|R3]] Elwyn-Wawa and [[R8 (SEPTA)#R8 Fox Chase|R8]] Fox Chase-Newtown regional rail service in suburban areas lacking alternate public transport.<ref>[http://www.r8newtown.com/history.html r8newtown.com]</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:06, 28 September 2009

  Route 15
Girard Avenue Trolley
SEPTA PCC II
Overview
LocalePhiladelphia, PA
Termini
  • 63rd Street and Girard Avenue
  • Richmond and Westmoreland Streets
Service
TypeStreetcar line
Operator(s)SEPTA
History
Opened1859; 2005 (resumed)
Technical
Line length8.5 mi[1] (13.7 km)
Track gaugePennsylvania Trolley Gauge: 62.5
Minimum radius?

Route 15 is a heritage streetcar line, operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA), along Girard Avenue through North and West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. As of 2007, it is the only surface trolley line in the City Transit Division that is not part of the Subway–Surface Trolley Lines. PCC streetcars are used on the line.

The line was first opened in 1859 as a horse car line operated by the Richmond and Schuylkill River Passenger Railway, and electrified in 1895.[2] Service was suspended (replaced with buses) in 1992, along with Route 23 (Germantown Avenue-11th and 12th Streets) and Route 56 (Wayne-Erie Avenues). On September 4, 2005, trolley service was restored.

Route

The tracks for 8.5 mile (13.7 km) Route 15 run along Girard Avenue and Richmond Street. The Western terminus is at the intersection of Girard Avenue and 63rd Street, at the Haddington Loop, and instantly passes by Carroll Park. The next landmark is Catehdral Cemetery, which is on the corner of US 30(Lancaster Avenue), which both Girard Avenue and Route 15 briefly overlap, along with the SEPTA Route 10 trolley. The line and US 30 leaves Lancaster Avenue and resumes it's way along Girard Avenue. After crossing over the SEPTA R5 Line at the intersection with Belmont Avenue, the line passes by the Philadelphia Zoo near Exit 342 on the Schuylkill Expressway before crossing the Schuylkill River.

After entering Francisville, Route 15 loops partially around the south side of Girard College, but rejoins Girard Avenue again, and passes by St. Joseph's Hospital. The first mass transit crossing the line encounters is the Broad Street Line's Girard Station, and two blocks from there crosses the SEPTA Route 23 bus line which was originally a trolley line that may be restored between 2014 and 2021. Directly east of the SEPTA Main Line, Route 15 passes by the Girard Medical Center. At Front Street Route 15 runs beneath the Market-Frankford Line's Girard Station, and then crosses Frankford Avenue, one of the two streets the line is named after.

Girard Avenue ends at Exit 23 on Interstate 95, so Route 15 moves beneath the highway onto Richmond Street, parallel to I-95 until it crosses over the street from the north side to the south side before Exit 25, the interchange with Allegheney Avenue, where it connects to the SEPTA Route 60 bus, another former trolley line. The road runs along the Richmond Playground before Route 15's Eastern terminus at the Westmoreland Loop, on the northwest corner of the intersection of Richmond Street and Westmoreland Street.

History

The Richmond and Schuylkill River Passenger Railway was chartered by the Pennsylvania General Assembly on March 26, 1859 to operate along Girard Avenue between the Girard Avenue Bridge over the Schuylkill River in Fairmount Park and Norris Street in Richmond, with an extension authorized west over the bridge to Lancaster Avenue.[3] The line opened from Second Street to 31st Street[4] in July 1859.[citation needed] The company was sold at foreclosure and reorganized as the Fairmount Park and Delaware River Passenger Railway on June 14, 1864,[citation needed] and was merged into the Germantown Passenger Railway (Route 23 Germantown Avenue) on February 15, 1866.[5]

Extensions were opened east to Palmer Street in 1866 (looping via Palmer, Beach, and Shackamaxon Streets[6]) and to Norris Street in 1875.[4] The People's Passenger Railway leased the line on October 1, 1881, and leased the Girard Avenue Railway (chartered May 17, 1894) on June 22, 1896,[5] extending the line west to 60th Street in 1900.[4] The Union Traction Company leased the People's Passenger Railway on July 1, 1896, giving it control over almost all the street railways in Philadelphia.[5] Girard Avenue cars were extended west to 63rd Street and east to Allegheny Avenue - the latter extension along the ex-Electric Traction Company Bridesburg Line on Richmond Street - in 1903,[4] and eventually replaced the Bridesburg Line entirely to Bridesburg.[citation needed] In 1992, SEPTA replaced trolley service along Routes 15, 23, and 56 with buses.

2005 return of trolley

The 15 line has been reopened as a trolley service in September 2005 after having been served by buses for thirteen years. To prepare for the resumption of trolley service, SEPTA spent a total of $100 million, including rehabilitating the tracks and repairs to the overhead wires. The rolling stock for Route 15 consists of PCC II cars, which are 1947 PCC streetcars that had been completely rebuilt by the Brookville Equipment Company as a cost of $1.3 million per trolley. The rebuilt trolley includes the addition of air conditioning and regenerative braking.[7]

The restoration of trolley service was delayed because of a long fight with local residents on 59th Street, which the trolleys needed travel down in order to access the Callowhill Depot, over parking on the street.[8]

Controversy continues to surround daily operations of the trolley line.[9] Shuttle busses have replaced inoperable trolleys more often than not due to alleged mismanaged regular maintenence on the restored trolleys.[10][11] In addition, the trolley has not generated new ridership since its reopening, a point of contention for supporters of resumed R3 Elwyn-Wawa and R8 Fox Chase-Newtown regional rail service in suburban areas lacking alternate public transport. The question of proper usage of public funds ($100 million = no new ridership) has been brought to SEPTA's attention during the summer of 2009 when trolley breakdowns occured on a regular basis.[12]

References

  1. ^ Railway Age, Cash-short SEPTA presses on with capital program, October 1, 2004
  2. ^ 1974 SEPTA Trolley History Brochure (PhillyTrolleys.org)
  3. ^ Public Laws 241 and 242 of 1859 and 1862 of 1861, reprinted in Law Department of the City of Philadelphia, A Digest of Laws Relating to the City of Pennsylvania, 1865, pp. 111-113 (appendix)
  4. ^ a b c d Harold E. Cox, Philadelphia Car Routes, 1982, cited in Template:PDFlink, 2005
  5. ^ a b c American Street Railway Investments, a Supplement to the Street Railway Journal, 1897, p. 198, 200, 204
  6. ^ William B. Atkinson, The Philadelphia Medical Register and Directory, 1875
  7. ^ "Philadelphia's PCCs Return to Service." Railway Age. Vol. 205, No. 10, p. 30. October 1, 2005.
  8. ^ citypaper.net Amy L. Webb (2004). "Communication Breakdown." Philadelphia City Paper. September 30, 2004.
  9. ^ septawatch.blogspot.com
  10. ^ blogcatalog.com
  11. ^ blogcatalog.com/blog
  12. ^ r8newtown.com