The Expo Line is the oldest line in the SkyTrain rapid transit system in Greater Vancouver, Canada. The line is owned and operated by TransLink, and links Surrey with downtown Vancouver.
The Expo Line attracted more than 160,000 passengers daily in 2003. It is expected to carry more than 210,000 daily in 2010 - the year when 41 additional SkyTrain cars go into service and the first full year of revenue service from the brand new Canada Line and Evergreen Line.
The line was simply known as "SkyTrain" from its launch in 1986 until 2002, as it was the only line on the system during this time. It was given its present name in 2002 to differentiate it from Millennium Line, the second line on the SkyTrain system which was opened that year. It was named for Expo 86, the world's fair that Vancouver hosted in 1986. It is designated blue on route maps.
The Expo and Millennium Lines share a common alignment from Waterfront Station in downtown Vancouver to Columbia Station in New Westminster.
As it was a showcase station, Main Street-Science World has a different design from other stations on the Expo Line that came after it. For example, glass is featured in the station's design, but is missing from other future Expo Line stations (except Stadium-Chinatown Station, since it was tied to the Expo grounds). Having preceded other stations on the line by four years, Main Street-Science World is visibly older, and signs of rust and wear are showing.
The guideway for the showcase line was a straight section east of the station running over Terminal Avenue. It ended across from where the Brussels Chocolate Factory is located on Terminal. There was no guideway west of the station as the track ended immediately at the west end of the platform where the VanCity head office now stands.
The ICTS guideway was built differently from the rest of the Expo Line. The columns were different especially with how they are joined with the guideway. The walkway between the two tracks is of a different but also inferior design from the Expo Line, and it is showing signs of rust that come with the older age of the guideway.
The ICTS guideway was retrofitted during the construction of the Millennium Line in order to accommodate the heavier weight MK II cars. This was done by adding additional steel reinforced concrete beams to the columns where they support the guideway. These are clearly visible when driving or walking on Terminal Avenue under the guideway. With the exception of the original ICTS guideway, no other part of the Expo Line required retrofitting for strength in order to accomodate the MK II cars.
Following the demonstration project, the construction of the line between Vancouver and New Westminster got under way in the mid-1980s. In late 1985, SkyTrain began providing free weekend service from Waterfront Station in downtown Vancouver to New Westminster Station, a few months before Expo 86 opened. Full service began on 3 January 1986.
During Expo 86, special shuttle trains ran from a third track at Stadium-Chinatown Station (where there was a connection to the monorail serving the main site of the world's fair) to the Canadian pavilion at Waterfront Station.
The line is elevated from Stadium-Chinatown to New Westminster, except for short at-grade sections between Nanaimo and Joyce Stations in east Vancouver, and around the SkyTrain yards at Edmonds Station in Burnaby.
The line travels underground for a short stretch between New Westminster and Columbia. Just east of Columbia Station is a junction with the newer Millennium Line. The line then crosses the Fraser River to Surrey via the Skybridge, and is elevated for the rest of its run to its terminus at King George.
From just west of Nanaimo Station all the way to New Westminster Station, the Expo Line follows BC Electric's former Central Park Line, which carried interurbans between Vancouver and New Westminster from 1890 to the early 1950s.
SkyTrain | Burnaby, British Columbia | New Westminster, British Columbia
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"Expo Line".
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