The Green Line is a light rail/streetcar system in the Boston, Massachusetts area, run by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). It is the oldest line of Boston's subway, running underground downtown and on the surface in outlying areas. The four branches are the remnants of a once large system of streetcar lines, begun in 1856 with the Cambridge Horse Railroad. The Tremont Street Subway carries cars of all branches under downtown, and is the oldest subway tunnel in North America, opened in stages between September 1, 1897 and September 3, 1898 to take streetcars off surface streets.
The "A" Branch ran to Watertown until 1969. (Although the route-letter scheme had been introduced two years prior to its closure, the "A" designation was never signed on streetcars operating to Watertown. It was, however, included in the destination signs on the Boeing-Vertol LRVs ordered in the mid-1970s, when reopening the Watertown service was still under consideration.) The A line tracks remained in non-revenue service to access maintenance facilities at Watertown until 1994.
The elevated part north of downtown was closed from June, 2004 until November 12, 2005 for replacement of the Causeway Street Elevated with a tunnel under North Station *. The historic concrete Lechmere Viaduct across the Charles River remains.
The original Tremont Street Subway south of Boylston has been closed since 1962, as the lines feeding into it have been bustituted. The Pleasant Street Portal at its south end has been covered over, but there are plans to build a new portal and reuse part of the tunnel for the Silver Line bus rapid transit line.
For many years, the line used the PCC streetcars developed during the Depression. These were finally phased out in favor of new light rail cars supplied by Boeing-Vertol in the mid-1970s. A second generation of LRVs was ordered from the Japanese firm, Kinki Sharyo. These later Kinki Sharyo cars now make up the bulk of the Green Line's rolling stock.
One of the earliest surviving pre-PCC cars can still be seen parked on a sidetrack at the Boylston station. Several of the surviving PCC cars are now run on the Ashmont-Mattapan portion of the Red Line. The San Francisco Muni F Market line historic street railway runs a PCC car in Boston colors, but that specific car never actually ran in Boston.
Originally, none of the Green Line stations included elevated platforms and the passengers had to step up into the vehicles, limiting accessibility for persons with disabilities. To address this, two changes have been made:
One hundred low-floor cars were purchased from the Italian vendor Ansaldobreda (aka "Breda"). These have proven to be problematic and difficult to maintain. Breda cars have failed every 400 miles, far less than the 9,000 miles specified by the MBTA, and were prone to derailments. The MBTA was forced to spend an additional USD $9.5 million to modify tracks to prevent the derailment problems (echoing early problems with the Boeing stock).
In December 2004, the MBTA canceled orders for the remaining 53 cars still to be delivered as part of the Breda contract -- ending its 9-year, USD $225 million-dollar deal with Breda. The MBTA has been criticized for its failure to assess Breda's reliability before and during the deal. One year later, in December 2005 the MBTA announced that it had entered into a restructuring of the deal with Ansaldobreda, reducing the order to 85 cars (with spare parts to be provided in lieu of the 15 remaining cars), and providing for the remaining payment under the original 1995 deal only if the cars meet performance requirements. *
Most of the Breda cars acquired during the deal have been dedicated exclusively to servicing the "B" line. Beginning in January 2006, Breda cars began running on the "C" line, and Breda cars are scheduled to enter service on the "E" line and "D" line beginning in fall 2006. Those branches are still serviced by Kinki Sharyo cars with an average manufacturing date of 1986, many of which have become mechanically unreliable due to their age, often resulting in long delays in service during cold weather. This has become particularly problematic on the D line, which extends through open, lightly wooded terrain outside the city for several miles.
The Green Line's rolling stock as of 2006 includes:
In 1897, the West End Street Railway property was handed over to the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) in the form of a 24 year lease, and the companies were ultimately combined. BERy, now under state ownership, is today's MBTA, with the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) in the interim from 1947 to 1964.
As a tunnel built to get streetcar lines off the streets, rather than a rapid transit line, the Green Line has had many branches, with many services operating in many patterns. Additionally, many services from other companies, notably the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway and its predecessors, have run into the subway from outer suburban points via BERy trackage. A partial list of these services is in the green rows on Boston-area streetcar lines.
The "A" or "Watertown" Branch was the northernmost of the branches, running from the Blandford Street Portal (still used by the "B" Branch) west to Watertown, mostly street-running. The bus replaced the streetcar line in 1969.
The Pleasant Street Portal hosted two services in its final days. The to City Point ended in 1953, and the to Egleston was cut back to Lenox Street in 1956, cut back to the portal in 1961, and ended operation in 1962. Prior to that, the ran out Tremont Street to Dover Street and Washington Street, ending at Dudley, and last running in 1938.
The last two routes to continue beyond the Canal Street Portal both ran to Sullivan. The ran via Main Street, last running in 1948, and the via Bunker Hill Street last ran in 1949. Until 1997 trains continued to use the portal and its North Station surface station as a terminal.
In addition to the lines that later became the "E" Branch, the predecessors to the and split in Brookline, one branch running into the current "E" tracks and into the Boylston Street Portal, and the other running up Brookline Street to end at Massachusetts Avenue station. These were truncated in 1932 into a shorter route from Brookline Village to the subway via the Boylston Street Portal, which itself stopped running in 1938 (being cut back to Brigham Circle short-turn trips), three years before the closure of that portal.
The last "foreign" cars to operate in the subway were those of the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, running from the Canal Street Portal to the Brattle Loop at Scollay Square until 1935. It was then that the old Mystic River Bridge to Chelsea was closed to streetcars and the lines were bustituted; the next year the BERy bought the Eastern Mass Chelsea Division and through-routed it with its lines connecting to the East Boston Tunnel at Maverick.
From July 10, 1922 (when the Lechmere terminal opened) to February 6, 1931, special service ran from Lechmere to various points on the subway. These trips were replaced on February 7 by extensions of the various branches from the west, which had terminated at Park Street, through to Lechmere.
| Station | Location | Time to Park Street | Opened | Transfers and notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cambridge Street, Cambridge | 13 minutes (sign said 12) | July 10, 1922 | "E" terminates here Viaduct to Lechmere opened June 1, 1912, with tracks running directly onto streets through July 9, 1922 | |
| Science Park | Charles River Dam Bridge, Boston, serving the Museum of Science | 8 minutes | August 20, 1955 | |
| Canal Street, Boston | June 28, 2004 | "C" terminates here and Orange Line and MBTA Commuter Rail north side lines Surface station opened September 3, 1898 and closed March 27, 1997 Elevated station opened June 1, 1912 and closed June 24, 2004 | ||
| Congress and New Sudbury Streets, Boston | May 10, 1971 | Orange Line Original station opened September 3, 1898 | ||
| Adams Square | September 3, 1898 | Closed October 27, 1963 | ||
| Government Center | Tremont, Court and Cambridge Streets, Boston, serving Boston City Hall and the Faneuil Hall/Quincy Market area | 2 minutes | September 3, 1898 | "B" and "D" Branches terminate here Blue Line Formerly Scollay Square until October 27, 1963 |
| Tremont, Park and Winter Streets, Boston, at the Boston Common | 0 minutes | September 1, 1897 | Red Line, Orange Line and Silver Line | |
| Boylston | Tremont and Boylston Streets, Boston | 1 minute | September 1, 1897 | Silver Line Tracks used to split at Boylston to the Pleasant Street Incline |
| Arlington | Boylston and Arlington Streets, Boston | 3 minutes | November 13, 1921 | |
| Copley | Copley Square, Boston | 4 minutes | October 3, 1914 | "E" Branch splits after Copley no crossover between directions at Copley; use Arlington to reverse direction |
| Hynes Convention Center/ICA | Massachusetts Avenue and Newbury Street, Boston | October 3, 1914 | Formerly Massachusetts until February 17, 1965, then Auditorium until March 27, 1990 | |
| Kenmore | Kenmore Square, Boston, serving Fenway Park | 11 minutes | October 23, 1932 | "B", "C" and "D" Branches split here |
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