Montreal’s new light-rail train network will be the 3rd largest of its kind
It will be the biggest transit project since the Montreal métro, but this one will be built and mostly funded by a pension fund.
Answering decades of demands for an airport link from downtown, the $5.5-billion Réseau électrique métropolitain will be a vast network linking the South Shore, the West Island and Deux-Montagnes to both the airport and the downtown core.
Leaving from Central Station, the 67-kilometre network will use the track running through the Mount Royal tunnel, taking over the Deux-Montagnes line — which already runs electric trains — from the Agence métropolitaine de transport. New tracks will be built over the new Champlain Bridge, and link to the South Shore, ending near the intersection of Highways 30 and 10 in Brossard. Two other dedicated tracks will be built, branching off from the Deux-Montagnes line, where Highway 13 meets Highway 40. One track will head to Trudeau airport, with a stop in the Technoparc in St-Laurent. Another will follow Highway 40 toward Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue. The existing Vaudreuil-Dorion train line won’t be affected by the project.
Because the trains will be fully automated, Sabia said the operating cost of the network will be low. The first stations will come online in 2020.
According to Macky Tall, the president of CDPQ Infra, the Caisse’s infrastructure arm, the REM will be « the most important public transit project in Montreal in the last 50 years ».
Source: Montreal Gazette
Image : Photo by Daniel Abadia on Unsplash