East Loop Trolley Track Alignment, 9 Stops Selected, Western Terminus Decision Delayed

Relying on “technical findings” and feedback from the Loop Trolley open house, East-West Gateway has made some decisions regarding track design. Single track east of Delmar Metrolink station (above) is “in” while the double-track in the East Loop (below) is “out”.

What does this mean? The single-track has fewer utility impacts and is estimated to save $5M in construction costs. Presumably headways would need to be greater with a single track, or at least the option to increase them may disappear. However, with DeBaliviere also planned for single-track there must be a double-track bypass somewhere east of the Delmar Metrolink station (though I have not seen detailed plans for this). My take is that this was purely a money decision. Anyone see an operational benefit to this decision?

The second decision is to run the single-track on DeBaliviere to the east of traffic and adjacent to the sidewalk and greenway (first image below). Well, this may negate my “purely a money decision” cynicism as the chosen option was stated to cost $300K more. According to the Loop Trolley Company the chosen option also provides less safe boarding and requires a more narrow greenway to be built to the east. So why was this alignment chosen? Who knows, no reasoning is given.

East-West Gateway also selected nine station stops. Locations include: The Missouri History Museum, Forest Park Metro, Crossroads College Preparatory School, Laurel and Delmar, Delmar MetroLink Station, the Pageant, the Tivoli, the Market and Trinity or Kingsland.

Finally, a decision regarding the western terminus of the Loop Trolley was left unresolved. Either a Loop or Stub will be constructed near University City City Hall.


{western terminus Loop}


{western terminus Stub}

CONTRIBUTE

NextSTL is committed to providing original stories and unique perspectives on a variety of urban topics such as architecture, development, transportation, historic preservation, urban planning and design and public policy in St. Louis. We're always looking to add new, diverse voices to the mix. We accept anonymous tips, pitches for story ideas, and completed stories.

Learn More