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Photo: W.S. Lind
Light Rail

Photo: W.S. Lind
A Streetcar
Vintage and Heritage Streetcars
A streetcar line may use modern,
Vintage or Heritage streetcars. While most streetcar lines in
other countries use modern cars, only one American line does so,
that in Portland, Oregon. Most American streetcars are "Vintage"
or "Heritage" cars. What is the difference? Vintage streetcars
are actual antiques, built sometime between the 1890s and the
1950s. Heritage streetcars are new cars built to antique designs.
Can actual antiques provide modern
transportation? Yes, they can. The best example is the St. Charles
Avenue streetcar line in New Orleans. The St. Charles Avenue line
is the oldest public transit line in North America; the first
tracks were laid in 1834. Just over six miles long, the St. Charles
Avenue line carries about 23,000 people on an average weekday,
all in a fleet of 35 Perley Thomas streetcars built in 1922 and
1923. 5 Why hasn't New Orleans bought modern streetcars? Because
the citizens would revolt if it did! They love their old streetcars,
with their wooden seats, clanging bells and windows that open.
They offer all the charms of the good old days, plus real transportation.

Photo: Paul M. Weyrich
A New Orleans Streetcar.
While the St. Charles Avenue cars
are Vintage streetcars, New Orleans is now building -- in its
own shops -- 23 Heritage cars for the new Canal Street streetcar
line. These will look like the Perley Thomas cars, but they will
be replicas, which is what makes them Heritage streetcars .
Which make the most sense for your city's or town's new streetcar
line, modern streetcars, Vintage cars or Heritage cars? That is
up to you. In general, modern streetcars are the most expensive,
but they offer air conditioning (which Heritage cars can also
offer) and quieter, smoother rides. If you want to project a modern
image, you will probably want modern streetcars. Vintage streetcars
make the most sense if you have streetcars that actually used
to run in your city or town, or if you want to use the famous
Art Deco PCC streetcars, which are readily available. Heritage
streetcars are easier to maintain than a mixed fleet of Vintage
cars, and, being new, can stand up to heavy usage. At the same
time, they offer a historic look and feel that fit well into a
downtown or small town made up mainly of historic buildings.

Photo: Paul M. Weyich
PCC Streetcar in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Our advice would be, get streetcars
that fit well with their surroundings. Because streetcars and
cities are natural partners, that isn't hard to do.
Who Else Is Doing It?
When you propose a new streetcar
line for your city or town, someone will probably ask, "Is anyone
else doing this?" The answer is yes. Lots of places are, so many
it is hard to keep track of them all.
Other than the new streetcar in
Portland, Oregon, all the existing lines use Heritage or Vintage
equipment. To keep things simple, we will refer to them all as
"Heritage lines" here. These Heritage lines are of two types:
stand-alone operations, which are not integrated into the rest
of the local public transit system, and integrated lines. All
the lines covered here are " common carriers," which people take
to go somewhere, not just for a trolley ride.
The stand-alone lines operate mostly
for tourists, although they do provide some local transportation
to residents. They include:
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Detroit, Michigan.
This was the first purpose-built Heritage streetcar line in
the U.S. It opened in 1976. The narrow-gauge line is 1.2 miles
long, running through downtown.
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Detroit from the Renaissance Center
to Grand Circus Park.
It has a wonderful collection of nine antique streetcars,
including three built in the 1890s. The hours of operation
are from 8 AM to 6 PM weekdays and 10 AM to 6 PM on weekends.
The fare is 50 cents, and average daily ridership is about
150 in spring and summer and 60 in winter.
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Tucson, Arizona.
Tucson 's Old Pueblo Trolley runs for 1.1 miles from the main
gate of the University of Arizona to downtown; many of its
passengers are students at theuniversity. This streetcar line
is operated solely by volunteers, and has just one streetcar
currently in service, a 1953 Hankai Electric Railway car from
Japan. At present, service isoffered only on Friday, Saturday
and Sunday. However, the line is to be extended to the Rio
Nuevo historical area, at which point daily operation is likely.
Three more streetcars are being restored for service, including
a 1936 tram from Brussels, Belgium and a 1912 AmericanCar
Company streetcar from St. Louis.
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Charlotte, North Carolina.
At present, the non-profit Charlotte Trolley runs weekdays--
only over a 1.2-mile non-electrified line (the car tows a
generator). But the city of Charlotte has invested $10 million
in the operation, which will extend the line 1.5 miles through
(literally!) the Convention Center and into downtown; the
whole line will also be electrified. When the extension is
completed, Charlotte's five streetcars will operate seven
days a week. The fleet includes a 1922 Birney Safety car,
a 1927 Brill Birney, a 1949 St. Louis PCC, a 1927 Southern
Public Utilities car and a 1914 United Electric Car from Preston,
England. Amazingly, new apartment buildings, condominiums
and restaurants are already being built with the streetcar
line as the focus. Current ridership is about 200 people per
day; that should increase substantially when the extension
opens.
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San Pedro, California.
San Pedro will soon begin operation of one of the great icons
from the streetcar era -- the famous "Red Cars" of Pacific
Electric. Intended to serve passengers from the cruise ships
that dock in San Pedro, this 1.5-mile line will operate four
days per week with three Pacific Electric cars -- one original
and two newly-built replicas. Theplanned fare is 25 cents,
and the new line is to begin operations before the end of
2002.
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Little Rock, Arkansas.
Service is to begin in 2003 on a 2.2-mile line from North
Little Rock to downtown. Three Heritage cars are being built
by Gomaco in Iowa. Fares are likely to be 50 cents, operation
will be seven days a week and ridership is estimated at 1500
daily.
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Several cities that have Light Rail lines also
operate Heritage streetcars over portions of the Light Rail
route. MAX in Portland, Oregon, runs replicas of its famous
"Council crest" cars from Lloyd Center to Downtown Portland
on Saturdays and Sundays from March through December. The
fare is free and the cars carry around 6000 people each day.
Two Council Crest cars also now operate on weekends on Portland's
new streetcar line. San Jose, California, also runs historic
cars through the downtown, on the Light Rail tracks, charging
regular Light Rail fares of $1.25.
In addition to these stand-alone
streetcar lines, a number of cities have streetcar lines that
are tied in with the regular transit system. Interestingly, some
are "survivors" -- streetcar lines that simply never quit or received
new equipment, and with the passage of time now find themselves
numbered among the Heritage lines. We have already touched on
one of these, perhaps the most famous: New Orleans's St. Charles
Avenue line. That line, with its fleet of Perley Thomas streetcars
built in the 1920s, is fully a part of the New Orleans transit
system, carrying some 23,000 passengers each day for a fare of
$1.25. It has also become one of New Orleans 's major tourist
attractions, almost on a par with San Francisco's famous cable
cars.
Not only has the St. Charles Avenue
line survived, it is so successful that it has sparked a general
streetcar revival in New Orleans. In 1988, the city opened a new
Riverfront line. Now, the Canal Street streetcar line is being
restored. About five miles of new track with 23 replica Perley
Thomas cars will run from the Esplanade stop of the Riverfront
line to the famous New Orleans cemeteries (it will also connect
with the St. Charles Avenue line). And when that is open, New
Orleans intends to restore the famous "streetcar named Desire,"
on a new line that will connect most of the city's tourist attractions.
Evidently, a city that thrives on tourism has found streetcars
a good investment.
Another "survivor" Heritage streetcar
line is to be found in Boston, Massachusetts. Many years ago,
the "T," as the Boston transit system is universally known, built
what they called a high-speed trolley line, connecting the Ashmont
Heavy Rail Red Line station with the community of Mattapan, about
two-and-a-half miles away. In the 1940s, the line was assigned
a group of PCC cars. And then, as if by magic, it all just froze
in time. The same PCC cars are still running today, from 4: 30
AM every morning to 1: 30 AM the next day, carrying about 7000
passengers daily. The T has tried for years to close the Ashmont-Mattapan
line, but community pressure has stopped them every time. The
people the line serves -- who are mostly poor and mostly black
-- love their streetcars and are not about to let anyone take
them away. Recently, the T relented and began rebuilding the old
PCC cars, restoring their beautiful original color scheme and
getting them ready for their second half-century of service.
Meanwhile, in Philadelphia work
is underway to restore an old streetcar line, Route 15 -- Girard
Avenue, which has been served by buses since 1992. SEPTA, the
Philadelphia transit system, has decided to use restored PCC cars
rather than modern Light Rail Vehicles on Rou te15, and it is
now rebuilding about 20 PCCs. As in Boston, the "new" cars will
be entering their second half-century of service. In addition
to local neighborhoods, Route 15 -- Girard Avenue runs past a
number of historic churches and the famous Philadelphia Zoo, so
the restored line may serve tourists as well as residents.
In addition to survivors, a number
of new streetcar lines are also fully integrated components of
the local transit system. One of the most interesting is the new
Heritage streetcar line in the small city (90,000) of Kenosha,
Wisconsin. When the old American Motors plant right in the heart
of downtown Kenosha closed and then was demolished, it left a
potentially disastrous hole in the city. But a young city official
named Joe McCarthy saw an opportunity. Guided by his vision, Kenosha
built a Heritage streetcar line in the form of a loop that connects
the train station and the waterfront, running alongside the vacant
land. The line cost just $ 4 million, including five PCC streetcars.
And it is working! New housing
developments are going up where the car factory once stood; their
residents can take the streetcar from their doorstep to catch
commuter trains to Chicago. A new museum has opened at the waterfront,
and it has almost no parking; its visitors come by streetcar.
Much of the downtown business district lies on or a short walk
from the streetc arline. Most Kenosha bus lines interchange with
the trolley.
Tragically, Joe McCarthy died of
a heart attack just weeks after the streetcar line began service.
But its success will be a memorial to him for many decades to
come.
One of the first integrated streetcar
lines is Seattle's Route 99, the Waterfront line, which began
operating in 1982. The 2.5-mile line has five former Melbourne,
Australia streetcars built in 1927. It operates seven days a week
from 7 AM to 11 PM, with cars running every twenty minutes. Fares
are $1 to $1.25, depending on time of day, and Route 99 is fully
integrated with the Seattle bus system. The southern end of the
line is across the street from the International District station,
which is a major terminal for the trolleybus subway. Commuters
make up a portion of the 400 average weekday riders; Saturday
ridership is about 800 and Sunday's approaches 600. Some downtown
special events have seen the line carry several thousand people
on a single evening.
Spring, 2002, is scheduled to see
the opening of Tampa, Florida's new Heritage streetcar line, the
TECO line, named for the Tampa Electric Company that used to operate
the city's many streetcars. This 2.3 mile line, which will connect
Tampa with the Ybor City entertainment district, is being built
and will be operated solely with private funds. It will have eight
replica Birney double-truck streetcars, plus two Vintage Birney's
which are now being restored. The large fleet will enable the
operators to revive an old streetcar motto, "Always a car in sight."
The TECO line will run seven days
a week, from 10 AM to 10 PM, with later service on weekends. Patronage
is projected at 250,000 people per year, which may prove conservative
as significant development is already taking place along the line.
TECO intends to have a transfer arrangement with Tampas HART line
buses.
Perhaps the most successful of
all the new integrated streetcar lines is San Francisco's F line,
also known as the Market Street Railway. Years ago, when San Francisco
built a subway under Market Street, it left the streetcar tracks
on the surface in place. In 1983, the Chamber of Commerce used
those tracks for a Historic Trolley Festival, running a number
of the city's antique streetcars. The festival was so popular
it was repeated in subsequent years. Then, in 1995, the old cars
began regular service on Market Street, running from the Castro
District downtown to the Financial District near the Ferry Terminal.
In the year 2000, a new line opened,
the F line. Also using historic streetcars (Vintage cars, actual
antiques), the F line continues the Market Street line on new
trackage along the waterfront to Fisherman's Wharf. the F line
was an immediate huge success, carrying so many people the cars
were crowded with standees. Today, ridership on the F line (a
six-mile route, including Market Street) is 19,200 on an average
weekday, 10,000 on Saturdays and 9,500 on Sundays. Service hours
are 6:00 AM to 12:30 AM.
The F line's fleet of Vintage streetcars
is unique. Now made up of 25 streetcars in regular service, with
4 more undergoing restoration, it includes car 578-S, built in
1895 and one of the oldest operable streetcars in the world; Car
No. 1, the first streetcar bought by San Francisco's municipally-owned
streetcar system; and streetcars from Oporto, Portugal; Melbourne,
Australia; Hiroshima and Osaka, Japan; Moscow, Russia; and Blackpool,
England. The everyday operating fleet relies on Peter Witt cars
(first developed in Cleveland, Ohio) from Milan, Italy and restored
PCC cars. The latter are painted in the color schemes of cities
across America that once ran PCCs on their own streetcar lines.
As a New York Times reporter wrote,
While the F line is fast becoming one of San Francisco's
most popular tourist attractions, it may turn out to be much
more. Day after day, it is reminding visitors of something they
may have forgotten: that trolleys are a good way to get around
congested cities. 6
Some of these streetcar lines are
part of Business Improvement Districts (BIDs), which are broad-scale
efforts to bring back urban areas which have seen better days.
BIDs are generally non-profit corporations which bring together
volunteer efforts, city government and historic preservation groups
to gain resources and provide direction to local rehabilitation
movements. Streetcars are a natural "fit" with BIDs, because,
like other rail transit, streetcars promote economic development.
As Greg Hnedak, one of the planners of Memphis' Main Street Trolley
put it, "Buses are cheaper, but when you put rails down, you have
made a permanent commitment, and developers can see that commitment.
Rail lines become development corridors." 7
As this survey illustrates, streetcar
lines that are integrated into the local transit system are generally
more useful and attract greater ridership than those which stand
alone. Streetcars are, after all, real transportation, and should
be treated like other transportation. They perform a real function
for local residents, and should not be seen merely as a tourist
attraction (though they do also attract tourists). This is true
whether the streetcar line is actually owned and operated by the
local transit authority, as in San Francisco, or is a separate
entity. Separate need not mean disconnected, and should not. Both
the streetcar operator and the transit system benefit when the
two are integrated as if they were part of a seamless system,
at least from the passenger's point of view.
What Does It Cost?
We will take a detailed look at
costs in our three case studies, which make up the next section
of this paper. In general, the answer to the question, "What does
it cost?", is the same answer J.P. Morgan gave when a reporter
asked him, "Mr. Morgan, what is the stock market going to do?"
The great financier replied, "It will fluctuate."
Costs of streetcar lines vary widely,
because the characteristics of streetcar lines vary widely. In
fact, it can be difficult to obtain the construction cost of a
streetcar line, because building the line is often part of a larger
project that includes other elements.
San Francisco's new F Line provides
a good example. This is a double-track streetcar line, built to
Light Rail standards, which now carries almost 20,000 people per
day (all in Vintage cars, we would note). The construction cost
was about $30 million per mile, which is high even for Light Rail.
But much of that money went for visual enhancements that have
nothing to do with running streetcars, including extensive use
of granite and marble and even planting palm trees along the right-of-way.
A city that wanted just the streetcar line without thecarmen Miranda-style
décor could build it for substantially less. 8
At the other end of the scale is
the excellent and highly innovative two-mile streetcar line recently
opened in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The total cost was just $4 million,
or $2 million per mile, including five restored PCC streetcars.
Some other examples include:
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Portland, Oregon,
the only line using modern streetcars. The 4.6 mile loop line
was constructed for $12.4 million per mile, including seven
new streetcars, built in the Czech Republic.
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Tampa, Florida,
a 2.3 mile line built for $13.7 million per mile including
eight Heritage streetcars. The cars themselves, replicas of
1920's Birney streetcars, cost $600,000 each (compared to
up to $3 million for a modern Light Rail Vehicle).
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Little Rock, Arkansas,
a 2.1 mile line built for $7.1 million per mile, including
three streetcars. 9
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San Pedro, California,
a 1.5 mile line that recreates the old Pacific Electric "Red
Cars" for $4 million per mile, including three streetcars,
one Vintage and two Heritage. 10 The costs
of Heritage and Vintage streetcars vary as much as construction
costs of streetcar lines. Heritage streetcars cost between
$200,000 and $800,000, depending on type and features (e.g.,
air conditioning). One of the best sources of Vintage streetcars
is Milan, Italy, which is gradually selling off its vast fleet
of 1920s-built Peter Witt cars, a type that was widely used
in the U.S. These cars go for $25,000 -$35,000 each, and have
been maintained so faithfully that they can go into service
the day they arrive. Other Vintage cars vary greatly in price,
depending largely on condition; some last served as chicken
coops.
Since many Vintage and Heritage
streetcar lines make use of volunteer labor, operating costs can
be very low. Perhaps the best guide to operating costs for a major
streetcar system that hauls lots of people and uses only paid
labor -- transit company employees -- is our oldfa vorite, New
Orleans. An APTA analysis, using data from the 1996 National Transit
Database, compared 20 Light Rail systems' operating costs, including
those of New Orleans streetcar lines (St. Charles Avenue and the
Waterfront line). 11 Operating costs were measured
in four ways, and New Orleans ranked as follows (20th is lowest
in operating cost):
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Operating expense per passenger mile: 16th
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Operating cost per vehicle mile: 17th
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Operating cost per vehicle hour: 18th
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Operating cost per passenger trip: 20th
An interesting wrinkle on operating
costs comes from Tampa, Florida. There, the organization that
will operate the Heritage streetcars has raised an endowment of
almost $7 million, the interest from which will cover part of
the operating costs.
In closing the discussion of costs
-- and stressing again that they vary widely -- let us offer a
minor Philippic. The greatest threat to the future of rail transit
is not Wendell Cox and the restof the anti-transit troubadors.
12 The greatest threat to America's rail renaissance
is escalating costs, costs that go far beyond what is required
to offer good service. We know Light Rail can be built and built
well for $20 million per mile, because some systems do it; the
latest extension of Dallas's DART Light Rail system came in at
just over $18 million per mile. St. Louis and Baltimore did it,
too. Why, then, do we see more and more Light Rail systems asking
for $40 million, $60 million, and in one case more than $100 million
per mile? The answer, too often, appears to be overbuilding, gold
plating, and the pernicious practice of placating NIMBYs with
tunneling, which should only be used when geographic obstacles
make it unavoidable.
We see signs of the same disease
appearing in streetcar lines. Museums build streetcar lines and
operate them for a pittance. So can, and should, public authorities.
San Francisco's F line is a great success, but why should a poor
streetcar be billed for recreating the Taj Mahal?
The authors of this paper both
recall vividly an incident all too typical in overbuilding.whenclevel
a nd's fine old Shaker Rapid line was rebuilt, the cost was more
than $100 million, and the result was slower trains running on
less frequent schedules. When someone asked the local U.S. Representative
about the outrage, the reply was, "Why not? It's free money, "
meaning Federal funds. Bah! Humbug! Where's our old friend Mr.
Scrooge when the taxpayer needs him?
Currently, the Federal Transit Administration's
process for giving new rail proposals a "recommended" or "not
recommended" rating is based too heavily on ridership forecasts.
We strongly suggest it should also include a base line "should
cost" figure of not more than $20 million per mile for Light Rail
and $10 million per mile for streetcars (a similar "should-cost"
figure should be set for urban highway construction). Exceptions
should be granted, but only when circumstances such as the need
to tunnel through a mountain or other unavoidable local conditions
clearly justify them.
Some rail advocates may see this
as treason. In fact, we are trying to save rail transit from itself,
to prevent Light Rail and streetcars from doing what Heavy Rail
did and pricing themselves out of the market.
And just in case you have forgotten,
please remember that we are conservatives. We believe that the
right place for a taxpayer's dollar is in his own pocket, not
the pocket of some fat cat politician or bloated government agency.
Off with their heads!
Having gotten that off our chests,
let us now proceed to see what three different cities, using three
quite different approaches, have done to give their citizens the
many benefits of streetcar service.
Three Case Studies
As we have seen in our previous
studies in this series, looking in some detail at specific operations
can be useful. Here, we will consider three different streetcar
lines or systems,each with different characteristics. The first,
the McKinney Avenue Transit Authority (MATA ) in Dallas, Texas,
represents Vintage trolleys run almost entirely with volunteer
labor. The second, in Memphis, Tennessee, is also a Vintage trolley
operation, but it is run by the local transit authority and operated
by transit system employees. Memphis also represents the use of
Vintage trolleys as precursors to Light Rail. Finally, we will
examine the new streetcar line in Portland, Oregon, which is operated
with modern streetcars. These three cases cover a sufficiently
wide spectrum that any city or town considering bringing back
streetcars will find at least one speaks to its own situation.
Dallas, Texas
The early history of the McKinney
Avenue trolley line holds some useful lessons for anyone interested
in bringing back streetcars. It is worth quoting at some length:
In 1981 a Dallas area along McKinney
Avenue, characterized by restaurants and specialty shops, was
being redeveloped. The effort included excavation and renovation
of the brick street paving. Removal of the asphalt revealed
a double-track streetcar line that appeared to be in generally
sound condition. A local businessman, with restaurant interests
along this route, decided that trolley service on that portion
of McKinney Avenue would enhance both the ambiance and commercial
success of the redevelopment project. His observation that,
"Wouldn't it be nice to have some old streetcars running down
our street?" drew local media attention. After screening vintage
Dallas trolley movies (supplied by a local VT ( Vintage Trolley)
enthusiast), the businessman organized MATA as a nonprofit corporation
-- Section 501(c)( 3) of the Internal Revenue Code -- to build
and operate the line. Two local trolley enthusiasts joined the
board to oversee technical aspects of the project.
The businessman funded a professional
feasibility study that supported the concept. He arranged pro
bono public relations and advertising services, conducted fund-raising
events, secured local business funding pledges, achieved city
support, and applied successfully for two UMTA con struction
grants. MATA's early initiatives addressed mainly political
hurdles. The businessman headed a small team that promoted MATA
steadily before Dallas' city government for several years. This
major effort finally produced the city's official endorsement
and passage, in the Texas Senate, of a bill that limited the
liability of city-contracted private transport firms to that
of the city itself. Once these hurdles were cleared, MATA began
to develop a physical plant. 13
That physical plant consisted of
a 2.8 mile streetcar line, four vintage streetcars and a carbarn.
The total cost was $5.5 million, and $3 million of that came from
the private sector; a $2.5 million Federal grant supplied the
rest. The city of Dallas spent about $200,000 for signs, pavement
marking and traffic light relocation. All the antique streetcars
were privately donated or funded.
Photo: Van Wilkins
McKinney Avenue Transit Authority Streetcar.
Service began on July 22, 1989,
and it continues today. All operating costs have been privately
funded. In its first two years of operation, the McKinney Avenue
streetcar had a daily ridership load factor about double that
of the surrounding bus system. 14 In 1990, the
trolley line carried 236,074 passengers and recovered 46% of its
costs from the farebox. 15
In 1991, MATA faced a financial
crisis that led to its current structure as an almost all-volunteer
operation (it currently has three paid employees). The fact that
the system uses mostly volunteer labor is a principal reason why
its operation requires no public funding. Is it really practical
to try to run a real transit operation with volunteer labor? McKinney
Avenue's answer is a resounding "Yes!" A detailed study of the
line, published in 1992, notes:
MATA's time sheets reveal that
two-thirds of the operating labor hours are volunteer. This
volunteer group includes the chief of cardiology at a major
hospital, a retired public utility chairman, a bus driver's
union president, educators, business owners, wage earners and
college students. Generally they are reliable, motivated, and
professional in demeanor. Their accident rate is lower that
that of MATA's paid employees. MATA's policy assigns each volunteer
to a specific task or project that is defined with specific
beginnings and completions. Once the volunteer is matched with
the job, they usually carry out the assignment with minimal
supervision. The volunteer has both the responsibility and the
personal recognition for a job well done. The key to volunteer
motivation is organization, individual responsibility, recognition,
and praise. 16
The same study, "McKinney Avenue
Transit Authority Experience," by Frank A Schultz III and John
B.McCall (Transportation Research Record 1361), makes a number
of other observations that may be useful to cities or towns considering
a Vintage trolley line:
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Is it practical to use actual antique streetcars
as opposed to replicas?
The study notes: In retrospect, choice of
old cars over replicas was the correct approach. The traditions
of MATA's steel car body designs, one of which is nearly
90 years old, have proven to be extremely reliable. It was
the attraction of the genuine article that drew the large,
skilled volunteer restorative force that did much of the
work on the project. Even if the labor had been purchased,
a restored car would still have been less expensive than
an estimated (in 1992) $450,000 reproduction car. With the
volunteer force, the cost of restoring a double-truck car
was approximately $185,000. Add ition all y, MATA has tied
its promotion and marketing to "genuine antique streetcars."
17
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Is it possible to use the old streetcar rails
which still lie under the asphalt on many city streets?
The study says, "MATA experience indicates that revival
of abandoned track in-place can be done at 10 percent of the
cost of new track on a new route." 18 Of
course, in some instances the track was worn out by the time
regular streetcar service ended, and replacement rails will
be needed. But even if that is the case, a great deal of the
expense of utility line relocation can be avoided by using
old streetcar right-of-ways.
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Is there a good book that can guide a town
or city in establishing a streetcar line?
The study reaches back into the past to recommend one: "For
a project manager new to Vintage Trolleys, a most useful reference
is the Electric Railway Handbook by Alberts. Richey, published
by McGraw-Hill in 1924. Reprints of this volume are available
from the Association of Railway Museums." 19
Streetcars have now been running
on McKinney Avenue for more than a dozen years. Far from being
a mere tourist attraction, the line is in the process of becoming
a formal part of Dallas's rail transit system. In 1996, Dallas's
DART transit system opened its first Light Rail line. The McKinney
Avenue streetcar line is now being extended on each end to a stop
on the Light Rail system. Passengers will be able to transfer
easily from Light Rail to streetcar, with the streetcar performing
the function it does best, carrying people to local destinations
within the city.
Still using almost entirely volunteer
labor, the McKinney Avenue streetcar runs seven days a week, twelve
hours a day (and later on weekends), 365 days a year. When the
extensions to DART are completed, streetcars will run every ten
minutes during peak demand hours. McKinney Avenue now has four
antique streetcars in service, with four more being rehabilitated.
Last year it carried about 50,000 people. It gets not one dollar
in taxpayer money for operation. The one-mile extension on the
north end is being built for the remarkably low figure of $3.3
million. 20
If you want to bring the streetcars
back to your town or city and don't have much money to do it with,
the McKinney Avenue Transit Authority offers a very good model.
You can contact them at (214) 855-0006.
Memphis, Tennessee

Photo: Van Wilkens
A Streetcar in Memphis, Tennessee.
In an effort to reverse urban decline,
Memphis decided in the 1970s to create a downtown pedestrian mall,
running about eight-tenths of a mile on Main Street, which parallels
the Mississippi River. By the late 1980s, the mall was failing.
Part of the reason was that it was too long for people to walk.
21
When Memphis decided to redevelop
the mall, it realized transit had to be part of the solution.
Buses running down the mall were considered, but rejected as incompatible
with pedestrians. In 1990, the city decided a streetcar line was
the solution, using Vintage streetcars.
The initial line began service
in 1993. It was 2.5 miles long, mostly double-tracked. The streetcars
served the mall, but also ran beyond it on both ends to serve
areas that needed economic development. Outside the mall, the
streetcars ran on the street, sharing a lane with automobile traffic.
In 1997, the initial line was converted into a loop by adding
a parallel line which ran mostly on an old railroad track. The
addition brought the total system up to a length of five miles.
All but one of the streetcars are
antiques, of two basic designs. Seven cars are four-wheel Brill
streetcars, two built in the U.S. in 1912, the rest built later
in Portugal to the same Brill design. The Brill cars have wooden
bodies and 19 seats. The other seven antique cars (more are being
restored) are larger (52 seats), slightly newer, have metal bodies
and came from Melbourne, Australia. As elsewhere, the antique
cars in Memphis have proven reliable in regular service.
Service is provided seven days
a week, and the fare is $.60 ($. 30 around lunchtime). Service
begins early on weekdays, at 6 AM, to accommodate people going
to work. It runs late on weekends, to 1 AM and sometimes later,
to serve people who have come downtown for entertainment. Eleven
streetcars are operated in peak travel hours, with a car coming
by about every five minutes.
In term of ridership, the streetcars
of Memphis have been a big success. In the first full year of
service, 1994, ridership was 468,115; in 1999, it was 922,475,
and in the year 2000 it rose to 941,011. Estimated current daily
ridership is 2774 on weekdays and 1704 on weekends. In 1999, the
streetcars carried almost three times more passengers per revenue
mile than Memphis 's buses. 22
It may be helpful to other cities
and towns that are considering streetcars to look in more det
ail at streetcar riders in Memphis, because it shows what streetcars
can do. A good study of the Memphis streetcar line by Mr. Thomas
Fox, the system's Director of Planning and Capital Projects, notes
that:
Monday through Thursday ridership
is comprised mainly of downtown workers and residents who use
the system on a regular basis. Friday through Sunday ridership
is more dependent on the activities that occur downtown. Saturday
is the highest ridership day, with 3,887 riders in 1999... Monday
through Thursday ridership is fairly stable but gradually increases
as the week progresses, ranging between 2,030 and 2,456 daily
patrons. Individual day ridership peaks generally coincide with
major events in the downtown area. For example, during the Memphis
in May Beale Street Music Festival onfrid a y, May 7, through
Sunday, May 9, 1999, the (streetcars) carried 34,479 passengers,
with 16,282 riders on Saturday. Other recurring events that
are highly dependent on the trolley system for movement of large
numbers of people are Memphis Redbirds (Triple A) baseball games
at AutoZone Park, concerts and college basketball games at the
Pyramid Arena, conventions, and cultural exhibits at the Cook
Convention Center. 23
An on-board survey of streetcar
riders in Memphis taken in 1994 found that:
-
51 percent were riding for transportation-related
reasons and 49 percent for entertainment-related reasons;
17 percent "normally get around Memphis" by public
transit;
-
61 percent had "eaten at restaurants along the
trolley line," and 34 percent had
"shopped at stores along the trolley line;" and
-
36% had incomes over $50,000; a total of 14
percent had incomes below $20,000. 24
How has the streetcar line helped
economic development? The south end of the line terminates at
Central Station, Memphis's historic main railroad station. There,
a redevelopment project includes a multi-modal transit center
serving the streetcars, buses, Amtrak and automobile park-and-ride.
The project also includes 12,000 square feet of commercial space,
63 apartments and a police station. At the north end, a similar
multi-modal transit center also offers a day care center, a welfare-to-work
career center and another police station. 25
Mr. Fox notes:
Ridership (on the streetcars)
has grown for a variety of reasons, the most important of which
is the gradual growth and diversification of development in
downtown Memphis. Since 1990, residential population has expanded
from fewer than 1000 to more than 5000 people. Entertainment-type
development -- such as AutoZone Park, Peabody Place, Gibson
Guitar Factory and Museum, and numerous restaurants, clubs,
and hotels -- has resulted in downtown becoming more of a destination
for nonwork activities. 26
What about costs? The original
2.5 mile line had a total cost, including the streetcars themselves,
of $34,887,072, or a somewhat high $14 million per mile. However,
almost half of this cost -$15,834,000 -- was for improvements
to the pedestrian mall. The second 2.5 mileline, which completed
the loop, cost just $9,428,860, or $3.8 million per mile. Why
the big difference? As noted, the cost of the initial line included
extensive repairs to the mall itself, plus construction of a new
operations and maintenance facility and a great deal of utility
relocation. In contrast, the second line used an existing rail
line, including the existing track, for most of its length. 27
Here as elsewhere, we see that construction costs vary greatly
depending upon the specific characteristics of the streetcar line.
If we look at the sources of the
construction funding, we see something else that may beusef ulto
other towns and cities. 69% of the construction cost of the initial
line and 44% of the cost of the second line came from money that
was initially allocated by the Federal government for Interstate
highway construction. When Memphis decided not to build the planned
extension of Interstate 40, the FTA transferred the funds to the
streetcar project.
IsTeA and TeA 21 Federal legislation
allow a great deal of flexibility in using highway funds for transit,
so other cities may also be able to fund a streetcar line with
money intended for unwanted highways.
Unlike Dallas, Memphis maintains
and operates its streetcars with regular transit authority labor,
not volunteers. Still, its operating costs are modest. In the
APTA comparison of twenty Light Rail systems referenced earlier,
Memphis's streetcar operating costs ranked 15th per vehicle mile
(20th is lowest), 19th per vehicle hour, and 11th per passenger
trip. Operating cost per passenger mile was 2nd, but that largely
reflects the line's comparatively short length (most Light Rail
lines are much longer). 28
As a streetcar system, Memphis
has been quite successful in terms of costs, ridership and effects
on downtown revival. But Memphis has another characteristic that
is of interest: from the outset, the city saw bringing back the
streetcars as a first step toward a modern Light Rail system .
Those plans are now moving toward
fruition. Memphis is currently building a two-mile extension of
the streetcar system, and the new line is being built to Light
Rail standards, for eventual use by modern Light Rail vehicles.
Running at right angles to the downtown loop along Madison Avenue,
the new line will connect the downtown with the Medical Center
district. Mr. Fox writes:
The project is the last segment
of the downtown rail circulation system as well as the first
segment of a regional light rail line. The extension is being
designed to accommodate modern light rail vehicles, but vintage
trolleys will be utilized until a proposed light rail line is
implemented and a fleet of modern vehicles is acquired. The
long-range Regional Transit Plan includes light rail in three
corridors by the year 2020. Each recommended corridor connects
to the (streetcar line) and downtown transportation terminals
with the purpose of eventually mixing heritage and modern rail
vehicles on Main Street, the riverfront, and Madison Avenue,
and providing intermodal connections at the terminals. 29
The cost per mile is about $24
million (plus two bridges for $8 million), but again, this line
is built to Light Rail Standards. 30
By starting with streetcars, then
moving to Light Rail, Memphis has found a way around a major obstacle
facing cities that want to initiate Light Rail: nobody locally
understands what Light Rail is. Once streetcars are running and
people have experienced them, Light Rail is much easier to explain.
The mystery -- and the fears -- go away. And when Light Rail is
built, it has a downtown circulator already operating with which
it can connect.
Compared to Dallas's McKinney Avenue
streetcar, the streetcar system in Memphis offers a somewhat "upscale"
alternative, slightly more expensive, but highly suitable as a
precursor to Light Rail. It, too, is a model other cities and
perhaps some towns could do well to emulate -- especially if they
have funds for a highway they no longer want to build.
Portland, Oregon
If Dallas's McKinney Avenue streetcar
represents the "low end" for new American streetcar lines (in
cost, not in service quality), the new Portland Streetcar is the
high end.when operations began on July 20, 2001, Portland, Oregon,
became the first American city since World War II to inaugurate
streetcar service with modern equipment.
Photo: Harold Geissenheimer
A Streetcar in Portland, Oregon.
Portland's new streetcar line is
a 2.4 mile long downtown loop (4.8 miles of track) with five modern
streetcars built in the Czech Republic. The cars run from 5: 30
AM to midnight Monday through Thursday and to 1: 30 AM on Friday
and Saturday; through most of the day, service is at 15-minute
intervals. By the end of its first week of service, it was alreadycarr
yingabout 7000 people each day -- almost double what was projected.
The line connects many important downtown venues, from Portland
State University on one end to Good Samaritan Hospital on the
other. It also provides local distributor service to Portland's
MAX Light Rail system, and is intended to spur and shape redevelopment
of two major downtown locations, one a former railroad yard.
From the beginning, the Portland
Streetcar was a citizen's project, not just a government program.
Starting in 1990, a team of consultants worked with a Citizens
Advisory Committee to plan the streetcar route. The initial alignment
was presented to the public, then changed significantly in response
to public comments and suggestions. Development considerations
played a major role in those changes. One study notes,
Dialogue was beginning with the
property owners and other interested parties about two large
parcels of undeveloped land near the central city.those parcelsare
the River District to the north of downtown and North Macadam
to the south. The conversations centered around the benefits
to the City and totheproperty owners of not developing huge
amounts of office space. Rather than competing with the downtown
office market, it was proposed to complement the jobs market
with new medium-to high-density housing and to use the streetcar
as the appropriate transit tool to facilitate and support that
develop ment. 31
Once the route was chosen, citizen
involvement did not end. On the contrary, a new, non-profit corporation,
Portland Streetcar, Inc., was formed to build and operate the
line. The Board of Directors is made up not of politicians but
of leading Portland businessmen, developers, and executives. Only
one elected official, City Commissioner Charlie Hales (a leading
proponent of streetcars for Portland), is a member. By giving
private citizens, including developers, a leading role in the
streetcar project, Portland has insured that the community is
united behind the streetcar line instead of being divided by it.
Portland was also careful to draw
a distinction between streetcars and Light Rail. Portland's Light
Rail system, MAX, opened in 1986 and has since expanded with several
new lines. MAX is popular and, in terms of ridership, very successful.
But the smaller, more intimate scale of streetcars was emphasized
strongly. A study co-authored by Commissioner Hales states :
A general tenet of the project
is, "This is not light rail; it's a streetcar. "Rather than
regional travel, the streetcar is intended to serve short local
trips. The theme of simplicity permeated every aspect of the
project, not only to keep costs low, particularly in its urban
setting, but also to ensure that the streetcar line blended
in with the neighborhoods through which it passes. It employs
small sidewalk stops, a simple track structure, an unobtrusive
overhead power supply, and it has required few utility relocations.
32
Another paper sounds the same theme:
Early on, it was decided that
Portland Streetcar should be integrated with every day street
life, should respect the human scale of the city and should
minimize disruption to the community during construction. The
streetcars use existing rights-of-way, do not require separation
from automobile traffic and allow on-street parking to remain
Construction staging was such that we worked in 3 block segments.
From the day the contractor cut into the street to the day everything
was finished was 3 weeks. 33
Minimizing construction time and
disruption is especially important to retail merchants whose businesses
lie along the streetcar route.
Portland 's approach to the streetcars
themselves is also instructive. Usually, when a city needs new
rail equipment, it decides what it wants, then finds someone to
build it. Portland realized this approach would be very expensive,
because it only needed seven streetcars (five initially and two
later). Wisely, it instead chose to buy "off the shelf." It found
a company that already built streetcars and took what it had to
offer, with a minimum of modifications.
The company was Skoda in the Czech
Republic. Skoda is an old and highly respected firm, and for decades
it had built streetcars for service in central and eastern Europe.
Skoda offered Portland a variant of its standard Astra streetcar
design. While MAX's Light Rail Vehicles ae 92 feet long (and usually
run as two-car trains), Skoda's streetcar is just 67 feet long.
It has doors on both sides and can be operated from either end.
The car is air-conditioned, the interior is bright and open, and
the middle section has a low floor, making it easy to get on and
off. It can seat thirty people, and has room for 87 standees;
for the short trips that are typical of streetcar travel, many
people prefer to stand (big windows let even standees see out)
. As Portland intended, its new Skoda streetcars fit into neighborhoods
rather than dominating them.
Skoda and other eastern European
companies, including some in Russia, may be able tosupply streetcars
to other American cities, and do so at reasonable prices. The
seven Skoda streetcars cost Portland $13.4 million, for a price
per car just under $2 million. This is up to a third less than
some modern Light Rail Vehicles cost. At the same time, it is
substantially more expensive than either Vintage or Heritage streetcars.
Modernity has its price, as conservatives know only too well.
Has Portland's streetcar been successful?
As of this writing, it has been in operation less than one year.
But in one important way, we can already say it has succeeded,
because it is already a ffecting economic development positively.
A rail transit line's effect on
development begins before the trains start to run. It begins once
a firm commitment to build the line is made and the exact route
is decided. At that point, developers know where and when they
will have high quality public transit. They also know that once
the line opens, transit is there to stay. This is a major difference
from bus service, and it is the reason why rail transit has profound
effects on development and bus service does not.
From the outset, the Portland Streetcar
was seen as a tool for shaping development. A study notes that:
The Portland Streetcar Project
is part of the City's growth management strategy City goals
call for 15,000 new housing units and 75,000 new jobs in our
urban core. The River District and North Macadam District will
be the site of over half of the new housing units and one-fifth
of all the new jobs. We believe that providing high density
housing close to jobs and all of the amenities available in
downtown is a good idea and a good deal. Portland Streetcar
will be the essential transit link connecting people to their
jobs, to shopping, to educational institutions and to the arts
and cultural communityÉ At the south end of the River District,
the Brewery Blocks Development is under construction. This is
a major mixed-use developmenton five City blocks that once housed
the Blitz Weinhard Brewery. The developer sees the streetcar
project as a key elemnt in the success of their project .
The Brewery Blocks Development
was under construction before streetcar service began. The day
streetcar service started, July 20, 2001, the local newspaper,
The Oregonian, ran a special section devoted to the new streetcar
line. It, too, could already report positive effects on development:
In Northwest Portland, already
heavily developed, advertisements are appearing promoting apartments
close to the streetcar lineÉ In the West End, projects in the
late planning stages include the three-block Museum Place, a
mixed-use development near the Portland Art Museum, and the
Mosaic condominiums. The condominium project, next to the Old
Church, will have no parking. On Lovejoy Street at Northwest
11th Avenue, a building called the Streetcar Lofts is nearly
completed, with units selling for $120,000 to $655,000. It will
carry a neon sign blaring the message, "Go By Streetcar". Michael
Dale, who moved recently from downtown to the new Gregory condominiums,
loves watching the streetcar pass his window in a way that he
said he could never love looking at a bus. "It seems so attractive
that you just want to ride it," he said. "You want an excuse
to get on."
If streetcars can have this much
effect on development before they enter service, it is not reasonable
to think they will have even more after service starts. Not surprisingly,
Portland is already planning to extend its new streetcar line.
How much did all this cost? As
we noted, Portland represents the high end of new streetcar lines,
and it was not cheap. At the same time, it cost less than Light
Rail, and far less than many urban freeways. Including everything
-- tracks, wires, streetcars and carbarn -- Portland 's initial
4.8 miles of streetcar lines (for a 2.4 mile loop) cost $56,925,164,
for a per-mile construction cost of just under $12 million. Portland
believes the streetcar line's benefits, especially in terms of
downtown development and revitalization, are worth the cost.
Conclusion
Our three case studies, plus the
many other examples of streetcar lines in operation or under construction
across the country, offer a wide variety of models other cities
and towns can emulate. One size does not fit all, but there is
a right size for everyone. Your city or town, too, can do it.
And it should. That is the most
important point of this study: regardless of who you are, how
big you are (or how small), or where you are, a streetcar line
(or larger streetcar system) would do you good. It would bring
more people downtown, and people are the lifeblood of a downtown.
It would both spur and channel development. It would make it easy
for tourists to get around, without a car. It would help your
town or city recover its own distinctive character, a character
people can identify with and even love.
As conservatives, we find America's
past attractive. America in the streetcar era, from around 1890
to about 1950, was a great place. Many Americans who are not conservatives
know that too. Who has not wished that they could visit (and ride
the streetcars) of their grandmother or great-grandmother's day?
sadly, no one has yet invented a
time machine. But people across the country are doing the next
best thing: they are recovering good things from our past and
bringing them to life again in the present. Historic preservation
and restoration of historic buildings is going on everywhere.
"Retro automobiles such as the new Volkswagen Beetle and the Chrysler
PT Cruiser are selling well. Gentlemen are even starting to wear
hats again.
Of all the things the past has
to offer us, nothing could serve the present better than streetcars.
We have no doubt that, if we could ask them, our ancestors would
tell us so. In fact, we can ask a couple of them what joys the
trolley car brought to their lives. In the early years of the
twentieth century, two newlyweds decided that, for their honeymoon,
they would journey from Delaware to Maine, all by trolley. When
they got home again, they wrote a book about it. Here's what trolley
riding was like back then -- when the cars ran through the countryside
as well as in town:
If William Penn founded the Quaker
city, God made its suburbs -- a fair countryside that now passed
before us in dissolving views, as our car at quickened speed
plunged on to Willow Grove:
"Straight mine eye hath caught new pleasures
As the Land skip round it measures."
We trolleyed past lawns and meadows,
stately villas and trim gardens, old wayside inns and ivy-covered
churches lodged under the spreading trees; here a classic gateway
with Ionic peristyle; there an ancient mansion half-hidden behind
high walls of solid masonry; a wide stretch of green fields
in the foreground; a background of woodland; winding country
lanes deep in shade; and last but not least a valley sweeping
northward and disclosing in far perspective green hills with
a bluish haze:
" A shady road with a grassy
track;
A car that follows free;
A summer's scene at early morn;
A nickel for a fee. 36
Yes, we can go home again -- by streetcar.

Photo:W.S. Lind
A shady road with a grassy track;
A car that follows free.
Appendix I: Getting Started
OK, we've sold you. You want to
see a streetcar operating in your city or town. Perhaps you are
a businessman, or a local official, or a citizen activist. Your
first question is likely to be, "How do I get started?"
This short guide to getting started
may be helpful. We do not say it is the only way to go.butit does
reflect what people in cities with streetcar lines have learned
in their own successful projects.
Step #1: Find other people with
the same interest and desire. You are not likely to makemuch progress
alone, although one person can certainly get the process started.
As that one person, you may find other people who are familiar
with the concept and are quick to sign up.or, you may have to
start from scratch, educating other local citizens about streetcars,
explaining what they are and how they can benefit your city or
town. Your goal should be to form an organization of some sort
-- perhaps a 501(c)( 3), so donations are tax-deductible --that
can help design and promote your local streetcar project. This
organization should not plan to go out of business once a local
streetcar line is running. It will continue to have many important
roles to play, from promoting the streetcar line through raising
funds for its operation to providing volunteers to maintain and
operate the streetcars.
Step #2: One of the things successful
streetcar projects all have in common is people to fill two key
roles: the "champion" and the "spear-carrier." The "Champion is
someone who is a community power "player" -- usually but not always
a political figure -- who will be the pusher and the public voice
for the project. The "spear-carrier" is the man who actually gets
the job done by organizing and directing the project. You need
both roles filled from the beginning.
Step #3: Design a streetcar project
that can garner widespread local support. That means thinking
not just in terms of fellow streetcar fans, but about building
a coalition. Coalitions are powerful because they bring together
people with a wide variety of interests -- and local political
clout. Some people may be businessmen who know a streetcar line
will bring them new customers. Others may be property owners,
builders or developers who see a streetcar line as a development
tool. Environmentalists may want streetcars to reduce automobile
use and resulting air pollution. City activists may see streetcars
as a way to bring new life to downtown. You want to appeal to
all these group |