- MetroLink (St. Louis)
-
Not to be confused with Metrolink (Southern California).
MetroLink
A view of the MetroLink system passing through Belleville, Illinois.Info Locale St. Louis Metropolitan Area Transit type Light rail Number of lines 2 Number of stations 37 Daily ridership 51,716 (FY 2010) Headquarters St. Louis, Missouri Operation Began operation July 31, 1993 Operator(s) Metro aka Bi-State Development Agency Reporting marks BSDA Number of vehicles 87 Train length 2 Articulated Vehicles Headway 5 Minutes Technical Track gauge 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) (standard gauge) Electrification Overhead lines, 750 V DC Average speed 24.7 mph (39.8 km/h) Top speed 65 mph (105 km/h) System map MetroLink (reporting mark BSDA) is the light rail transit system in the Greater St. Louis area of Missouri and the Metro East area of Illinois. The entire system currently consists of two lines (Red Line and Blue Line) connecting Lambert-St. Louis International Airport and Shrewsbury, MO with Scott Air Force Base near Shiloh, Illinois through downtown St. Louis. The system features 37 stations and carries an average of 51,716 people each weekday.[1]
A second line, the "Cross-County Extension," now known as the Blue Line, opened to the public August 26, 2006Clayton, the popular Saint Louis Galleria shopping center and Shrewsbury to the system.[2] Further extensions are under study, but no alignments have yet been chosen, engineered or funded.
. This 8-mile (12.9 km), nine-station line connects Washington University,MetroLink is operated by the Bi-State Development Agency, operating as Metro since 2003,[3] in a shared fare system with the MetroBus lines.
Contents
History
Construction on the initial MetroLink alignment from Lambert-St. Louis International Airport to the 5th & Missouri station in East St. Louis began in 1990. The portion between North Hanley and 5th & Missouri stations opened in July 31, 1993 , and the line was extended westward to Lambert Airport Main station in 1994.[4] At that time another station, East Riverfront, was opened in East St. Louis.[5] Four years later, in 1998, the Lambert Airport East station was added.[6] The capital cost to build the initial phase of MetroLink was $465 million. Of that amount, $348 million was supplied by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA).[7]
MetroLink exceeded pre-opening ridership estimates, but the system has expanded slowly. Construction on proposed extensions has been delayed by the increasing scarcity of FTA funds. As time has passed, an ever-greater share of the costs has been borne by state and local governments. The most recent work has been entirely funded by local dollars.
Construction on the St. Clair County MetroLink extension from the 5th & Missouri station to the College station in Belleville began in 1998 and opened in May 2001. The extension added eight new stations and seven park-ride lots. The total project cost was $339.2 million, with the FTA and St. Clair County Transit District sharing the burden at 72% ($243.9 million) and 28% ($95.2 million), respectively. Local funding was provided by the St. Clair County Transit District as a result of a 1/2 cent sales tax passed in November 1993.[7]
In May 2003, a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) extension from Southwestern Illinois College to Shiloh-Scott station opened. This $75 million project was funded by a $60 million grant from the Illinois FIRST (Fund for Infrastructure, Roads, Schools, and Transit) Program and $15 million from the St. Clair County Transit District.[7]
The recent Cross-County Extension project was funded by a $430 million Metro bond issue. Metro cited repeated delays and cost overruns as its reasons for firing its general contractor in Summer 2004. The contractor, itself a coalition of four general contractors (Cross County Collaborative), in turn cited excessive change orders by Metro as the cause of the problems. After firing the general contractor, Metro functioned as its own general contractor on the project. Metro sued the Collaborative for $81 million for fraud and mismanagement. The Collaborative counter-sued for $17 million for work that Metrolink hadn't yet paid for. On December 1, 2007, the jury voted in favor of the Cross County Collaborative, awarding them $2.56 million for work as yet unpaid for.
The rail portion of the extension opened to the public August 26, 2006Brentwood I-64 station opened on June 12, 2007 . The garage parks 1000 cars where riders can park for free.
, and a parking garage at theOn October 27, 2008Emerson Park to Fairview Heights. All trains have a red or blue sign on the front that identify the train as a Red Line or Blue Line train, and all operators make station announcements identifying the Red Line or Blue Line.[8]
, Metro renamed the two MetroLink lines using color designations: the Lambert Airport branch was renamed to the Red Line; the Shrewsbury branch, the Blue Line. Service was also extended on the Blue Line from its former terminus atChronology
Below is a chronological list of dates on which specific portions of the MetroLink system opened for service.
Date Event Stations Length July 31, 1993 Line opens between North Hanley and 5th & Missouri 16 13.9 miles (22.4 km) May 14, 1994 East Riverfront opens between existing stations 1 — June 25, 1994 Extension to Lambert Airport Main opens 1 3.15 miles (5.1 km) December 23, 1998 Lambert Airport East opens between existing stations 1 — May 5, 2001 Extension to College opens 8 17.4 miles (28.0 km) June 23, 2003 Extension to Shiloh-Scott opens 1 3.5 miles (5.6 km) August 26, 2006 Extension to Shrewsbury-Lansdowne I-44 opens 9 7.5 miles (12.1 km) Total 37 46 miles (74.0 km) Rail lines
Red Line
Main article: Red Line (St. Louis MetroLink)The main Metrolink alignment begins at Lambert St. Louis International Airport, making stops at the main and east terminals. It then proceeds through Kinloch before making a stop North Hanley in Bel-Ridge. It then makes two stops (UMSL North & South stations) at the University of Missouri St. Louis located in Normandy. Following that, it makes stops in Pagedale at St. Charles Rock Road and in Wellston, before crossing the county line at Skinker Boulevard; and making a stop at Delmar Boulevard, serving the popular Delmar Loop area that straddles the St Louis/University City border. It meets up with the Blue Line at the Forest Park- DeBaliviere station. From this station on till the Fairview Heights station, it shares tracks with the Blue Line. For the rest of the Red Line see "Shared alignment".
Blue Line
Main article: Blue Line (St. Louis MetroLink)The Blue Line starts in Shrewsbury just to the west of River des Peres. It crosses Interstate 44 and then continues northeast till the next 2 stations located in Maplewood, one at the Sunnen Industrial Complex, the other at Manchester Road. From there it continues north to the Brentwood I-64 station located in Brentwood just south of Interstate 64. It then proceeds underneath Interstate 64, continuing to the Richmond Heights station in Richmond Heights. This station serves the popular St. Louis Galleria shopping center. Following that it proceeds to Clayton Central station in Clayton, serving the Central Business District of St. Louis County. From here it continues in a tunnel right under Forest Park Parkway, making stops at Forsyth Boulevard and Big Bend Boulevard in University City, serving Washington University. It then makes a stop at Skinker Boulevard in St. Louis City, before meeting the Red Line at Forest Park DeBaliviere station. For the rest of the Blue Line, see "Shared alignment".
Both MetroLink lines meet at the Forest Park-Debaliviere station and continue for fourteen more stations east on shared tracks until the Blue Line terminates at Fairview Heights.
From the Forest Park station the trains continue to the Central West End station, serving the Barnes-Jewish Hospital complex and the popular Euclid Avenue shopping district. From there it proceeds to the Grand station under the Grand Boulevard viaduct, which services the Saint Louis University complex and hospital. The trains pass under the Jefferson Avenue viaduct before they enter the next station near Union Station, located underneath 18th Street just near the popular Union Station shopping mall. A short distance later the trains stop at the Civic Center Station, with transfer to the Gateway Transportation Center and the Scottrade Center. The trains then continue to run parallel under the 14th Street and Tucker Boulevard viaducts to the elevated section of Interstate 64 till the Busch Stadium station, originally serving the old, and now the new Busch Stadium. The trains continue underground through a series of abandoned railway tunnels, with stations at 8th & Pine streets, and the Convention Center under Washington Avenue and 6th Street, serving the Edward Jones Dome and Convention Center. It then makes stops on both sides of the Eads Bridge at Arch-Laclede's Landing station and at the East Riverfront station in East St. Louis, which serves the Casino Queen Gambling Casino & Hotel. From there it runs at-grade from the 5th & Missouri station till the Fairview Heights station in Fairview Heights, IL. Here the Blue line trains terminate, and the Red line trains continue till the line terminus at Shiloh-Scott AFB station at the gate to the base in Shiloh, Illinois.
Rolling stock
MetroLink operates a fleet of 87 light-rail vehicles composed of 31 SD-400 and 56 SD-460 vehicles. Each 90-foot (27,432 mm), single articulated vehicle has 4 high platform doors per side and has a capacity of 72 seated and 106 standing passengers.[9][10] The cars are powered by an electric motor which gets its electricity from a catenary wire with a 750 volt supply.
Each car has an enclosed operator cab at each end. This allows the most flexible system for managing operations, but prevents travel between cars except at stations. Each car also has separate doors for station level and track level access. In normal operations the track level doors (equipped with stairs) are unused.
The system also has two different railroad yards along the line for the storage and maintenance of light-rail vehicles: Ewing Yard is located between the Grand and Union Station stops just west of downtown St. Louis; 29th Street Yard is located between the JJK and Washington Park stops in Illinois. On October 27, 2009, Metro had recently opened a paint booth facility on the Illinois railyard in East St. Louis, IL.
Roster information
Unit Type Year Built Quantity Numbers[11] Siemens SD400 LRV 1991–1993 31 1001–1031 Siemens SD460 LRV 1999 10 2001–2010 Siemens SD460 LRV 2000 24 3001-3024 Siemens SD460 LRV 2004–2005 22 4001-4022 Fares
MetroLink uses a proof-of-payment system. Tickets can be purchased at ticket vending machines at the entrance to all stations and must be validated before boarding the train. Effective January 1, 2009 , the fares are as follows:
- 1 Ride Ticket-$2.25 (reduced fare-$1.10) (RAIL ONLY)
- 2 Hour Pass-$2.75 (reduced fare-$1.35)(Unlimited use on Metrobus and Rail for 2 HOURS ONLY)
- 2 Hour Pass from Lambert Airport $3.75 (Unlimited use on MetroBus and Rail)
- One-Day Pass-$7.50 (Unlimited use on MetroBus and Rail)
Reduced fares can be purchased by seniors ages 65+, people with disabilities, and children ages 5–12. Children younger than 5 years of age ride free. Proof of age may be requested of all people riding with reduced fares. Weekly and monthly passes are also available in addition to the fares listed above.[12]
List of stations
Main article: List of St. Louis MetroLink stationsPotential plans and extensions
The idea of MetroLink has been around for more than 20 years in the region. There have been plans and priorities that have been laid out for the region since 1989. These priorities are determined by a System Analysis for a region which is required by the federal government. The East-West Gateway Council of Governments conducted a System Analysis in 1989 in the St. Louis region and determined that there were three tiers of priorities for MetroLink expansion for the region.
- Tier I - Cross County, St. Charles and St. Clair County, IL
- Tier II - North County, South County and West County
- Tier III - Southwest County and Madison County, IL
These extensions may increase the MetroLink light rail system with as much as 80 miles (130 km) of trackage.
Daniel Boone Corridor
- Daniel Boone Corridor - Clayton to Westport
- A study performed in 2000 recommended a new MetroLink line from Clayton, Missouri to Westport Plaza in Maryland Heights, Missouri. The 8–10-mile (13–16 km) line would run north from the Clayton station along the old Rock Island Railroad right-of-way paralleling I-170, then turn west to follow existing TRRA trackage to Page where the line would then follow Page Avenue to Westport Plaza.[13] This future alignment will add up to six stations between Clayton and Maryland Heights in the I-170-Page Corridor. Metro officials have suggested that this line could be the next MetroLink extension to be built.[14][15]
MetroNorth Corridor
- MetroNorth Corridor - Clayton to Florissant
- This 12-mile (19 km) extension project would extend the current Blue Line from Clayton to North County into Florissant. Like the Daniel Boone line, some of it will follow along the old Rock Island Railroad right-of-way paralleling I-170.
MetroSouth Corridor
- MetroSouth Corridor - Shrewsbury to Butler Hill
- This 12-mile (19 km) extension project would extend the current Blue Line from its terminus in Shrewsbury further into South County beyond I-270/I-255 to Butler Hill Road. An environmental impact study was completed in 2004; however, selection of a locally preferred alternative was deferred due to the lack of local funding sources as well as many other factors.[16]
MetroWest Corridor
- MetroWest Corridor - Westport to Chesterfield
- This 12-mile (19 km) extension is part of Phase II of the Daniel Boone Line to connect Westport Plaza to Chesterfield, Missouri in West County.
NorthWest Connector
- NorthWest Connector- Northside to Daniel Boone and North County
- This future 6-mile (9.7 km) connector cuts off from the Northside Line in North St. Louis, passing over the Red Line to the future Daniel Boone and North County Line extensions.
NorthSide Corridor
- NorthSide Corridor- Downtown to Goodfellow & I-70 to St. Louis Community College-Florissant Valley
- [17]
The 12-mile (19 km) extension starts north from Downtown St Louis further northwest to the Florissant Valley Community College. A study for this extension was completed in 2008 and a Locally Preferred Alternative selected.
SouthSide Corridor
- SouthSide Corridor - Downtown to Bayless to Butler Hill[18]
- The 9-mile (14 km) or 17-mile (27 km) extension starts from Downtown to the south of St. Louis County to Bayless I-55. A study for this extension was completed in 2008 and a Locally Preferred Alternative selected.
St. Clair Extension
- St. Clair Extension Phase 3 - Shiloh-Scott to Mid-America Airport
- This 5.3-mile (8.5 km) extension to Mid-America Airport was originally part of the St. Clair County Extension Phase 2 project that extended MetroLink to Shiloh-Scott, but was separated into its own project by the Federal Transit Administration due to low ridership projections. Design work for this extension has been completed, but funding for construction has yet to be secured.[19]
Madison County Corridors
- Madison County Corridors - East St. Louis to Alton or Edwardsville
- A feasibility study was performed in 2005 to investigate the potential costs, ridership, and impacts of extending MetroLink into Madison County, Illinois. The recommended alignment options would extend MetroLink from the 5th & Missouri station in East St. Louis north to Madison, Illinois and potentially to Alton or Edwardsville 21–23 miles (34–37 km) away. No further studies have been performed nor any sources of funding identified.[20] In 1997, voters in Madison County rejected a half-cent sales tax proposal to fund a MetroLink extension.[15]
St. Charles Corridor
- St. Charles Corridor - Lambert Airport to St. Charles
- Possible plans to extend service 16–20 miles (26–32 km) northwestward into St. Charles County were abandoned after St. Charles County voters rejected a sales tax in 1996 to fund an extension; subsequently, all Metro bus service to St. Charles County was ended.
SouthWest Corridor
- SouthWest Corridor - South St. Louis to Fenton
- This 16–20-mile (26–32 km) extension to Fenton, Missouri in Southwest County is considered for study by the East-West Gateway Council of Governments.
See also
- Bi-State Development Agency
- List of tram and light-rail transit systems
- List of rail transit systems in the United States
- St. Clair County Transit District
- Delmar Loop Trolley
Notes
- ^ "Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (FY 2010)" (PDF). Metro. 2010. http://www.metrostlouis.org/Libraries/Annual_Financial_Reports/2010_CAFR_Final.pdf. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
- ^ "Metro Announces August 26 Grand Opening Date for Cross County MetroLink Extension" (PDF) (Press release). Metro. 7 August 2006. http://metrostlouis.org/InsideMetro/NewsRoom/releases/2006-051AUPDATEDCROSSCOUNTYOPENING08-07-06.pdf. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
- ^ "Bi-State Development Agency Adopts “Metro” As New Name" (PDF) (Press release). Metro. 2003-01-24. http://www.metrostlouis.org/InsideMetro/NewsRoom/2003/2003-002Metro.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
- ^ Tipton, Virgil (1994-06-22). "Takeoff: MetroLink Opens Lambert Stop Saturday". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
- ^ Goodrich, Robert (1994-04-27). "East St. Louis Starring in MetroLink". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
- ^ "2nd MetroLink station opens at Lambert". St. Louis Business Journal. 1998-12-23. http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/stories/1998/12/21/daily11.html. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
- ^ a b c "Metro - Inside MetroLink". Metro. http://www.metrostlouis.org/InsideMetro/QuickFacts/metrolink.asp. Retrieved 2007-10-23.
- ^ "Service Changes Effective October 27, 2008" (PDF) (Press release). Metro. http://www.metrostlouis.org/MetroBus/ServiceChanges102708.pdf. Retrieved 2008-10-24.
- ^ "Siemens AG - Projects - Rolling Stock". Siemens AG. http://www.sts.siemens.com/p_nav4.html#stock. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
- ^ "SD460 Light Rail Vehicle - St. Louis" (PDF). Siemens AG. http://www.sts.siemens.com/DS/SD460%20St%20Louis%20DS.pdf. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
- ^ Modern Urban Rail Systems Bi-State Transit Info & Roster
- ^ "Fare Chart". Metro. http://www.metrostlouis.org/Fares/FareChart.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
- ^ "MetroLink Planning - Daniel Boone". East-West Gateway. http://www.ewgateway.org/MetroLink/DanielBoone/danielboone.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-01.[dead link]
- ^ Hilligand, Terry; Bryant, Tim (2008-07-29). "Commuters in St. Charles, Madison counties still waiting for the train". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/40CA42D2A9C22ADE862574F2000C56D3?OpenDocument. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
- ^ a b Leiser, Ken (2008-10-30). "St. Louis County MetroLink expansion: West Port Ho!". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/illinoisnews/story/0BD71DD25966CE548625749500101DA8?OpenDocument. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
- ^ "East-West Gateway Board Defers Selection of MetroLink Alternative for Metro South Study Area". East-West Gateway. 3 November 2004. http://www.ewgateway.org/metrosouth/pdfs/News_Release_110404.pdf. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
- ^ "MetroLink Planning - Northside". East-West Gateway. http://www.ewgateway.org/MetroLink/Northside/northside.htm. Retrieved 2008-10-30.[dead link]
- ^ "MetroLink Planning - Southside". East-West Gateway. http://www.ewgateway.org/MetroLink/Southside/southside.htm. Retrieved 2008-10-30.[dead link]
- ^ Wolinsky, Julian (July 2002). "For St. Louis, a long-term strategy - St. Louis, MO's rail transit plan". Railway Age. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1215/is_7_203/ai_90190966. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
- ^ "MetroLink Planning - Madison County". East-West Gateway. http://www.ewgateway.org/MetroLink/MadisonCounty/madisoncounty.htm. Retrieved 2008-10-30.[dead link]
References
- Tuzik, Robert (August 1990). "What's different about St. Louis light rail - its low cost per track mile". Railway Age. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1215/is_n8_v191/ai_9362671/. Retrieved 2007-05-18.
- "MetroLink: the long ride from concept to reality". West End Word. 2006-08-30. Archived from the original on 2007-05-09. http://web.archive.org/web/20070509173629/http://www.westendword.com/moxie/news/metrolink-the-long-ride.shtml. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
- Garrison, Chad (2008-08-20). "Out-of-control shoplifting at the St. Louis Galleria. Violent attacks in the Delmar Loop. Is MetroLink a vehicle for crime?". The Riverfront Times. http://www.riverfronttimes.com/2008-08-20/news/out-of-control-shoplifting-at-the-st-louis-galleria-violent-attacks-in-the-delmar-loop-is-metrolink-a-vehicle-for-crime/. Retrieved 2010-02-25.
External links
External images Rapid Transit Systems – St. Louis Photographs of the MetroLink system. Railroad Picture Archives: MetroLink – MetroLink photographs at Railroad Picture Archives. Skips Railroad Depot MetroLink Photo Page - Metro – Official website
- NextStop STL| A Conversation About Transit – Official Metro blog
- East West Gateway – St. Louis MPO: MetroLink planning page
- Cross County Extension – Official project website
- Metro South Study – Official study website
- Citizens for Modern Transit – St. Louis transit advocacy group
- Moving Transit Forward
- St. Louis Transit Alliance Website
- MetroLink Expansion Options
Public transportation in Greater St. Louis Public Transit Agencies Missouri: Bi-State Development Agency • St. Charles Area Transit Illinois: Madison County Transit • St. Clair County Transit DistrictLocal and express bus service Bus rapid transit St. Louis Bus Rapid TransitLight rail St. Louis MetroLink: (List of stations) Red Line • Blue LineStreetcar Streetcars in St. Louis • Delmar Loop Trolley • St. Charles City StreetcarParatransit Commuter rail St. Louis Commuter RailIntercity rail Airport Other Transportation in St. Louis, Missouri • Gateway Arch • Eads BridgeItalics denote lines or service which are planned, or not operating at this present timeSt. Louis MetroLink St. Louis MetroLink services MetroLink system features Eads Bridge • Vandeventer Avenue Bridge • St. Louis Freight Tunnel • Central West End Tunnel • Union Station TunnelRolling Stock Siemens SD-400 • Siemens SD-460Maintenance facilities and shops Ewing Yard • 29th Street YardConnections Forest Park-DeBaliviere • Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center • Lambert-St. Louis International Airport • MetroBikeLink TrailConnecting Services MetroBus • Madison County Transit • St. Charles Area Transit • Metro Call-A-Ride • Delmar Loop TrolleyMetroLink Expansion Daniel Boone Corridor • MetroNorth Corridor • MetroSouth Corridor • MetroWest Corridor • NorthWest Connector • NorthSide Corridor • SouthSide Corridor • St. Charles Corridor • SouthWest Corridor • MidAmerica Extension Phase 3 • Madison County CorridorsOperators Bi-State Development Agency • St. Clair County Transit DistrictItalic denote lines or services which are proposed and planned.Developments in St. Louis Other Buildings Other Projects Public Transportation Lambert Airport expansion • Metrolink Expansion • New Mississippi River Bridge • Delmar Loop Trolley • Memorial Dr.Railroads of Illinois Common carriers ALS • BJRY • BLOL • BNSF • BOCT • BRC • CAEG • CC • CCUO • CFE • CIR • CIRY • CN • COER • CP • CPC • CRL • CSS • CSXT • CTM • DME • DT • EFRR • EIRC • EJE • EVWR • GTW • GWWE • IAIS • IC • IHB • ILW • IMRR • INRD • IR • JE • KBSR • KCS • KJRY • LSLS • MJ • MRS • NS • PPU • PRY • RVPR • SCIH • SIM • SOO • STR • TPW • TRRA • TZPR • UP • VRRC • VVRR • WC • WSOR
Passenger carriers Private carriers BTCZ • CCFF • CHTT • CMAZ • CRC • CWI • DOTX • FNG • JJRX • KKRX • NAIR • MIRR • PCCX • PPHW • RRC
Former carriers A • ATSF • BN • BO • C&A • CBQ • CEI • CGW • CIW • CMNW • CNW • CO • CR • CRI • CTML • ERIE • EL • GMO • GWWR • ICE • ICG • IHRC • LM • LSBC • IMRL • IN • ITC • LN • MC • MI • MILW • MON • MP • MSTL • NKP • NP • NW • NYC • PACY • PAE • PARY • PC • PI • PLM • PM • PRR • PTC • RI • SBD • SOU • SP • SSW • WAB • WICT • WVRC • ZCCX
See also: List of United States railroads by political divisionRailroads of Missouri Common carriers Passenger carriers Private carriers HTSX • JGDX • JSRC • MRIX • RRC • SHRX
Former carriers See also: List of United States railroads by political divisionCurrently operating light rail and streetcar systems in the United States ArkansasArizonaCaliforniaMUNI: Cable Car, F Market & Wharves, and Metro lines · Metro Rail: Blue Line, Green Line and Gold Line · Sacramento RT · San Diego Trolley · Sprinter · Santa Clara VTA · Waterfront Red CarColoradoFloridaGeorgiaRiver Street StreetcarLouisianaMassachusettsMarylandMinnesotaMissouri / IllinoisMetroLinkNew JerseyNew YorkNorth CarolinaOhioOregonPennsylvaniaPittsburgh Light Rail · SEPTA Routes 15, 101, 102, and Subway–Surface LinesTennesseeTexasUtahVirginiaWashingtonLink Light Rail · Seattle Streetcar NetworkWisconsinCoordinates: 38°37′32″N 90°13′15″W / 38.62565°N 90.22073°W
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