The Denver Post

RTD hopes to boost service downtown, on-time numbers

- By John Aguilar

A new light rail line — dubbed the L-Line — launches in downtown Denver on Sunday, with transit officials touting it as a more efficient way to move passengers traveling to and from the Five Points neighborho­od while also helping boost ontime performanc­e across the Regional Transporta­tion District’s rail system.

The L-Line, which does not use new track, takes over the existing northerly segment of the D-Line, which runs from Mineral Station in Littleton to the 30th and Downing Station in Five Points.

After Sunday’s launch, the DLine will end at the 18th and Stout Station while the L-Line will cover the 1.7 miles between that station and the 30th and Downing station, with trains doing a turnaround loop through the heart of downtown Denver along Stout, Welton and 14th streets.

By breaking off the northernmo­st segment of the D-Line and making it a standalone line, service should improve for those traveling between Five Points and the 16th Street Mall, said RTD spokeswoma­n Lisa Trujillo.

“Currently, our D-Line trains along Welton have about an 80

percent on-time performanc­e,” she said, noting that RTD’s light rail trains overall average a 94 percent on-time rating. “This ripples through the system — if there is a late D-Line that continues south of downtown, then other trains behind it are affected.”

The L-Line will maintain 15-minute frequencie­s most of the day, and trains will run at the same times they do now.

While the creation of the L-Line appears to be little more than a glorified namechange for a short section of the D-Line, it represents a step in a long-term plan to link Five Points to the A- Line’s 38th and Blake Station, Trujillo said. An extension of the L-Line to 38th and Blake Station — just under a mile in distance — would give residents in the neighborho­od a quick and easy rail connection to Denver Internatio­nal Airport that doesn’t exist now.

“The main advantage is to provide a better destinatio­n for the northeaste­rn end of the line and provide another connection for the Convention Center area of downtown with the airport, as well as the Five Points neighborho­od,” Trujillo said.

But no funding has been identified and no timeline set for that new track, which is part of RTD’s Central Rail Extension project. The project is part of the FasTracks program approved

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States