Réseau express métropolitain: Difference between revisions
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===REM de l'Est=== |
===REM de l'Est=== |
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The "REM de l'Est" was a planned second REM line which would have been {{Cvt|32|km}} long. Announced in 2020,<ref>{{Cite news |first1=Philippe |last1=Teisceira-Lessard |first2=Henri |last2=Ouellette-Vézina |title=Un train toutes les deux minutes pour le nord et l'est de Montréal |trans-title=A train every two minutes for north and east of Montreal |url=https://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/grand-montreal/2020-12-15/rem/un-train-toutes-les-deux-minutes-pour-le-nord-et-l-est-de-montreal.php |language=fr |work=[[La Presse (Canadian newspaper)|La Presse]] |date=15 December 2020 |access-date=15 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |first=Issac |last=Olson |title=Montreal's east end to get its own $10B light-rail network |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/light-rail-network-montreal-east-end-1.5842032 |work=[[CBC News]] |date=15 December 2020 |access-date=15 December 2020}}</ref> it would have used the existing REM technology but not be connected directly to the first section of the network. |
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{{REM de l'Est|collapsed=yes}} |
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The "REM de l'Est" is a planned second REM line which would be {{Cvt|32|km}} long. Announced in 2020,<ref>{{Cite news |first1=Philippe |last1=Teisceira-Lessard |first2=Henri |last2=Ouellette-Vézina |title=Un train toutes les deux minutes pour le nord et l'est de Montréal |trans-title=A train every two minutes for north and east of Montreal |url=https://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/grand-montreal/2020-12-15/rem/un-train-toutes-les-deux-minutes-pour-le-nord-et-l-est-de-montreal.php |language=fr |work=[[La Presse (Canadian newspaper)|La Presse]] |date=15 December 2020 |access-date=15 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |first=Issac |last=Olson |title=Montreal's east end to get its own $10B light-rail network |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/light-rail-network-montreal-east-end-1.5842032 |work=[[CBC News]] |date=15 December 2020 |access-date=15 December 2020}}</ref> it would use the existing REM technology but not connect directly to the first section of the network. |
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Beginning |
Beginning a few blocks east of Boulevard Robert-Bourassa (and therefore from Central Station), the line would have run east on an elevated guideway along Boulevard René-Lévesque and Rue Notre-Dame until Rue St-Clément, where it would have turned north and split into two branches: |
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*one running elevated along [[Sherbrooke Street]] to [[Pointe-aux-Trembles]] |
*one running elevated along [[Sherbrooke Street]] to [[Pointe-aux-Trembles]] |
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*one diving into a tunnel and running north to [[Cégep Marie-Victorin]] via [[Lacordaire Boulevard|Lacordaire |
*one diving into a tunnel and running north to [[Cégep Marie-Victorin]] via [[Lacordaire Boulevard|Lacordaire]] |
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The REM de l'Est would |
The REM de l'Est would have added 23 new stations. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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In May 2022, the project was abandoned<ref>{{Lien web |langue=fr-ca |auteur=Radio-Canada |titre=Québec retire le REM de l’Est des mains de CDPQ Infra |url=https://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/1880334/reseau-express-caisse-depot-transports-commun-montreal |site=Radio-Canada.ca |date=2022-05-02 |consulté le=2023-01-04}}</ref> and, as of mid-2023, still nothing is known about its eventual replacement, which is under study, except that it is to be named ''Projet structurant de l’Est'' (PSE) instead of REM.<ref>{{Lien web |langue=fr-ca |auteur=Le Devoir |titre=La facture du futur REM de l’Est fait sursauter |url=https://www.ledevoir.com/societe/transports-urbanisme/793975/la-facture-du-futur-rem-de-l-est-fait-sursauter |site=ledevoir.com |date=2023-07-03 |consulté le=2023-07-03}}</ref> |
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!Station |
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!Branch |
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!Connections |
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|Robert-Bourassa |
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|Common section |
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|{{rint|Montreal|REM|1}} {{rint|montreal|rail|Mascouche|x}} {{rint|montreal|rail|Saint-Hilaire|x}} [[Montreal Central Station|Central Station]] {{rint|Montreal|Metro|1}} {{stms|McGill}}, {{rint|Montreal|Metro|2}} {{stms|Square-Victoria-OACI}}, local buses |
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|- |
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|St-Urbain |
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|Common section |
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|Local buses |
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|- |
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|Labelle |
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|Common section |
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|{{rint|Montreal|Metro|2}} {{stms|Champ-de-Mars}}, local buses |
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|- |
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|Cartier |
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|Common section |
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|Local buses |
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|- |
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|Dufresne |
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|Common section |
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|Local buses |
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|- |
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|Davidson |
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|Common section |
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|Local buses |
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|- |
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|Pie-IX Sud |
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|Common section |
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|[[Montreal bus rapid transit|Pie-IX bus rapid transit]], local buses |
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|St-Clément |
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|Common section |
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|Local buses |
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|Viauville |
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|Common section |
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| |
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|{{stms|Assomption}} |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|{{rint|Montreal|Metro|1}} {{stms|Assomption}}, local buses |
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|Hôpital Rosemont |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Local buses |
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|St-Zotique |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Local buses |
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|Lacordaire |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|{{rint|Montreal|Metro|5}} Lacordaire (''future''), local buses |
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|St-Léonard |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Local buses |
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|Couture |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Local buses |
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|Montréal-Nord |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Local buses |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Cégep Marie-Victorin |
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|Local buses |
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|Haig |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|Local buses |
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|{{stms|Honoré-Beaugrand}} |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|{{rint|Montreal|Metro|1}} {{stms|Honoré-Beaugrand}}, local buses |
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|- |
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|Contrecoeur |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|Local buses |
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|St-Jean Baptiste |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|Local buses |
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|Tricentenaire |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|Local buses |
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|Rousselière |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|Local buses |
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|[[Pointe-aux-Trembles station|Pointe-Aux-Trembles]] |
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|Pointe-Aux-Trembles |
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|{{rint|montreal|rail|Mascouche|x}} [[Mascouche line]], local buses |
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|} |
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[[File:Proposed route of the REM 2.0 following the initial announcement.png|thumb|upright=1.25|Proposed route of the REM 2.0 (red) along Taschereau Boulevard between Terminus Panama (REM – green) and Terminus Longueuil (Montreal metro – Yellow Line). Officials have expressed interest in extending this line southwest to Châteauguay and northeast to Boucherville.]] |
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=== South Shore "REM 2.0" branch === |
=== South Shore "REM 2.0" branch === |
Revision as of 22:17, 3 July 2023
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (April 2017) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Réseau express métropolitain | |
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Overview | |
Owner | CDPQ Infra |
Locale | Greater Montreal |
Transit type | Light metro |
Number of lines | 1 (3 branches) |
Number of stations | 5 (first phase) 26 (full route) |
Daily ridership | 190,000 (projected)[1] |
Website | rem |
Operation | |
Operation will start | Q3 2023 | (first phase)
Operator(s) | SNC-Lavalin–Alstom |
Number of vehicles | 212 Alstom Metropolis[2] |
Train length | 2 cars (4 during rush hour) |
Technical | |
System length | 16.6 km (10.3 mi) (first phase)[3] 67 km (42 mi)[4] |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Electrification | Overhead line, 1,500 V DC |
Average speed | 51 km/h (32 mph) |
Top speed | 100 km/h (62 mph) |
The Réseau express métropolitain (REM; Template:Lang-en) is a light metro rapid transit system under construction in Greater Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The system will link several Montreal suburbs and Montréal–Trudeau International Airport with Downtown Montreal and will open in stages between 2023 and 2027.[5] A portion of the route was taken over from the Deux-Montagnes line and converted to light metro standards.
The 67-kilometre (42 mi) light metro rail system is projected to cost $6.9 billion.[6] It will be independent of—but connect to—the existing Montreal Metro, operated by the STM. Trains on the network will be fully automated and driverless, and it will become the fifth-longest automated transportation system in the world, after the Singapore Mass Rapid Transit, Kuala Lumpur Rapid KL, Vancouver SkyTrain, and Dubai Metro.[7]
The first section between Brossard and Central Station is expected to open by mid-August 2023.[8]
History
On 13 January 2015, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard and Michael Sabia, CEO of Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ), agreed to a partnership in which the Crown corporation could assume financing for major transportation projects in the province, with $7.4 billion planned to be spent on infrastructure from 2014 to 2024.[9] Two of these projects were the South Shore Line and the Train de l'Ouest toward the West Island, which eventually merged to become the core of the REM project.[10]
On 22 April 2016, Sabia and Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre unveiled the project, then known as the Réseau électrique métropolitain, to the media. The estimated completion date for the first portion of the system was December 2020. On 22 June 2016, CDPQ Infra published two requests for qualification: one for the engineering, procurement and construction contract and the other for the rolling stock, systems, operation, and maintenance. The estimated value of the two contracts are $4 billion and $1.5 billion respectively.[11]
On 25 November 2016, CDPQ Infra announced the addition of three new stations to the project. These new stations—Central Station, McGill, and Édouard-Montpetit—would improve downtown Montreal service by integrating the REM with the Metro system through connections to the Orange, Green and Blue Lines. Included with news of the 3 new stations was an increased price tag of $5.9 billion for the entire project.[12][13]
On 15 June 2017, the Government of Canada pledged $1.28 billion to finance the project,[14] completing the financing of the project. Construction on the project was announced as starting at the end of 2017.
On 1 December 2017, the CDPQ extended the tender process on the project to the end of January 2018, citing a need for additional discussions with the bidders.[15]
Procurement
On 28 June 2016, CDPQ Infra launched two public tenders in parallel: one for "Engineering, Procurement and Construction" (EPC, or "Ingénierie, Approvisionnement et Construction des infrastructures" (IAC) in French), and a second, for "Rolling Stock, Systems and Operation and Maintenance Services" (RSSOM, or "Fourniture du Matériel Roulant, de Systèmes de conduite automatique et de Services d'Exploitation et de Maintenance" (MRSEM) in French).[16][17] Following a prequalification phase, the Caisse's subsidiary announced, on 10 November 2016, the qualified candidates that would be allowed to submit a bid:
- For the EPC contract, the competitors were the Groupe NouvLR consortium composed of SNC-Lavalin Grands Projets, Dragados, Aecon, Pomerleau, EPC and AECOM and the Kiewit-Eurovia consortium formed by Kiewit Corporation, Eurovia, WSP Global and Parsons Corporation;[18][19]
- For the RSSOM contract, three companies and consortia were in competition: Bombardier Transportation alone, Alliance Montréal Mobilité (composed of Parsons Corporation, Hyundai Rotem, RATP Dev and Thales Canada) and the Groupe des Partenaires pour la Mobilité des Montréalais (associating Alstom and SNC-Lavalin O&M).[18] Ansaldo STS-Hitachi and China Railway International Co. were not allowed to bid.[18]
According to LaPresse, final bids were submitted to CDPQ Infra on 27 October 2017.[20] On 10 November 2017, the date of the planned announcement of the selected contractors, the procurement process was "postponed indefinitely" to provide more time for analysis and evaluation of the bids received.[21] On 8 February 2018, CDPQ Infra finally announced its selection: Groupe NouvLR consortium for the EPC contract (SNC-Lavalin Grands Projets, Dragados, Aecon, Pomerleau, EBC and AECOM) and the Groupe des Partenaires pour la Mobilité des Montréalais for the RSSOM contract (Alstom and SNC-Lavalin O&M).[19][22] The contracts' value is estimated to be around $6.3 billion, of which approximately 80% is for the EPC contract.[23]
Construction
Preparatory work began in late March 2018.[24] On 12 April 2018, the project broke ground officially.[25]
In December 2019, CDPQ revised the capital cost of the project to $6.5 billion, an increase of $230 million.[26][27]
In November 2020, a disruption from an "unexpected" explosion during the renovation of the Mont Royal Tunnel, likely caused by century-old explosives, delayed the opening of the central section of the REM from 2022 to 2023.[28]
In June 2021, CDPQ updated the project costs to $6.9 billion, an increase of $350 million, citing impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic in Montreal.[29][6] In June 2022, CDPQ Infra acknowledged that construction issues with the Mount Royal Tunnel,[30] labour shortages and material supply issues would postpone the opening of most REM stations to 2024. The delay had also resulted in higher costs for the project overall, exceeding the last projected budget estimate of $6.9 billion.[31] No new estimate of the project cost was provided.
Route
The primary route follows the Mount Royal Tunnel, where new underground stations are being built to connect with the existing McGill and Édouard-Montpetit Metro stations. A new connection to the Mascouche commuter rail line is being built near the A-40 at the Côte-de-Liesse station to allow this line that previously used the tunnel to have access to downtown.
Southeast from Central Station, the line follows existing rail lines until Marc-Cantin Street, where it transitions to an elevated guideway and crosses to Nuns' Island, and then uses a rail deck constructed on the new Champlain Bridge to cross the St. Lawrence River. Three stations in Brossard on the South Shore have been built: Panama, connecting to the existing bus terminal; Du Quartier, directly connected to the DIX30 commercial district; and Brossard, a future bus terminus.
The northwest branch will be a direct conversion of the existing Deux-Montagnes line, with a doubling of the tracks beyond Bois-Franc station. On the West Island, a new airport branch will separate near the A-13, with a stop in Technoparc Saint-Laurent before terminating at Montréal–Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport. The other branch will follow an existing freight rail spur through Pointe-Claire, then follow the Quebec A-40 alignment just east of St-Jean Boulevard and continue through Kirkland before ending in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue.
In the city centre, three stations are being built to connect with existing Metro lines: McGill will connect with the Green Line,[13] Édouard-Montpetit will connect with the Blue Line,[13] and Bonaventure Gare Centrale will connect with the Orange Line.
Rolling stock
Alstom Metropolis Saint-Laurent[32] | |
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Manufacturer | Alstom |
Assembly | Sri City, Andhra Pradesh, India |
Family name | Metropolis |
Constructed | 2019–2021 |
Number built | 212 carriages (106 units) |
Formation | 2-car units, 1–2 units per train |
Capacity | 64 seated / 390 maximum (2-car unit) |
Depots | Centre de remisage et de maintenance de Brossard |
Specifications | |
Train length | 38.1 m (125 ft 0 in) per unit |
Car length | 19.05 m (62 ft 6 in) over coupler faces |
Width | 2.94 m (9 ft 7+3⁄4 in) |
Height | 3.9 m (12 ft 9+1⁄2 in) (excluding pantograph) |
Doors | 3 per side per car |
Wheelbase |
|
Maximum speed | 100 km/h (62 mph) |
Weight | 232 t (228 long tons; 256 short tons), 2 units |
Axle load | 14.5 t (14.3 long tons; 16.0 short tons) |
Traction motors | 4 × 185 kW (248 hp) each |
Power output |
|
Electric system(s) | Overhead line, 1,500 V DC |
Current collector(s) | Pantograph |
UIC classification | Bo′Bo′+Bo′Bo′ (one unit) |
Braking system(s) | Air |
Safety system(s) | Fully automated (GoA4) |
Coupling system | Dellner |
Seating | Longitudinal |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Notes/references | |
[33] |
The Alstom Metropolis Saint-Laurent is a type of light metro train built by Alstom for the Réseau express métropolitain. Part of the Alstom Metropolis family, 106 two-car trains were built in Sri City, Andhra Pradesh in India. Trains will run as a single two-car train at quieter times, running as a four-car trainsets at rush hour.[34] The trains are fully automated (Grade of Automation 4), with no driver or attendant on board the train.[34]
Each two-car train seats 64, with standing capacity around 300. A four-car trainset can carry a maximum of 780 people at rush hour.[34][35] The external livery is white, grey, and bright green, matching the REM logo.[34]
The train has a large front window, allowing passengers to view from the front.[32] A dedicated space for wheelchair users is available, and the train will feature WiFi, air conditioning and heated floors.[32] CDPQ Infra is "confident that the trains ... will be able to withstand ... winter conditions", with trains featuring double glazing, ice scraping pantographs and heated automatic couplings.[36]
Compared to the Azur trains used on the Montreal Metro, the trains use steel wheels (rather than rubber tires), they are 17% wider, they are faster (with a top speed of 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph) on the Champlain Bridge) and fully automated.[35][32] However, the REM trains are shorter and can carry fewer passengers per trainset - noting that the REM has the ability to increase capacity to meet demand.[35][32] The REM trains are also exposed to the weather, unlike the fully underground Metro.
History
In April 2018, CDPQ Infra awarded a $2.8 billion contract to Alstom and SNC-Lavalin to deliver a driverless light metro including rolling stock and automatic signalling, as well as operation and maintenance for the line.[37] This contract included 212 Alstom Metropolis cars, forming 106 two-car trains.[37] Later that year, a consultation took place regarding the external design of the trains - with the Saint-Laurent design chosen, with front lights inspired by the Champlain Bridge.[34] The final design was unveiled in April 2019.[38]
Built at Alstom's Sri City plant in India, the trains were delivered to Montreal by boat, arriving in October 2020.[39] They were first unveiled by the in November 2020.[40][41] By November 2021, 37 of the 106 trains had been delivered and trains were undergoing testing.[42]
Stations
The REM will consist of 26 stations on three branches. Twelve of these stations are on the former suburban Deux-Montagnes line and will become part of the REM after being converted to rapid transit standards. Several have received new names since the project's inception.[43]
South Shore and Central section (all branches)
All stations on the main branch of the Réseau express métropolitain are projected to have a train frequency of 2.5 minutes during rush hour and every 5 minutes otherwise, both towards Brossard station and towards the three different branches.
Station | Opening for REM[44] | Opened | Parking spots[43] | Bike racks | Connections |
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Brossard | Q3 2023 | 2,950 | 50 | RTL, Exo; 22 bus platforms | |
Du Quartier | — | 74 | RTL; street stops only | ||
Panama | 700 | 200 | Terminus Brossard-Panama; RTL and Exo; 31 bus platforms | ||
Île-des-Soeurs | — | 20 | STM; 4 bus platforms | ||
Griffintown–Bernard-Landry | TBD | — | — | STM; street stops only | |
Central Station | Q3 2023 | 1943 | — | — |
|
McGill | Q4 2024 | 1966 | — | — | McGill, STM Several other nearby connections via the RÉSO underground city. |
Édouard-Montpetit | 1988 | — | 30 | Édouard-Montpetit, STM | |
Canora | 1918 | — | 100 | STM; street stops only | |
Ville-de-Mont-Royal | 1918 | — | 60 | STM; street stops only | |
Côte-de-Liesse | Q4 2024 | — | 35 | Mascouche line; STM; street stops only | |
Montpellier | Q4 2024 | 1918 | — | 60 | STM; street stops only |
Du Ruisseau | 1994 | 1,060 | 45 | STM, STL; street stops only. In the future, 1 bus platform and street stops | |
Bois-Franc | 1994 | 740 | 120 | STM, STL; street stops only. In the future, 6 bus platforms and street stops |
Deux-Montagnes branch
Stations on the Deux-Montagnes branch are projected to run every five minutes during rush hour, and every fifteen minutes otherwise.
Station | Opening for REM[44] | Opened | Parking spots | Bike racks | Connections |
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Sunnybrooke | Q4 2024 | 1994 | 400 | 40 | STM; street stops only |
Pierrefonds-Roxboro | 1944 | 1,140 | 80 | STM; 6 bus platforms and street stops | |
Île-Bigras | 1995 | 45 | 20 | STL (taxibus T26 only),[46] | |
Sainte-Dorothée | 1995 | 975 | 45 | STL; 6 bus platforms | |
Grand-Moulin | 1925[47] | 304[48] | 44 | Exo; street stops only | |
Deux-Montagnes | 1995 | 1,256[49] | 247 | Exo; 6 bus platforms and street stops |
Anse-à-l'Orme branch
The Anse-à-l'Orme (formerly Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue) branch of the Réseau express métropolitain is projected to run every ten minutes during rush hour, and every fifteen minutes otherwise.
Station | Planned opening[44] | Parking spots | Bike racks | Connections |
---|---|---|---|---|
Des Sources | Q4 2024 | 500 | 20 | STM; 1 bus platform and street stops |
Fairview–Pointe-Claire | 700 | 50 | STM; 17 bus platforms | |
Kirkland | 2,500 | 30 | STM; 6 bus platforms | |
Anse-à-l'Orme | 200 | 20 | STM, Exo; 11 bus platforms |
Airport branch
The Airport branch of the Réseau express métropolitain is projected to run every ten minutes during rush hour and every fifteen minutes otherwise.
Station | Planned opening[44][50] | Parking spots | Bike racks | Connections |
---|---|---|---|---|
Marie-Curie | 2027[51] | — | 20 | STM; street stops only |
YUL–Montréal–Trudeau Airport | — | — | Connection to Montréal–Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport |
Controversies
In a report prepared by the Bureau d'audiences publiques sur l'environnement (BAPE) and released on 20 January 2017, the project was criticized for failing to provide crucial information on the project's financial model, environmental impact, as well as the impact on ridership levels throughout the public transit network across Montreal. Without such information, the BAPE declared that it was "premature to authorize the approval of this project".[52] The BAPE also stated that CDPQ Infra had not met its obligations for transparency, as it had failed to provide information in a timely fashion on the ridership levels of the REM's three branches.[52] The CDPQ Infra was also reproached for not studying the impact of the REM on existing public transit authorities.[52] CDPQ Infra was criticized for not being able to answer questions like how much tickets would cost, whether municipalities on the REM would themselves have to pay for the necessary infrastructure for access to it, and whether municipalities would also have to contribute to the REM's operation.[52]
A lawsuit filed by Coalition Climat further alleged that the REM project violated federalism for a lack of federal assessment of the potential harm to citizens' environmental rights by its potential contribution to noise pollution and urban heat islands. The lawsuit was dismissed by the Quebec Superior Court on 13 December 2017.[53]
Another controversy occurred in November 2019, when Montreal mayor Valerie Plante proposed naming Griffintown's REM station after controversial politician Bernard Landry, sparking a backlash from the city's Irish community.[54] As a compromise, the station was named Griffintown–Bernard-Landry, which still proved controversial.[55]
Proposed lines, stations, and extensions
On 20 May 2019, the Quebec government announced that it had requested CDPQi to study two REM extensions. One route would be nearly 20 km (12 mi) north to Carrefour Laval and the other nearly 30 km (19 mi) south to Chambly and St-Jean-sur-Richelieu.[56] The government also made a request to determine the best electrified transit system to be put in place for the East Island, with the possibility of it being a new REM line.[56] The proposal became the REM de l'Est Project.
Dorval station
The federal government requested the Canadian Infrastructure Bank study a possible extension of the REM to Dorval Exo train station and to Dorval Via Rail station to connect with Exo and Via Rail trains.[57] This station would be about a 1-kilometre (0.62 mi) extension from the Airport station. The STM bus station is located south of the CP, CN tracks and west of the Via Rail station.
Bridge-Bonaventure station
The city of Montreal requested two stations, instead of one station, at Bassin Peel.[58] The second station would be added between Île-des-Soeurs and Griffintown–Bernard-Landry stations.[59]
REM de l'Est
The "REM de l'Est" was a planned second REM line which would have been 32 km (20 mi) long. Announced in 2020,[60][61] it would have used the existing REM technology but not be connected directly to the first section of the network.
Beginning a few blocks east of Boulevard Robert-Bourassa (and therefore from Central Station), the line would have run east on an elevated guideway along Boulevard René-Lévesque and Rue Notre-Dame until Rue St-Clément, where it would have turned north and split into two branches:
- one running elevated along Sherbrooke Street to Pointe-aux-Trembles
- one diving into a tunnel and running north to Cégep Marie-Victorin via Lacordaire
The REM de l'Est would have added 23 new stations.
In May 2022, the project was abandoned[62] and, as of mid-2023, still nothing is known about its eventual replacement, which is under study, except that it is to be named Projet structurant de l’Est (PSE) instead of REM.[63]
South Shore "REM 2.0" branch
In partnership with the City of Longueuil and the Municipality of Brossard, the Quebec government announced an extension of the REM through the South Shore of Montreal. This branch has been referred to as "REM 2.0" and is planned to connect the existing REM line at Terminus Panama to the Montreal metro at Terminus Longueuil.[64] The REM 2.0 would follow the axis of Taschereau Boulevard for much of its length, superseding earlier proposals for an electric tramway, the "East–West Electric Line" (Lien électrique est–ouest or LÉEO),[65] to connect these transit hubs. The Quebec government suggested that this REM line could ultimately continue in either direction to the municipalities of Châteauguay and Boucherville respectively.[66]
See also
References
- ^ "Sommaire des previsions d'achalandage du REM" (PDF). www.cdpqinfra.com. CDPQ Infra Inc. February 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2017. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
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- ^ T26
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