A Line (Los Angeles Metro)

Route map:
A Line
Overview
Other name(s)Blue Line (1990–2019)
Gold Line/L Line (north of Little Tokyo/Arts District)
OwnerLos Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Line number801
Termini
Stations44 (4 more under construction)
Websitemetro.net/riding/guide/a-line
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemLos Angeles Metro Rail
Depot(s)Division 11 (Long Beach)
Division 24 (Monrovia)
Rolling stockKinki Sharyo P3010 or AnsaldoBreda P2550 running in 2- or 3-car consists
Daily ridership60,423 (weekday, October 2023) Increase
Ridership10,663,617 (2022) Increase 17.2%
History
OpenedJuly 14, 1990; 33 years ago (1990-07-14)
Technical
Line length48.5 mi (78.1 km)
Number of tracks2 (except single track Long Beach loop)
CharacterMostly at-grade in private right-of-way, with some street-running, elevated and underground sections
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line750 V DC
Operating speed55 mph (89 km/h) (max.)
24 mph (39 km/h) (avg.)
Route map

The A Line (formerly, from 1990 to 2019, and colloquially known as the Blue Line) is a 48.5-mile (78.1 km) light rail line in Los Angeles County, California. The A Line runs east-west between Azusa and Pasadena, then north-south between Pasadena and Long Beach, via Downtown Los Angeles. The A Line is currently the longest light rail line in the world.

The A Line is the oldest of six lines in the Los Angeles Metro Rail system, operated by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The original Blue Line segment from Long Beach to Downtown Los Angeles opened in 1990, using much of the original right-of-way of the Long Beach Line, a former Pacific Electric interurban line.

The A Line's current Azusa–Long Beach service was introduced in June 2023 with the opening of the Regional Connector, incorporating the Union StationPasadena–Azusa portion of the former Gold Line.

Service description

Route description

The A Line runs 48.5 miles (78.1 km) between Azusa and Downtown Long Beach, with 44 stations. It is the longest light rail line in the world.

The line's northern terminus is at APU/Citrus College station just west of Citrus Avenue and the two universities. The line runs west through Azusa before stopping at Azusa Downtown station at Azusa Avenue, north of Foothill Boulevard, near the downtown shops and government buildings.

Continuing west, the line crosses over the I-210 freeway and runs parallel to it, entering Irwindale before stopping at Irwindale station at Irwindale Avenue. After this station, the line continues west, crossing over the San Gabriel River and underneath the I-605 freeway, diverging from I-210 and entering Duarte, before stopping at Duarte/City of Hope station located on the north side of Duarte Road, across from the City of Hope National Medical Center.

Continuing west, the line parallels Duarte Road, entering Monrovia, before diverging northwest just before arriving at Monrovia station. In this area, the line runs adjacent to single-family homes. Entering Arcadia, the line crosses all street crossings on bridges except for First Avenue at the at-grade Arcadia station.

Continuing west, the line reconverges with and enters the median of I-210 and continues west to Sierra Madre Villa station in Pasadena. Six stations serve different parts of Pasadena, with three of them in the freeway's median. In Old Pasadena, the line travels underground for almost half a mile, passing under Pasadena's main thoroughfare, Colorado Boulevard, which makes the Memorial Park station below grade. The station serves most of Pasadena's fine dining, shops, malls, and civic center. The Pasadena City Hall is visible upon exiting the station. The line continues south through downtown Pasadena and South Pasadena, primarily at-grade.

North of Highland Park, the line crosses over the Arroyo Seco Parkway (State Route 110) via the grand Santa Fe Arroyo Seco Railroad Bridge towards Highland Park. After Highland Park station, the line runs in the median of Marmion Way, where trains go at only 20 miles per hour (32 km/h). After 50th Avenue, the line runs primarily at-grade in its own right-of-way, except for a short tunnel underneath the intersection of Figueroa Street and Pasadena Avenue.

From here, the line continues, with a handful of stations serving the hillside communities north of downtown, including Lincoln Heights, Mount Washington, and the Southwest Museum of the American Indian. Northeast of Chinatown, the line crosses over the Los Angeles River on an elevated viaduct. Continuing on the elevated viaduct, the line stops at Chinatown station before arriving at Union Station. This entire section of the line north of Union Station follows the current and former right-of-way of the Pasadena Subdivision.

At Union Station, riders can transfer to other trains and modes.

Transfers include:

When the line used to be the L Line, trains went toward Atlantic station in East Los Angeles. Trains now use a new tunnel constructed via the Regional Connector Transit Project underneath downtown, which connects with the original A Line at 7th Street/Metro Center station. In Little Tokyo, the line enters the new tunnel north of Temple Street to serve the replacement underground Little Tokyo/Arts District station, where the line merges with the E Line. The lines turn to run under 2nd Street and the 2nd Street Tunnel, as well as the B and D lines, with clearances as low as 7 feet (2.1 m).

The new tunnel ends at the north end of 7th Street/Metro Center station, the previous terminal built in the early 1990s, and the line continues south under Flower Street. After rising to street level, the A and E Lines run south along Flower Street. Passengers can connect to the bus rapid transit J Line at 7th Street/Metro Center, Pico, and Grand stations. The two lines diverge at Flower Street and Washington Boulevard. E Line trains continue south along Flower Street. At the same time, the A Line turns east onto Washington Boulevard before turning south into the former Pacific Electric right-of-way at Long Beach Avenue. This historic rail corridor has four tracks, two for A Line trains and two for freight trains. Along the corridor, there are some flyovers to either eliminate grade crossings in more densely populated areas or pass over diverging freight tracks. Passengers can connect with the C Line at the Willowbrook/Rosa Parks station. Just south of Willow station, A Line trains exit the rail corridor and begin street running in the median of Long Beach Boulevard into the city of Long Beach, where trains travel through the Long Beach Transit Mall while making a loop using 1st Street, Pacific Avenue, and 8th Street.

Hours and frequency

A Line service hours are from approximately 4:30 a.m. and 11:45 p.m daily. Trains operate every 8 minutes during peak hours, Monday through Friday. During weekday midday and weekends from 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., trains run every 10 minutes. Night and early morning service is approximately every 20 minutes every day.

Time 4A 5A 6-7A 8A-1P 2-6P 7P 8P-12A
Weekdays 20 8-20 8 10 8 10-20 20
Weekends/Holidays 20 8-20 10 10-20 20

Speed

As listed on the official timetable, trains take two hours to travel the 49.5-mile (79.7 km) length of the line, an average speed of 24 miles per hour (39 km/h).

Station listing

The following is the complete list of stations, from north to south.

Station Date Opened City/Neighborhood Major connections and notes
APU/Citrus College March 5, 2016 Azusa Park and ride: 200 spaces
Azusa Downtown Park and ride: 521 spaces
Irwindale Irwindale Park and ride: 350 spaces
Duarte/City of Hope Duarte Park and ride: 125 spaces
Monrovia Monrovia Park and ride: 350 spaces
Arcadia Arcadia Park and ride: 300 spaces
Sierra Madre Villa July 26, 2003 Pasadena Park and ride: 965 spaces
Allen
Lake Park and ride: 22 spaces
Memorial Park
Del Mar Park and ride: 610 spaces
Fillmore Park and ride: 155 spaces
South Pasadena South Pasadena Park and ride: 142 spaces
Highland Park Los Angeles (Highland Park)
Southwest Museum Los Angeles (Mount Washington)
Heritage Square Los Angeles (Montecito Heights) Park and ride: 129 spaces
Lincoln/Cypress Los Angeles (Lincoln Heights/Cypress Park) Park and ride: 94 spaces
Chinatown Los Angeles (Chinatown)
Union Station Los Angeles (Downtown) B Line D Line J Line 
AmtrakAmtrak, FlyAway (bus) LAX FlyAway and Metrolink (California) Metrolink
Paid parking: 3,000 spaces
Little Tokyo/Arts District November 15, 2009 Los Angeles (Little Tokyo/Arts District) E Line 
Historic Broadway June 16, 2023 Los Angeles (Downtown) E Line 
Grand Avenue Arts/Bunker Hill E Line J Line 
7th Street/Metro Center February 15, 1991 B Line D Line E Line J Line 
Pico July 14, 1990 E Line J Line 
Grand/LATTC J Line 
San Pedro Street South Los Angeles
Washington
Vernon
Slauson
Florence Florence-Graham Park and ride: 116 spaces
Firestone
103rd Street/Watts Towers Watts Park and ride: 64 spaces
Willowbrook/Rosa Parks station Willowbrook C Line 
Park and ride: 234 spaces
Compton Compton
Artesia Park and ride: 288 spaces
Del Amo Carson Park and ride: 362 spaces
Wardlow Long Beach Park and ride: 139 spaces
Willow Street Park and ride: 927 spaces
Pacific Coast Highway
Anaheim Street
5th Street
(southbound only)
September 1, 1990
1st Street
(southbound only)
Downtown Long Beach
(northbound only)
Pacific Avenue
(northbound only)

Ridership

Annual ridership
Year Ridership
2009 25,735,979
2010 25,119,753 −2.4%
2011 26,053,645 +3.7%
2012 28,959,483 +11.2%
2013 28,185,745 −2.7%
2014 27,276,468 −3.2%
2015 24,457,253 −10.3%
2016 24,988,825 +2.2%
2017 22,383,828 −10.4%
2018 19,836,016 −11.4%
2019 8,905,140 −55.1%
2020 9,290,318 +4.3%
2021 9,099,416 −2.1%
2022 10,663,617 +17.2%
Source: Metro

History

LA Metro Blue Line (now A Line) opening celebration on July 14, 1990
Nippon Sharyo P865 train (now retired) leaving Downtown Long Beach station.

Long Beach Line

Much of the current A Line follows the route of the Pacific Electric's Long Beach Line, which ended service in 1961. The old route gave the new light rail trains a private right-of-way between Washington and Willow Street stations allowing them to reach higher speeds between stops.

The line initially opened as the Blue Line on Saturday, July 14, 1990, for US$877 million (equivalent to $1.96 billion in 2022 adjusted for inflation), and ran from Pico to Anaheim Street. The Long Beach Loop section to Long Beach opened in September 1990, followed by the tunnel into 7th Street/Metro Center in February 1991.

The route was a success, and from 1999 to 2001, the Blue Line underwent a US$11 million project to lengthen 19 of its platforms so that they could accommodate three-car trains. Plans were also made to extend the Blue Line north to Pasadena, but the connection across downtown was deferred, and the northern portion opened as the Gold Line in 2003. That original plan for the Blue Line became a reality when the Regional Connector was announced in 2009. Ground was broken for the Regional Connector across downtown in 2014, and it opened on June 16, 2023.

The Blue Line was renovated in 2019, with the southern half of the line being closed for the first five months and the northern half closing for the following five months (10 months total). Metro provided a bus shuttle service to compensate for the lack of rail service. Metro officially reopened the line on November 2, 2019, rebranding it as the A Line.

Pasadena Blue Line

AnsaldoBreda P2550 train at Chinatown station

Much of the L Line's right-of-way through the San Gabriel Valley was built by the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Valley Railroad in 1885, eventually taken over by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, as part of the Pasadena Subdivision, which saw Amtrak service until 1994, when construction began on the conversion to light rail. The project was initially called the "Pasadena Metro Blue Line." Planners envisioned extending the existing Blue Line from Long Beach. Still, when a ban on sales tax spending on subway tunnels passed in 1998, the project became a separate line terminating at Union Station.

The now-renamed Gold Line, between Union Station and Sierra Madre Villa station in East Pasadena, opened on July 26, 2003.

Foothill Extension

Phase 2A (the section between LA and Pasadena was Phase 1) of the Foothill Extension, running between Sierra Madre Villa and APU/Citrus College station in Azusa, opened on March 5, 2016.

Regional Connector

The Regional Connector Transit Project constructed a 1.9-mile (3.1 km) light rail tunnel across Downtown Los Angeles that connected the L Line with the A and E lines. The project finally completed the late 1990s vision of the "Pasadena Blue Line," connecting the northern (Union Station–Azusa) segment of the L Line to the A Line (formerly the Blue Line), which ran between Los Angeles and Long Beach. The southern (Pico/AlisoEast LA) segment was combined with the existing E Line between Downtown Los Angeles and Santa Monica. The new east–west line kept the E Line name but uses the L Line's gold color.

The at-grade Little Tokyo/Arts District station was demolished in 2020 and was rebuilt as a subway station approximately 500 feet (150 m) south and on the opposite side of Alameda from its former location.

With this project completed, service was simplified into the following configuration:

  • A Line
  • E Line
    • The southern portion of the current L Line to the Eastside was combined with the existing E Line, which kept the E Line name but now uses the L Line's gold color.

The groundbreaking for constructing the Regional Connector occurred on September 30, 2014, and opened on June 16, 2023.

Future developments

Foothill Extension

Phase 2B of the Foothill Extension, running between APU/Citrus College station in Azusa and the Pomona–North Metrolink station in Pomona, is currently under construction, with a current estimated completion of December 2024. This extension, like the original Gold Line to Pasadena, and the first phase of the Foothill Extension is being built by a specialized construction authority, independent of Metro. The original plan called for the extension to end at Montclair in San Bernardino County, but budget challenges forced the construction authority to cut the line back to Pomona.

It is served by the A Line due to the completion of the Regional Connector project on June 16, 2023.

WSAB

Main Article: West Santa Ana Branch Transit Corridor

The West Santa Ana Branch Transit Corridor is a planned light rail line, mostly following the Pacific Electric's historic West Santa Ana Branch, connecting Downtown Los Angeles to the city of Artesia, along with other cities in southeastern Los Angeles County. It will link the southeast/Gateway cities with the A line at Slauson station (A Line) station. It is to start construction in 2025 and operate starting in 2035. Metro says it will take 10 years to build.

Current issues

Capacity limits

A Line train arriving at 7th Street Metro Center.

The line often operates at capacity, and various options to increase capacity have been considered, such as four-car or more frequent trains. Both have problems: it would be difficult or impossible to lengthen some of the station platforms, and the number of trains already causes delays for other vehicles at level crossings. Thus it may not be possible to increase A Line ridership without a costly grade-separation project, either by elevation, by an entrenchment method similar to that used by the nearby Alameda Corridor freight rail "expressway," or by building another parallel transit corridor to relieve capacity strains from the A Line. With the Regional Connector Transit Project linking the A and E Line tracks with the former L Line tracks in Little Tokyo, this may result in even more capacity problems, with ridership expected to grow. Pico station, which is served by both A and E line trains, is a major limiting factor for service frequency. The very busy grade crossing immediately adjacent to the station makes reliably running high-frequency service on both lines logistically very difficult.

Safety at level crossings

A Metro A Line train heading to Long Beach arrives at Willow station.

Over 120 motorists and pedestrians have been killed at A Line level crossings since 1990. There have been more than 800 collisions, making the line easily the country's deadliest and most collision-prone rail line.

Train at the Slauson station

In 1998, the MTA commissioned Booz Allen Hamilton, Inc. to evaluate the cause of Blue Line collisions and recommend affordable solutions. The study reported the high ridership (over 70,000 per day) was a contributor:

The MBL has one of the highest ridership counts for light rail lines in the Country. This factor is perhaps the most important contributor to the grade-crossing accident rate. The high ridership results in increased pedestrian traffic near stations compared to other light rail systems. In addition, although MTA Operations does not allow high passenger loads to dictate safe operations, there is pressure to maintain travel times and headway schedule requirements (e.g., a passenger trip from Los Angeles to Long Beach in less than one hour).

Other contributing factors identified were the high population density leading to more pedestrian and vehicular traffic around the tracks, the diverse varied socio-economic community around the line that creates literacy and language difficulties for public education campaigns, driver frustration due to the slow traffic speeds around the line that leads to more risk-taking behavior, and the shared right-of-way with freight traffic in the fastest running section from Washington station to Willow station, where trains operate at a maximum of 55 mph (89 km/h) between stations.

The collision rate has declined somewhat following the installation of four-quadrant gates at some crossings where the A Line shares the right-of-way with freight rail between Willowbrook station and Artesia station. The gates prevent drivers from going around lowered gates. In addition, cameras along some problem intersections issue traffic tickets when drivers go around gates.

Operations

On Metro Rail's internal timetables, the A Line is called line 801.

Because of the length of the line, operators do not take trains from end to end, swapping out at Union Station. Trains are operated between APU/Citrus College and Union Station by employees based at Division 24 in Monrovia. Between Long Beach and Union Station, operators are based out of Division 11 in Rancho Dominguez.

Maintenance facilities

The A Line is operated out of two divisions, Metro’s term for train maintenance and storage facilities.

Division 11 is located at 4350 East 208th Street in Cota, North Long Beach between Del Amo and Wardlow stations. The facility can house and maintain 86 light rail vehicles and can perform heavy maintenance including repainting. Trains get to this yard via a wye junction on the southbound tracks. Northbound trains can enter and exit the yard via the cross tracks on the north and south side of the junction.

Division 24 is located south of the I-210 freeway in Monrovia between Monrovia and Duarte/City of Hope stations. Just like Division 11, trains access the yard via the westbound/southbound tracks from either direction of its wye junction. Crossovers from the eastbound track to the yard junction are located near the California Avenue and Mountain Avenue railroad crossings.

Rolling stock

Blue Line train in the 1990s
Blue Line train at Long Beach Blvd. and 20th St., 1995

The A Line operates trains with three light rail vehicles on weekdays and two on weekends. The line currently uses two different types of light rail vehicles: the Kinki Sharyo P3010 and the AnsaldoBreda P2550, but has seen every type of light rail rolling stock on Metro's roster throughout its history of operation.

When the A Line, then known as the Blue Line, first opened in 1990, the line had 54 Nippon Sharyo P865 light rail vehicles, numbered 100–153. These cars wore a unique livery of several blue stripes and a single red stripe, reflecting the Blue Line's color designation and its Pacific Electric Red Car heritage.

In 2000, Metro transferred all 15 Nippon Sharyo P2020 (numbered 154-168) light rail vehicles from the Green Line (now the C Line) to the Blue Line fleet. These light rail vehicles were nearly identical to the older P865 model but were about five years newer and originally had equipment for automatic train operation.

In 2012, Metro transferred some Siemens P2000 light rail vehicles from the Gold Line to the A (then Blue) Line fleet. These vehicles were used before their refurbishment. As of 2023, some are currently being tested on the A Line.

In 2017, the Blue Line received 78 Kinki Sharyo P3010 light rail vehicles, the first new cars for the line since it opened in 1990. As the P3010 fleet was introduced, Metro gradually retired all of the remaining P865 light rail vehicles, followed by the P2020 fleet.

In 2023, due to the completed Regional Connector, the AnsaldoBreda P2550 light rail vehicles started running the original Blue Line route. They originally test-ran the Blue Line in 2009 before becoming exclusive to the Gold Line. Initially, the P2550s could not run along the Blue Line due to weight restrictions.


This page was last updated at 2024-01-15 14:26 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari