The northern end of the proposed line is
Sylmar/San Fernando station, providing a connection to the
Metrolink Antelope Valley Line, and the southern end would be the
G Line's
Van Nuys station. An important intermediary stop would be at the currently existing
Van Nuys Metrolink and Amtrak station, where passengers could transfer to the
Ventura County Line,
Amtrak routes, and the proposed
Sepulveda Transit Corridor to the
Westside. The Metro staff recommendation included 14 stations for the line. The
Pacific Electric San Fernando Line ran a north–south line between Downtown Los Angeles and San Fernando, partially on Van Nuys Avenue, from 1911 to 1952 before being dismantled and converted to bus service. The project route was portrayed in the project map included in the 1980
Proposition A documentation.
Metro Rapid bus lines that serve the route are route 761 on Van Nuys Boulevard, with additional
Metro Local lines supplementing both. Planning for the line will take into consideration other major planned infrastructure projects, including a
Sepulveda Transit Corridor rail link, the conversion of the G Line from
bus rapid transit to light rail, and double tracking of the
Metrolink Antelope Valley Line. The Draft Environmental Impact Report was completed and released in September 2017, In 2022, the
Federal Transit Administration issued a Letter of Intent to provide $909 million to fund the project. In 2024, this turned into a signed agreement for an $893 million federal grant from the
United States Department of Transportation. This grant was received by Metro on September 6, 2024. In January 2023, the project was awarded another $600 million out of the state's Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program, originating from the state's budget surplus in prior years. The capital project cost for the first phase is estimated to be $3.635 billion. ==History==