First Coast Commuter Rail is a proposed commuter rail system serving
Jacksonville, FL and northeast Florida. It is currently in the planning stages, having completed the first step of a feasibility study and currently pursuing an alternatives analysis. Three routes were analyzed in depth, north to
Yulee, FL, southwest to
Green Cove Springs, FL and the southeast to
St. Augustine, FL. A feasibility study was completed in November 2009 for the Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA). James Boyle, JTA's regional transportation planner, has since said that there are no fatal flaws in the study. The study looked into 7 routes, most along existing freight rail right of ways. Three of these, north to
Yulee, FL, southwest to
Green Cove Springs, FL and the southeast to
St. Augustine, FL were selected for in depth study. In May 2013,
St. Augustine City Commission voted in a resolution supporting the proposal of a commuter train service on the southeast corridor. JTA says that the federal government could fund half of the southeast corridor project, estimated to cost about $193.3 million. The proposal still needs approval from
St. Johns County, The
North Florida Transportation Planning Organization board, and the Jacksonville Transportation Authority board. As of 2023, First Coast Commuter Rail is still in the planning stages and no funding has been identified for its implementation. All routes in the in-depth study start in downtown Jacksonville and head out in one of three directions: North (to Yulee), South (to Green Cove Springs), and Southeast (to St. Augustine). The North Corridor originates in Downtown Jacksonville, and heads North along the abandoned S-Line to the CSX Kingsland division line to
Yulee, FL. The Kingsland division line is a remnant of the
Seaboard Air Line's mainline. The route passes two miles (3 km) from
Jacksonville International Airport. The Southwest Corridor originates in Downtown Jacksonville, and heads South along the CSX A-Line to
Green Cove Springs, FL. The Southeast Corridor originates in Downtown Jacksonville, and heads Southeast along the
Florida East Coast Railway's main line to
St. Augustine, closely following
U.S. 1, known as Philips Highway in Jacksonville and Ponce de Leon Boulevard in St. Augustine . The proposed route would share the railbed with the northernmost part of a freight rail line to
Miami. The heavily trafficked corridor already serves 17 regularly scheduled interregional freight trains per day, a figure which does not include
Amtrak service, unscheduled freight trains, and other services. The 2009 feasibility study estimated that this route could carry an estimated 5,469 passengers in 2020 on trains between
Jacksonville and St. Augustine. Travel time is estimated at 51 minutes end to end, comparable to travel time by car. Notable proposed stops along the route include the
J. Turner Butler Freeway,
The Avenues, Race Track Road/
Nocatee, the massive mixed-use residential/commercial development at Palencia, West St. Augustine, the
Northeast Florida Regional Airport (not to be confused with the much larger and busier
Jacksonville International Airport almost 50 miles to the north), the St. Johns County Government Complex, and its terminus in
Downtown St. Augustine. == References ==