Construction Early plans called for the Wye to be centered underneath Broadway and 8th Street, but this was later changed to Broadway and 9th. This required a tighter turn between Lake Merritt station and 12th Street/Oakland City Center and, consequently, lower speeds through the Wye. There is some evidence that then-Oakland mayor
John C. Houlihan objected to the original 8th Street location because it threatened a store owned by a friend of his. A third track (labeled MX/CX in the above schematic diagram) connecting West Oakland, 12th Street Oakland City Center, , and stations was completed in 1986. Originally the MX/CX was used for peak hour service (westbound towards San Francisco in the morning, and eastbound in the evening). Since 1992, it has been used almost entirely for eastbound
Yellow Line trains, allowing for
cross-platform transfers with
Orange Line trains.
Incidents On December 17, 1992, a southbound train (operating on northbound track C1
due to maintenance)
split a switch at the north end of the wye, injuring 14 passengers. In February 2000, automatic train controls failed due to a loose cable and trains through the Oakland Wye were forced to operate in manual and slow to when switching tracks. In February 2009, two northbound trains from West Oakland and Lake Merritt (one operating in manual mode) collided and partially derailed in the Wye while merging to approach 12th Street/Oakland City Center. == Future ==