Draft EIR The MBTA filed the Draft
Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for Phase 2 with the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) Office on November 30, 2004. In its FY2005-10 and draft FY2006-11 Capital Improvement Plans, the MBTA has not budgeted any money for the Urban Ring project, beyond supporting the EIR process. Phase 2 would convert and expand five of the "crosstown" lines (CT2, CT3, CT4, CT5, and CT8) into
bus rapid transit lines that overlap and form a complete ring around the urban core. • BRT 1: Airport Station to Kendall Square via Wellington, Assembly Square, Sullivan Square, and Lechmere • BRT 2: Logan Airport Terminals to Wellington with local service to Chelsea and Everett • BRT 3: Wellington to Kendall via Gilman Square, Union Square Somerville, and Lechmere • BRT 5: Lechmere to Ruggles via Kendall, Grand Junction/MIT, BU Bridge, Kenmore/Yawkey/Fenway, and Huntington Avenue • BRT 6: Commonwealth Ave at
Boston University Central to UMass Boston via Ruggles, Melnea Cass Blvd, Uphams Corner • BRT 7: Longwood Medical Area to
Mystic Mall via South Boston,
World Trade Center,
Ted Williams Tunnel, and Downtown Chelsea BRT connections with the commuter rail lines would be improved by expanding the following existing stations: • Downtown Chelsea (
Newburyport/Rockport Line) • Yawkey (
Framingham/Worcester Line, project initiated, construction scheduled for completion in 2014) • Ruggles (inbound platform for Northeast corridor) The following new Commuter Rail stations would be created: • Sullivan Square (near junction of
Newburyport/Rockport and
Haverhill/Reading Lines) • Gilman Square (
Lowell Line) • Union Square (
Fitchburg Line) The new BRT lines would make additional connections at other commuter rail stops, rapid transit stops, and bus hubs. Some parts of the BRT system would run in mixed traffic, including through the
Ted Williams Tunnel and to the terminals at
Logan International Airport. Dedicated lanes would be provided for certain portions, including: • The
Grand Junction Railroad right-of-way, which runs through the campus of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and crosses the
Charles River under the
Boston University Bridge • Railroad right-of-way in Somerville, connecting with Lechmere • Portions from East Boston to Chelsea • Melnea Cass Boulevard, connecting the Silver, Orange, and Green Lines (E Branch) • The Haul Road in South Boston Ridership was estimated at 106,000 passengers per day in 2010; capital cost was estimated at $500 million.
2008 revised draft EIR The revised route of the ring had the following stops: Logan International Airport, Broadway, and Dudley Square were to be on short spurs, each served by only one route. There were to be two major spurs, both served only by the BRT 6 route. One was to
JFK/UMass station, splitting from the main route near Crosstown Center with intermediate stations at and Edward Everett Square. The other spur would run to
Harvard station via
Allston, with several possible alignments. Potential intermediate stations on different alignments included
West Station, Cambridge Street, North Harvard Street, and Brighton Mills; all alignments included a Barrys Corner stop. A commuter rail platform was to be added at Sullivan Square to serve the
Haverhill Line and Newburyport/Rockport Line. An interim surface routing was proposed, with multiple stops in the Longwood Medical Area, while the tunnel would be under construction. The capital cost for this version of the plan was estimated at $2.2 billion, with a projected daily ridership of 170,000. Approximately 53% of the route was either in a bus-only lane, dedicated busway, or tunnel. This was increased from the previous plan for Phase 2, to improve travel times. As a result of the implementation of Phase 2, ridership growth on the Red, Orange, Blue, and Green lines would be slowed, but Commuter Rail ridership boosted. The Urban Ring would have a higher collective ridership than the Orange Line, Blue Line, or the entire Commuter Rail system. ==Phase 3==