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BOSTON QUINCY MILTON BROOKLINE NEWTON WATERTOWN BELMONT WALTHAM ARLINGTON LEXINGTON NEEDHAM CAMBRIDGE SOMERVILLE MEDFORD WINCHESTER WOBURN MALDEN MELROSE STONEHAM EVERETT CHELSEA REVERE E E E E E E E E E E BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL GL GL GL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL BL B A G G G D D D D R R R D R D R D R D D D D D R Bowdoin State Courthouse South Station BCEC World Trade Center Silver Line Way Broadway Andrew JFK/UMass North Quincy Wollaston Quincy Center Quincy Adams BRAINTREE Cedar Grove Butler Milton Central Ave Valley Rd Capen St MATTAPAN Savin Hill Fields Corner Shawmut ASHMONT Park St Boylston Downtown Crossing Chinatown Tufts Medical Center Back Bay Arlington Copley Prudential Fenway Longwood Brookline Village Brookline Hills Beaconsfield Reservoir Chestnut Hill Newton Centre Newton Highlands Eliot Waban Woodland RIVERSIDE Symphony Northeastern St. Marys St Hawes St Kent St St. Paul St Coolidge Corner Summit Ave Brandon Hall Fairbanks St Washington St Washington St Warren St Allston St Griggs St Harvard Ave Fordham Rd Packards Corner BU Central BU East Blandford St Tappan St Dean Rd Englewood Ave South St Chestnut Hill Ave Sutherland Rd Chiswick Rd CLEVELAND CIRCLE BOSTON COLLEGE Museum of Fine Arts Longwood Medical Area Brigham Circle Fenwood Rd Mission Park Riverway Back-of-the-Hill HEATH Massachusetts Ave Ruggles BU West Babcock St Roxbury Crossing Jackson Sq Stony Brook Green St Forest Hills Haymarket North Station Charles/MGH Kendall/MIT Central Harvard Porter Davis Science Park Community College Sullivan Sq Assembly Wellington Malden Center OAK GROVE UNION SQ Aquarium Central Station Maverick Airport Wood Island Orient Heights Suffolk Downs Beachmont Revere Beach Wonderland ALEWIFE Boston Historic “T” Expansion Track Map Orient Heights Yard Caddigan Yard Codman Yard Cabot Yard Southampton St Yard Amtrak Southampton Yard Lake Street Carhouse Watertown Carhouse North Cambridge Carhouse New Vehicle Maintenance Facility (Under Construction) Mattapan Yard Reservoir Carhouse Riverside Yard To Fitchburg Wellington Carhouse Wonderland Yard D D D D D Tremont St State St Summer St Dorchester Ave Cambridge St Seaport Blvd Boylston St Stuart St Mass. Turnpike Mass. Turnpike Beacon St Beacon St Kent St Beacon St Storrow Dr Chestnut St Main St Charles River Dam Massachusetts Ave Cambridge St River St Webster Ave Massachusetts Ave Concord Ave Mt Auburn St Greenough Blvd Mt Auburn St Belmont St Belmont St Trapelo Rd Trapelo Rd Mt Auburn St Mt Auburn St Huron Ave Aberdeen Ave Massachusetts Ave Commonwealth Ave Commonwealth Ave Commonwealth Ave Huntington Ave Columbus Ave Lamartine St Armory St Centre St South St Washington St Hyde Park Ave Hyde Park Ave Huntington Ave South Huntington Ave Washington St Washington St Shawmut Ave Southeast Expy Newport Ave Neponset Bridge Thomas E. Burgin Pkwy Pilgrims Highway Eliot St Northern Expy Chelsea St Rivers Edge Drive Commercial St Washington St Chelsea St Route 1 Bennington St Chelsea St Broadway Chelsea Bridge Bennington St Ocean Ave Highland Ave Longfellow Bridge Atlantic Ave Ted Williams Tunnel *1 *7 *2 *3 *48 *4 *5 *6 *10a *10b *12a *12b *13 *14 *47 *44 *16 *17 *19 *20 *21a *21b *23 *25 LOGAN AIRPORT D D D D D D D E West Newton St BRIGHAM CIRCLE E E E C C C C C C C C C C C C E E E E E E E VA E Bynner St E Perkins St E Moraine St E Beaufort Rd E Robinwood Ave E Lakeville Rd E Monument E Seaverns Ave E Pond St E B A C D E C D E D E D E C D D C E E B A E D C Fb L Nr G F Fr F B B Ps Nb W Oc D B C D E E B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B A A A A A A B A M M B M M M M M M A B A B Fb A B A B A B A B A B A B A B 1 1 2 1 2 2 3 1 2 1 2 3 3 A B A B A Dudley St A B A A A B B B B Blackstone Atlantic Ave D 1 2 3 2 Terminal A 1 Terminal B 1 Harbor St 2 Tide St 2 23 Dry Dock Ave 2 DESIGN CENTER Black Falcon Ave 2 Terminal C 1 Terminal E 1 Scale of Miles 71 72 73 WATERTOWN SQ 71 WAVERLEY SQ 73 77 ABERDEEN AVE 72 NORTH CAMBRIDGE 77 Chelsea West Medford Belmont Waltham Fb Fb Fb Fb L Nr *33 *33 *34 *35 *35 *37 *37 *38 *38 *38 *38 *39 *39a *51 *39 *39 *43a *43b *43c See Lynn breakout To Plymouth and Kingston, Middleborough/Lakeville To Greenbush Newmarket F Uphams Corner F Four Corners/ Geneva F Talbot Ave F Morton St F Blue Hill Ave F Fairmount F Readville F Endicott F WESTWOOD/RT 128 Hyde Park Ps Ps Ps Ps Roslindale Village Bellevue Highland West Roxbury NEEDHAM JUNCTION Needham Center Hersey Needham Heights Nb Fr Ps W Lansdowne W Boston Landing W West Station W Newtonville W West Newton W Auburndale W Oc Oc Braintree Oc MBTA Commuter Rail Maintenance Facility Needham Layover To Stoughton, New Bedford, Fall River & Providence To Forge Park-495 CHELSEA Bellingham Sq Box District Eastern Ave *40 *42 *41 *41 Mass. Turnpike Cambridge St Washington St Brighton Ave Mass. Turnpike Mass. Turnpike *45 *46 Hyde Park Ave Vassar St Pleasant St Channing Rd Somerville Ave Belgrade Ave Chestnut Ave Highland Ave Commuter Rail Back Bay-South Boston Line Back Bay to BCEC B Fitchburg Line North Station to Wachusett Fb Fairmount/Franklin Line South Station to Forge Park/495 F Newburyport/Rockport Lines North Station to Newburyport, Rockport Nr Providence Line South Station to Providence P Worcester Line South Station to Worcester W Grand Junction Line West Station to North Station G New Bedford Line New Bedford to South Station Nb Fall River Line Fall River to South Station Fr Lowell Line North Station to Lowell L Old Colony Lines South Station to Greenbush, Plymouth, Kingston, Middleborough/Lakeville Oc Red Line Alewife to Ashmont Red Line Alewife to Braintree Service Guide Heavy Rail Light Rail A B Red Line East Watertown to Ashmont Red Line Hanscom-Rt 128 to Braintree A B Red Line Mattapan to Ashmont M Red Line Arlington Hghts to E. Watertown C Green Line Watertown to Park St A Green Line Watertown to Post Office Sq A Green Line Brigham Circle to Lechmere Green Line Newton-Riverside to Union Sq D Green Line Arborway to Woburn E Orange Line Reading to Dedham Center Orange Line Reading to Westwood-Rt 128 D R Blue Line Bowdoin to Wonderland Blue Line Brighton to East Boston Blue Line Charles/MGH to Lynn Green Line Boston College to Park St B Green Line Boston College to Brighton B Green Line Cleveland Circle to North Station C Green Line Cleveland Circle to Kenmore Sq C Green Line Riverside to Union Sq D Green Line Arborway to Medford/Tufts E Green Line Arborway to Brigham Circle E Green Line Needham to Park St G Silver Line Nubian Sq to Logan Airport Terminals Silver Line Nubian Sq to Design Center Bus Rapid Transit 1 2 Silver Line South Station to Chelsea 3 Trackless Trolley All Times Harvard to Watertown 71 All Times Harvard to Aberdeen Ave 72 All Times Harvard to Waverley Sq 73 Part Time Harvard to North Cambridge 77 Map Key Station Name Line/Branch Abandoned Platform Terminal Note Revenue Track Non-Revenue Track Active Portal Alternative Extension Lower level Track Abandoned Track/ROW Harvard *18a A B 71 Active Platform Lower level Platform Proposed extension Abandoned Portal 3 3 3 3 3 Readville Yard Wedgemere L Winchester L Wyoming Hill Melrose Highlands R Greenwood Melrose/Cedar Park East Somerville Lechmere Gilman Sq Lowell St Ball Sq Medford/Tufts *52 1 2 NUBIAN E WOBURN E Medford Hillside Cross St Woburn Highlands HARTWELL-RT 128 B Arlington Center / C Arlington Heights B Lexington B EAST WATERTOWN A C Mount Auburn C Lake St C Brattle C ARLINGTON HEIGHTS C R R R D Edgeworth R D R D R D R D R D R R R R R D R R D R D D D D R DEDHAM D 1 2 East Berkeley St 1 2 Union Park St 1 2 Newton St 1 2 Worcester Sq 1 2 Massachusetts Av 1 2 Lenox St 1 2 Melnea Cass Blvd 1 2 Herald St Columbia Rd A Mt Bowdoin A Talbot Ave A Morton St A Blue Hill Ave A Atlantic B R Mt Hope* R Metropolitan Ave* R R R D D D Newton D Faneuil D Brighton D Allston D Cottage Farm D D G Nickerson Field Loop Union Sq Loop Oak Sq Loop / / Broadway D / B A A C D E G B A C D Hynes G G Kenmore G G G G G G G Newton Upper Falls G Allston St Harvard Ave Packards Corner Pleasant St St. Mary’s St / G POST OFFICE SQ A / / / B A C D E / / B A C D C G Cambridge/Kendall G St. Rose St E Child St E Carolina Ave E Packards Corner A St. Lukes St A Chester St A Linden St A Harvard Ave A Allston St A Union St A Saunders St A Dustin St A Washington St A Waldo Terrace A Foster St A Brock St Lake St A Oak Sq Ave Langley Rd A Market St Chestnut Hill Ave A OAK SQ A A Tremont St A Cufflin St A Pembroke St A Waverly Ave A Hibbard Rd A Elmwood St A Pearl St Jefferson St A Maple St Boyd St A Tremont Pl A Tremont St Galen St Berwick St Belmont St Myrtle Ave Main St Mystic Valley Pkwy Main St Arborway Yard Loop BRIGHTON BL G B 1: Green Line (1897-1920) What we know today as the Green Line opened in 1897 as the first rapid transit subway in the US and third in the world. The Green Line was designed to take in numerous streetcar lines originating from all over the city and its suburbs and seamlessly terminate them under the streets of Boston. After the initial success of the Green Line plans were drawn up to expand the network. The two most famous examples from this time period were the Riverbank Subway plan and the Post Office Square branch. The Riverbank Subway was a mostly above ground line be built from Park St to Kenmore Sq along the banks of the Charles River. At that time Storrow Dr had not been built. The line was to act as an express bypass for streetcars coming from the suburbs of Brighton, Allston and Brookline. No stations were planned on the route and streetcars would have used a large new loop built next to the Park St station. Boylston St was chosen instead as it was more centrally located. Provisions were added as part of the extension for a possible branch to Post Office Sq. This new branch would have taken pressure off Park St station which was going to be temporarily converted to heavy rail for the new elevated lines, the future Orange Line before the Washington St Tunnel could be built. The plan was dropped as it was felt that the Washington St Tunnel would provide adequate service. 2: Red Line (1912-1920) The Red Line was first conceived as an elevated line which would have run from Harvard Sq in Cambridge to Maverick Sq in East Boston. But a dispute between the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy), who were building and operating the lines, and the Boston Transit Commission split the line into two different subways. The Cambridge Tunnel opened to Park St Under in 1912. Beginning in 1915 the line was extended to South Station and by 1918 had been extended to Andrew station. South of Andrew BERy originally considered continuing the line as a traditional subway through Uphams Corner and south along Washington St to Talbot Ave. Instead of building a new subway, BERy chose to purchase the Shawmut Branch Railroad from the NY, New Haven & Hartford Railroad (New Haven Railroad) and convert it to rapid transit. This became the Ashmont and Mattapan Branches. At the time BERy considered continuing heavy rail through to Mattapan but residents opted for a high-speed trolley instead. BERy considered building a second branch of the Red Line which would run from Andrew station to a new line paralleling the Fairmount Branch railroad to Blue Hill Ave where it would loop back via an ungraded Mattapan Line. With Mattapan staying as a high-speed streetcar this plan was ultimately shelved. 4: Orange Line (1901-1920) The Orange Line started as an elevated train network which featured branches from the South End (Dudley Sq, now Nubian), & Charlestown. Elevated lines through Dorchester, Cambridge, Everett, Chelsea, and South Boston were also proposed but dropped. Trains originally ran along the outer tracks of the Green Line subway Pleasant St portal to North Station. A second branch ran along Atlantic Ave to serve the seaport. In 1908 a permanent tunnel for the Orange Line was opened under Washington St and streetcar service was returned to the Green Line. The Orange Line was soon extended to serve the growing suburbs. In 1909 it was extended from Dudley Sq to Forest Hills. A decade later the northern end was extended from Sullivan Sq to Everett. The terminal in Everett was meant to be temporary and the extension planned to run north along Main St to Malden Center. An elevated line was opposed and the plan was eventually dropped. 5: Green and Blue Lines to Heavy Rail (1920s-30s) The Boylston St Subway was originally built to a portal east of Kenmore Sq but traffic in the square delayed streetcars so an underground station was soon proposed. As part of this project planners developed a proposal to convert the whole of the Green and Blue Lines from streetcars to heavy rail and create two new rapid transit lines. The first route would have run from Lechmere to Brigham Circle. By utilizing the eastern two tracks at Park St the line would run south through Boylston to a new subway tunnel running from the Pleasant St portal to Back Bay station, then along the New Haven RR tracks before swinging west to Huntington Ave. The subway would ascend to the surface, as the E branch does today, and have run southwest along Huntington Ave to a large loop terminal at Tremont St and Brigham Circle. The second route would have run from Brighton to East Boston. The Blue Line was to make a large curve south from Scollay Sq or Bowdoin stations and connect to the western two tracks at Park St. From here the line would have run west along the existing Boylston St Subway to a new station under Kenmore Sq. After Kenmore the subway was to continue west under Commonwealth Ave to Warren St where a large transfer terminal was to be built (today the Franciscan Children's Hospital stands in this location). The streetcars from the A and B branches were to terminate here. In 1924 the Blue Line was converted to heavy rail but was not extended west. Kenmore station was built so that the center two tracks were lower than the outer tracks for a “future conversion” to heavy rail. The portal for the B branch on Commonwealth Ave was built to be temporary for a future extension west. Plans for a Huntington Ave subway evolved into the 1930s when a final plan for the subway as we know it were finalized in 1933. Funds were provided by the WPA and the two new stations and portal at Gainsborough St were all built to allow for future conversion to heavy rail. The Huntington Ave subway opened in 1941. 6: Green Line to Newton and Needham ( 1945-1959) The Boston & Albany Railroad ran west through Newton and featured a large loop line through the leafy suburbs known as the Riverside Line. In 1945 the Coolidge Commission proposed to convert this loop, along with another branch to Needham, into rapid transit service and connect it to the Green Line through a new tunnel under South Cove to the Tremont St Subway. The section of the Green Line from Park St to Scollay Sq was to be expanded from two tracks to four. In 1959 the Riverside Line was successfully incorporated into the Green Line as the D branch but was connected to the network at Kenmore Sq rather than Boylston. The line proved so popular that streetcars had to be transferred from other lines to serve the new branch. This ultimately led to the abandonment of many of the remaining streetcar lines in the system, including the A branch. 7: Green Line to West Medford and Woburn (1945-Present) Ideas to extend the Green Line north of Lechmere station had existed since the 1920s but were formalized in the Coolidge Commission which proposed extending it along the Lowell Line to Woburn. In the 1990s the Commonwealth began to seriously look at extending the Green Line north through Somerville. Planning began in 2006 and ground was broken in 2012. Two branches were proposed: D trains would run to College Ave in Medford and E trains would run to Union Sq in Somerville. The original concept included two more stations at Medford Hillside and West Medford but due to the extra costs involved with bridging the Mystic River these have been deferred to a future phase. The extension is planned to open by the end of 2021. 8: Green Line Watertown and Arborway Branches (1969-2005) Beginning in the 1920s the streetcar lines of Boston were systematically converted to buses and the tracks ripped up. In 1962 the last lines ran through the Pleasant St Portal and the southern branch of the Tremont St Subway was abandoned. Unlike the B and C branches, most streetcars ran on narrow city streets and not in their own traffic-separated medians. Subways had been planned which were to replace the A, B and E branches but only the Huntington Ave Subway was built for E trains. In 1969 the A branch, from Watertown Sq to Packard’s Corner in Brighton was “temporarily” replaced with buses due to a shortage of streetcars. The overhead wires were removed in 1994 and the tracks in 1996. Since then, there have been no serious proposals to bring the A branch back. The E branch runs in a dedicated median along Huntington Ave until Brigham Circle, after which it runs on tracks in the middle of traffic to a loop at Heath St and South Huntington Ave. Formerly the line ran all the way to Forest Hills and was known as the Arborway Line. In 1985 the street-running portion past Brigham Circle was replaced with buses as it was assumed that the soon to be open Orange Line Southwest Corridor line would serve Jamaica Plain better. As part of a law suit against the Commonwealth in the 1990s, service to Arborway was to be reinstituted as mitigation for the Big Dig. The City of Boston opposed streetcar service and began ripping the tracks up in 2005, ending any hopes of returning service on the line. 9: Red Line South Shore Branch (1945-1980) After World War II the South Shore saw massive suburban growth while at the same time the Old Colony Railroad was going bankrupt. The Coolidge Commission proposed that the Old Colony tracks be bought and converted to one or more branches of the Red Line. Initially a branch was to run from Savin Hill to Braintree. A second proposal in the 1960s included extending the Ashmont branch across the Neponset River to Granite Ave in East Milton to build a large Park-and-Ride terminal As plans developed into the 1950s the branch connection was moved up to Andrew station as a kind of bypass of Dorchester. An original station from the Old Colony Line at Atlantic (Quincy Shore Dr) was eventually dropped. Secondary branches off the Braintree extension were proposed with one to Holbrook and one to South Weymouth. The South Shore extension was opened in phases, first to Quincy in 1971 and eventually to Braintree in 1980. 10: Red Line Northwest Extension (1945-1985) Two plans were conceived to extend the Red Line past Harvard station. The Red Line proper was to be extended west from Harvard Sq to East Watertown along what is today Greenough Blvd. The Lexington Branch railroad running through Arlington and Lexington was to be converted into a high-speed trolley (similar to the Mattapan Line) and would run to East Watertown via the Watertown Branch railroad through what is now Alewife. In 1947 a more sensible alternative was proposed which extended the Red Line north to Porter Sq and then west along the Fitchburg Branch railroad to Alewife. As this plan was further developed possible extensions to Waltham or Arlington were included and a station at Davis Sq was added. After Governor Francis Sargent suspended highway construction in the Boston area in 1972 former highway funds were available for subway expansion. The Red Line was formally proposed to be extended from Harvard to Arlington Heights as a first phase and a then to Route 128 in Lexington as a future second. Arlington residents protested as they believed a “temporary” terminal in their town would bring too much traffic. The Arlington section was cut and the extension to Alewife was opened in 1985. 11: Blue Line to Wonderland and Lynn (1945-Present) The Boston, Revere Beach & Lynn Railroad was a narrow-gauge railroad running from East Boston to Winthrop, Revere and Lynn serving mostly summer beach goers. It had been eyed for rapid transit conversion early on in the development of the subways and this was formally proposed as part of the Coolidge Commission (the branch to Winthrop was abandoned). Between 1952 and 1954 the section from East Boston to Revere Beach was converted to the Blue Line. Due to lack of funds the further extension to Lynn was postponed indefinitely. Today the former right-of-way has been allowed to be redeveloped so any potential extension to Lynn will most likely run parallel to the Newburyport Line instead. Alternatively, in the 1960s a proposal was floated to extend the Blue Line one station west to the Salem Turnpike where a large Park-and-Ride terminal would be built. 12: Red-Blue Connector (1970s-Present) In the latter half of the 20th Century as the tech and life science industry began to boom in Cambridge, it was proposed to extend the Blue Line from its terminal at Bowdoin one stop to Charles/MGH to create a new transfer point in the core of Boston. A connection once existed between the two lines using streetcar tracks but this was only used for non-revenue moves to send Blue Line trains to the yard in Harvard (the portal at Joy St was covered up in the 1950s). The Red-Blue Connector as it’s known was included as a Big Dig mitigation project in the 1990s but was ultimately dropped due to lack of funds. 13: Orange Line Southwest Corridor (1945-1987) After World War II planners saw the need to extend the Orange Line ever deeper into the suburbs. South of the Forest Hills terminal the Needham and Dedham Branch railroads were to be converted to rapid transit with the Orange Line extending through West Roxbury and south to Dedham or west to Needham. When the Federal Interstate Highway program was funded planners saw a way to take advantage of the new highways by designing the proposed Southwest Expressway with the Orange Line relocated down the median (as had been done in Chicago). An alternative subway along Shawmut Ave to Dudley Sq was deemed too expensive. The Southwest Expressway was to replace much of the defunct New Haven Railroad (now the Northeast Corridor) with all remaining rail traffic being moved to the Fairmount Line. As part of the relocation the Orange Line was to be extended to Needham and also to Route 128 via Hyde Park. Much of the route through Roxbury was cleared for the highway as protests erupted against the road. In 1972 Governor Francis Sargent canceled all new highways inside of Route 128, including the Southwest Expressway, and transferred the funds to mass transit. The cleared land through Roxbury was reimagined as a transit and ribbon park corridor. The Orange Line was relocated along the Southwest Corridor along with expanded commuter rail lines which were chosen by the more suburban residents of West Roxbury and Hyde Park over Orange Line service. 14: Orange Line North (1945-1975) BERy had attempted to extend the Orange Line north in the 1920s but was stopped by local opposition to elevated trains. In 1945 the Coolidge Commission proposed to convert the Reading Branch of the Boston & Maine Railroad to rapid transit as an extension of the Orange Line to Route 128. The extension would have begun at Haymarket station and run in a new tunnel to Charlestown where it would come to the surface and run north. This allowed the elevated tracks from North Station to Everett to be demolished. Planning began in the 1960s and included the first express track in the system so that trains from Reading could bypass Charlestown. While construction was ongoing in the late 1960s and early 1970s, residents of Melrose, Wakefield and Reading objected to Orange Line service and fought for restoration of commuter rail. The MBTA eventually gave in as they didn’t have the funding the extend the Orange Line north of Oak Grove in Malden. The third express track, partially built, was never used for revenue service and commuter rail service through Reading is limited to one track because of the confined right-of-way next to the Orange Line. A station at Edgeworth was dropped from the original plan. In 2014 an infill station at Assembly Sq was opened. 15: Silver Line (2000-Present) The Washington St Silver Line opened in 2001 as a Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line from Dudley Sq (now Nubian) to Temple Place in downtown Boston. It was chosen over light rail to replace the demolished Washington St El after the Orange Line had been relocated to the Southwest Corridor. The second phase, using the new South Boston Piers Transitway, opened in 2004 with service to Logan Airport and City Point in South Boston. Other potential branches were hinted at but ultimately none were ever implemented and the City Point branch was cut back to the South Boston Design Center in 2009. Phase 3 of the Silver Line was to be a complex tunnel below the Theatre District which would have connected both sides of the line. The tunnel required buses to drive a convoluted route under narrow streets and, in one version, completely rebuild the existing but unused Tremont St tunnel south of Boylston St. The costs and complexity killed the plan in 2009 and the MBTA shifted focus to the Green Line Extension through Somerville. As a result, the Washington St Silver Line was split into two street running services, one to Temple Pl and the other to South Boston. A southern extension of the Silver Line to Mattapan and Ashmont were proposed early on. This would have converted the 28 and 22 or 23 bus lines to BRT under the Silver Line brand. In 2008 Federal funds were secured to build a BRT line, the 28X, along the route but was killed by local opposition that claimed the funds were secured without consulting residents beforehand. 16: Urban Ring (1990s-Present) The Urban Ring was a multi-phased proposal to create a new, circumferential transit way around the core of downtown Boston so that riders wouldn’t have to go all the way downtown to transfer. The first phase was a reorganization of the crosstown bus lines and implementation of new crosstown bus lines, mostly through Cambridge and into Boston. Phase 2 was to encircle Boston with a series of Bus Rapid Transit lines running in dedicated lanes and connecting to subway stations and major job centers. The projected cost for these lanes was $2.2 billion in 2008. Phase 3 was to build a fixed rail line along a corridor from Sullivan Sq to MIT, to Kenmore Sq or just west of it, and through the Fenway and to Dudley Sq (now Nubian). This would have either been light rail as a branch of the Green Line or a heavy rail branch of the Orange Line. In 2018 a new branch of the Silver Line was opened from East Boston to Chelsea along part of the projected route of the Urban Ring. Running mostly along a dedicated right-of-way, this branch of the Silver Line is being considered as a first step towards a new Urban Ring with possible extensions west or north. 17: North-South Rail Link (1890s-Present) Early steam railroads each had separate terminals around the outskirts of downtown Boston. In the 1890s two new terminals, North Union Station and South Union Station, were built to simplify operations. Since then, it has been a dream to connect the two via a tunnel under downtown Boston. Freight trains once ran between the two terminals via Atlantic Ave as they served the warehouses and shipping industries, but as these declined so too did the need for the rail service. The Atlantic Ave El once connected riders from South Station to North Station but was demolished in the 1930s due to declining ridership. When the Central Artery and Tunnel Project was first proposed in the 1980s it was the transit-friendly Governor Michael Dukakis who insisted that a North-South rail link be included. As the cost and scope of the project ballooned the rail link was soon dropped but the highway tunnels were designed so that a future rail tunnel could be built below them with no obstacle. The North-South Link has been studied as recently as 2018 as either a two-track or four-track tunnel. Plans have called for up to three stations: at North Station, South Station, and a Central Station near the Aquarium station on the Blue Line. 18: Track 61 (2010s-Present) In 2013 the MBTA and MassDOT proposed using a track, known as Track 61, for passenger service from Back Bay to serve the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center (BCEC). Track 61 was once part of the Boston & NY Central Railroad which ran along the present-day Fairmount Line to a terminal near South Station (crossing Fort Point Channel). Passenger service ceased in 1896 when it was moved to the new South Station, after which the track served only freight to the warehouses along the waterfront. It’s the only rail connection to the South Boston Waterfront and extends to Black Falcon Pier along the Reserve Channel. New passenger service would run from Back Bay station to the Fort Point Channel, turn south to Widett Circle and loop back north. A new flyover track would need to be built above the MBCR and Red Line tracks. Alternatively, trains using the Fairmount Line would terminate at BCEC as well as South Station. New Diesel Multiple Unit trains were to be used on the extension as well as to convert the Fair- mount Line to rapid transit-like service. The order for these trains was canceled in 2015 and no funding has been found for either the new trains or service. 19: West Station and Grand Junction (2010s-Present)t In 2013, as part of the development of the Beacon Park Yard and straightening of the Mass Pike through the area, MassDOT proposed a new station along the existing Worcester Line in Allston that would serve new development in the area. West Station, as it is known, would also serve trains using the Grand Junction Railroad through Cambridge to North Station. Current plans for the sta- tion have a completion date of 2040. 3: Blue Line (1904) The Blue Line opened in 1904 as the first rapid transit line to run under a body of water. The tunnel was used by streetcars but designed for heavy rail and ran from Court Sq, near Government Center, to Maverick Sq in East Boston. Since it was built for the same streetcars as the Green Line alternative plans were drawn up which would have built the tunnel under an alignment which would have allowed East Boston cars to connect to the Green Line under Scollay Sq (now Government Center). This alternative alignment would have run through the heart of the North End and provided two stations for residents. 1 Green Line Riverbank Subway 16 Urban Ring 19 West Station & Grand Junction Service 19 Grand Junction Service 16 Urban Ring 5 Blue Line East Boston-Brighton Line 3 Blue Line Alternative East Boston Tunnel 1 Green Line Post Office Sq Branch 17 North-South Rail Link 18 Track 61 15 Silver Line Phase III Tunnel 4 Elevated Lines South Boston Branch 2 Red Line Alternative Dorchester Routes 4 Elevated Lines Everett Lines Main St Broadway 5 Blue Line East Boston-Brighton Line 5 Green Line Lechmere-Huntington Line 5 Green Line Lechmere-Huntington Line 5 Blue Line Chelsea-East Boston Line 6 Green Line Newton Branch 6 Green Line Needham Branch 7 Green Line West Medford Extension 7 Green Line Woburn Extension 8 Green Line Watertown “A Branch” Line Restoration 8 Green Line Arborway “E Branch” Line Restoration 9 Red Line South Shore Branch Alternative 9 Red Line South Shore Branch Alternative 10 Red Line East Watertown Extension 10 Red Line Arlington High-Speed Line 10 Red Line Arlington High-Speed Line 10 Red Line Northwest Extension Red Line Note Both the Arlington High-Speed Line and Northwest Extension would have used the Lexington Branch railroad right-of-way but would have been completely separate projects. Both are drawn here: the Arlington High-Speed Line would have made all stops labeled “C” while the Northwest Extension would have only made the stops labeled “B”. North-South Rail Link Note The true purpose of the North-South Rail Link is to merge commuter rail branches from the north with those in the south. The branches as we know them would be reimagined as full-length regional rail lines. Since no exact branch pairing has been proposed, and for purposes of simplicity, all through running lines are indicated with a solid purple bullet. 11 Blue Line Lynn Extension 12 Blue Line Red-Blue Connector 13 Orange Line Dedham Branch 13 Orange Line Hyde Park Branch 13 Orange Line Shawmut Ave Subway 14 Orange Line Reading Extension 15 Silver Line Mattapan and Ashmont Branches How to read this map The purpose of this map is to show the history of all official expansion plans for the MBTA subway system from its inception in 1897 until today. The map acts as a “choose your own adventure” where by each variant of every plan is drawn. The reader can pick and choose which lines they think could have been built and what the system might have looked like today if they had. To show the evolution of these plans over time this map contains different layers of proposals. The current system is drawn as is but proposed lines are drawn with a black outline. Pre-World War II plans are drawn in lighter colors while post-War plans are drawn in darker colors. Some lines show two totally different services at the same time to indicate how service would have differed under alternative plans. For the majority of proposals specific stations were outlined. Stations which have no official designation are indicated with an asterisk (*). Lines which were proposed but not developed into actual plans, or alternative extensions to existing plans, are indicated with a grey dashed line. Exact route labeling, if not evident by historical precedent or determined by track layout, is completely speculative and should be viewed as purely for illustrative purposes. This map is unofficial and is intended for non-commercial, educational, and entertainment purposes only and is not intended for sale, alteration, or distribution without written consent. © vanshnookenraggen 2021 | v.1.0.3 | vanshnookenraggen.com See Reading & Wakefield Breakout LYNN Point-o-Pines West Lynn LYNN North Shore Rd Lynn 11 Blue Line Lynn Extension To Newburyport & Rockport BL BL BL WAKEFIELD Wakefield Junction Wakefield North Wakefield-Rt 128 READING R R R R North Ave High St Reading and Wakefield 14 Orange Line Reading Extension To Lowell, Haverhill Simmit Ave Mt. Hood Rd Greycliff Rd *8 1. Former North Station portal 2. Abandoned original Haymarket Sq Green Line station and central tracks 3. Former Joy St portal 4. Unused Brattle Loop platform 5. Original Green Line tunnel to Adams Sq (demolished) 6. Abandoned Court St terminal 7. North Station tracks 11 and 12 provisions 8. Former Stoneham Branch RR 10. Former Washington St Line a) portal b) supports for tracks above Mass Pike 12. Former portals at a) Public Garden and b) Boylston St 13. Broadway underground trolley station and portals 14. Former Kenmore Sq portal 16. Original Riverside terminal platform 17. Gate where Red Line connected to street tracks for access to former Eliot Yard 19. Abandoned tunnels and portal to Eliot Yard (demolished) 20. Abandoned Airport station (original) foundations 21. Abandoned ROW of Boston, Revere Beach & Lynn RR a) Winthrop branch b) Lynn branch 23. Provisions for Orange Line extension to Reading 25. Provisions for Orange Line extension to Needham 33. Abandoned ROW of the Saugus Branch RR, now Northern Strand Trail, East Coast Bike Path 34. Abandoned ROW of the Medford Branch RR 35. Abandoned ROW of the Fitchburg Cutoff RR, now Fitchburg, Alewife, and Somerville Paths 37. Abandoned ROW of the Central Massachusetts RR 38. Abandoned ROW of the Watertown Branch RR 39. Abandoned ROW of the Eastern RR, southern section now East Boston Greenway a) Suffolk Downs branch 40. Abandoned ROW of the Neponset Branch RR, now part of Neponset River Reservation 41. Abandoned ROW of the Nedham Branch RR 42. Abandoned ROW of the Millis Branch RR 43. Former East Boston Tunnel a) portal b) heavy rail loop c) streetcar loop 44. Abandoned streetcar transfer station (surface level) and pedestrian tunnel under Mass Ave 45. Former Allston Station (Boston & Albany RR) 46. Former Brighton Station (Boston & Albany RR) 47. Abandoned northern section of Ruggles Commuter Rail platform 48. Abandoned Navy Yard service tracks 51. Track remnants of the former Boston Elevated Suffolk Downs branch 52. Former temporary Porter Sq commuter rail platform Abandoned Sections & Future Provisions Notes Nb Fr Nb Fr Nb Fr Nb Fr Nb Fr 4 Elevated Lines Cambridge Branches 4 Elevated Lines Chelsea-Revere Line BL BL GL GL BL BL BL

Boston Historic “T” Expansion Track Map

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Page 1: Boston Historic “T” Expansion Track Map

BOSTON

QUINCYMILTON

BROOKLINE

NEWTON

WATERTOWN

BELMONT

WALTHAM

ARLINGTON

LEXINGTON

NEEDHAM

CAMBRIDGE

SOMERVILLE

MEDFORD

WINCHESTER

WOBURN

BURLINGTON

MALDEN

MELROSE

STONEHAM

SAUGUS

EVERETT

CHELSEA

REVERE

E

E

E

E

E

E

E

E

E

E

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

GL

GL

GLBL

BL

BL

BLBL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

BL

B

A

G

G

G

DD

D

D

R

R

R

D R

D R

D

R

D

D

D

D

D

R

Bowdoin

State

Courthouse

South Station

BCEC

World Trade Center

Silver Line Way

Broadway

Andrew

JFK/UMass

North Quincy

Wollaston

Quincy Center

Quincy Adams

BRAINTREE

Cedar Grove

Butler

MiltonCentral Ave

Valley RdCapen StMATTAPAN

Savin Hill

Fields Corner

Shawmut

ASHMONT

Park St

BoylstonDowntown Crossing

Chinatown

Tufts MedicalCenter

Back Bay

Arlington

Copley

Prudential

Fenway

Longwood

Brookline Village

Brookline Hills

Beaconsfield

Reservoir

Chestnut Hill

Newton Centre

Newton Highlands

Eliot

Waban

Woodland

RIVERSIDE

Symphony

Northeastern

St. Marys St

Hawes St

Kent St

St. Paul St

Coolidge Corner

Summit Ave

Brandon Hall

Fairbanks StWashington St

Washington St

Warren St

Allston StGriggs St

Harvard Ave Fordham Rd PackardsCorner

BU Central

BU EastBlandford St

Tappan St

Dean Rd

Englewood Ave

South St

Chestnut Hill Ave

Sutherland Rd

Chiswick Rd

CLEVELANDCIRCLE

BOSTONCOLLEGE

Museum ofFine Arts

LongwoodMedical Area

BrighamCircle

Fenwood Rd

Mission Park

Riverway

Back-of-the-Hill

HEATH

Massachusetts Ave

Ruggles

BU West

Babcock St

Roxbury Crossing

Jackson Sq

Stony Brook

Green St

Forest Hills

Haymarket

North Station

Charles/MGH

Kendall/MIT

Central

Harvard

Porter

Davis

Science Park

Community College

Sullivan Sq

Assembly

Wellington

Malden Center

OAK GROVE

UNION SQ

AquariumCentral Station

Maverick

Airport

Wood Island

Orient Heights

Suffolk Downs

Beachmont

Revere Beach

Wonderland

ALEWIFE

Boston Historic “T” Expansion Track Map

Orient Heights Yard

Caddigan Yard

Codman Yard

Cabot Yard

Southampton St Yard

AmtrakSouthampton Yard

Lake Street Carhouse

Watertown Carhouse

North CambridgeCarhouse

New VehicleMaintenance

Facility(Under Construction)

Mattapan Yard

Reservoir CarhouseRiverside Yard

To Fitchburg

Wellington Carhouse

Wonderland Yard

D

D

D

D

D

Trem

ont S

t

State St

Summer St

Dorchester A

ve

Cambridge St

Seaport Blvd

Boylston St

Stuart St

Mass. TurnpikeMass. Turnpike

Beacon St

Beacon St

Ken

t St

Beacon St

Storrow Dr

Chestnut St

Main St

Charles River Dam

Massachusetts Ave

Cambridge St

River St

Webster Ave

Mas

sach

uset

ts A

ve

Concord Ave

Mt Auburn St

Greeno

ugh B

lvd

Mt Auburn StBelmont St

Belmont St

Trapelo Rd

Trapelo Rd

Mt Auburn St

Mt Aub

urn St

Huron Ave

Aberdeen Ave

Massachusetts Ave

Commonwealth Ave

Commonwealth Ave

Commonwealth Ave

Huntin

gton

Ave

Col

umbu

s Av

e

Lam

artin

e St

Arm

ory

St

Centre S

tS

outh St

Was

hing

ton

St

Hyd

e P

ark

Ave

Hyd

e P

ark

Ave

Huntington Ave

Sou

th H

untin

gton

Ave

Was

hingt

on S

t

Was

hingto

n St

Shawmut

Ave

Southeast Expy

Newport Ave

Neponset Bridge

Thom

as E

. Bur

gin

Pkw

y

Pilgrims H

ighway

Eliot St

Northern Expy

Chelse

a St

Rivers Edge D

rive

Com

mer

cial

St

Was

hing

ton

St

Chelse

a St

Rout

e 1

Bennington St

Chels

ea S

t

Broa

dway

Chelsea B

ridge

Benn

ingt

on S

t

Ocean A

ve

Highland Ave

Longfellow Bridge

Atla

ntic

Ave

Ted

Willi

ams

Tunn

el

*1

*7

*2

*3

*48

*4

*5

*6

*10a

*10b

*12a

*12b

*13

*14

*47

*44

*16

*17

*19

*20

*21a

*21b

*23

*25

LOGAN AIRPORT

D

D

D

D

D

D

D

E

West Newton St

BRIGHAMCIRCLE

E

E

E

C

C

C

C

C

C

C

CC

C

C

C

E

E

E

EE

E

E

VAE

Bynner StE

Perkins StE

Moraine StE

Beaufort RdE

Robinwood AveE

Lakeville RdE

MonumentE

Seaverns AveE

Pond StE

BA C D E

C D E

D E

D E

C D

DC E

E

BA

EDCFb L Nr G

F Fr

F BB

PsNb WOc

D

B

C

D

E

E

B

B

B

B

B

B

BB

BB

B

B

BB

B

A

A

AA

A

A B

A M

M

B

MM

MM

M

M

A B

A B Fb

A B

A B

A B

A B

A B

A B

A B

1

1 2

1 2

2 3

1 2

1 2

3

3

A B

A B

A

Dudley StA

B

A

A

A

B

B

B

B

Blackstone

Atlantic Ave

D

1 2 3

2

Terminal A1

Terminal B1

Harbor St2

Tide St2 23 Dry Dock Ave

2DESIGN CENTER

Black Falcon Ave2

Terminal C1

Terminal E1

Scale of Miles

717273

WATERTOWN SQ71

WAVERLEY SQ73

77

ABERDEEN AVE72

NORTHCAMBRIDGE

77

Chelsea

West Medford

Belmont

Waltham

Fb

Fb

Fb

Fb

L

Nr

*33

*33

*33

*34

*35

*35

*37

*37

*38

*38

*38

*38

*39

*39a

*51

*39

*39

*43a

*43b

*43c

See Lynn breakout

To Plymouth and Kingston,Middleborough/Lakeville

To Greenbush

NewmarketF

Uphams CornerF

Four Corners/Geneva

F

Talbot AveF

Morton StF

Blue Hill AveF

FairmountF

ReadvilleF

EndicottF

Dedham CorpCenter

Fr

IslingtonFr

WESTWOOD/RT 128

Hyde Park

Ps

Ps

Ps

Ps

Roslindale Village

Bellevue

Highland

West Roxbury

NEEDHAM JUNCTION

Needham Center

Hersey

Needham Heights

NbFr Ps W

LansdowneW

Boston LandingW

West StationW

NewtonvilleW

West NewtonW

AuburndaleW

Oc

Oc

BraintreeOc

MBTA Commuter RailMaintenance Facility

Needham Layover

To Stoughton, New Bedford, Fall River & Providence

To Forge Park-495

CHELSEA

Bellingham Sq

Box District

Eastern Ave

*40

*42

*41

*41

Mass. Turnpike

Cambridge St

Washington St

Brighton Ave

Mass. Turnpike

Mass. Turnpike

*45

*46

Hyd

e Pa

rk A

ve

Vassar

St

Pleasan

t St

Channing Rd

Somerville Ave

Belgrade Ave

Che

stnu

t Ave

Hig

hlan

d A

ve

Commuter Rail

Back Bay-South Boston LineBack Bay to BCECBFitchburg LineNorth Station to WachusettFbFairmount/Franklin LineSouth Station to Forge Park/495FNewburyport/Rockport LinesNorth Station to Newburyport,Rockport

Nr

Providence LineSouth Station to ProvidencePWorcester LineSouth Station to WorcesterWGrand Junction LineWest Station to North StationGNew Bedford LineNew Bedford to South StationNbFall River LineFall River to South StationFr

Lowell LineNorth Station to LowellL

Old Colony LinesSouth Station to Greenbush,Plymouth, Kingston,Middleborough/Lakeville

Oc

Red LineAlewife to Ashmont

Red LineAlewife to Braintree

Service Guide

Heavy Rail

Light Rail

A BRed LineEast Watertown to Ashmont

Red LineHanscom-Rt 128 to BraintreeA B

Red LineMattapan to AshmontM Red Line

Arlington Hghts to E. WatertownCGreen LineWatertown to Park StA Green Line

Watertown to Post Office SqA

Green LineBrigham Circle to Lechmere

Green LineNewton-Riverside to Union SqDGreen LineArborway to WoburnE

Orange LineReading to Dedham Center

Orange LineReading to Westwood-Rt 128D R

Blue LineBowdoin to Wonderland

Blue LineBrighton to East Boston

Blue LineCharles/MGH to Lynn

Green LineBoston College to Park StB Green Line

Boston College to BrightonBGreen LineCleveland Circle to North StationC Green Line

Cleveland Circle to Kenmore SqCGreen LineRiverside to Union SqDGreen LineArborway to Medford/TuftsE

Green LineArborway to Brigham CircleEGreen Line

Needham to Park StG

Silver LineNubian Sq to Logan Airport Terminals

Silver LineNubian Sq to Design Center

Bus Rapid Transit

12

Silver LineSouth Station to Chelsea3

Trackless Trolley

All TimesHarvard to Watertown71All TimesHarvard to Aberdeen Ave72All TimesHarvard to Waverley Sq73Part TimeHarvard to North Cambridge77

Map Key

Station Name

Line/Branch

Abandoned Platform

Terminal

Note

Revenue Track

Non-RevenueTrack

Active Portal

AlternativeExtension

Lower level Track

AbandonedTrack/ROW

Harvard

*18a

A B71

Active Platform

Lower level Platform

Proposed extensionAbandoned Portal

3

3

3

3

3

Readville Yard

WedgemereL

WinchesterL

Wyoming Hill

Melrose Highlands

RGreenwood

Melrose/Cedar Park

East Somerville

Lechmere

Gilman Sq

Lowell St

Ball Sq

Medford/Tufts

*52

1 2NUBIAN

EWOBURN

EMedford Hillside

Cross St

Woburn Highlands

HARTWELL-RT 128B

Arlington Center/ C

Arlington HeightsB

LexingtonB

EAST WATERTOWNA C

Mount AuburnC

Lake StC

BrattleC

ARLINGTON HEIGHTSC

R

R

R

D

EdgeworthRD

R

D R

D R

D R

D R

R

R

R

R

D R

R

D

R

D

D

D

D R

DEDHAMD

1 2

East Berkeley St1 2

Union Park St1 2

Newton St1 2

Worcester Sq1 2

Massachusetts Av1 2

Lenox St1 2

Melnea Cass Blvd1 2

Herald St

Columbia RdA

Mt BowdoinA

Talbot AveA

Morton StA

Blue Hill AveA

AtlanticB

RMt Hope*

RMetropolitan Ave*

R

R

R

D

D

D

NewtonD

FaneuilD

BrightonD

AllstonD

Cottage FarmD

D G

NickersonField Loop

Union Sq Loop

Oak Sq Loop

//

BroadwayD/

BAA

C D E G

BA C DHynes

G

G

Kenmore

G

G

G

G

G

G

G

Newton Upper FallsG

Allston St

Harvard Ave

Packards Corner

Pleasant St

St. Mary’s St

/

G

POSTOFFICE SQA

/

/

/

BA C D E /

/

BA C DC

G

Cambridge/KendallG

St. Rose StE

Child StE

Carolina AveE

PackardsCornerA

St. Lukes StA

ChesterStA

LindenStA

HarvardAveA

Allston StA

Union StA

Saunders StA

Dustin StA

Washington StA

Waldo TerraceA

Foster StA

Brock StLake StA

Oak Sq AveLangley RdA

Market StChestnut Hill AveA

OAK SQ

A

A

Tremont StA

Cufflin StA

Pembroke StA

Waverly AveA

Hibbard RdA

Elmwood StA

Pearl StJefferson StA

Maple StBoyd StA

Tremont PlA

Tremont St

Galen S

t

Ber

wic

k S

t

Bel

mon

t St

Myr

tle A

ve

Main St

Mys

tic V

alley

Pkw

y

Main S

t

Arborway Yard Loop

BRIGHTONBL

G

B

1: Green Line (1897-1920)

What we know today as the Green Line opened in 1897 as the first rapid transit subway in the US and third in the world. The Green Line was designed to take in numerous streetcar lines originating from all over the city and its suburbs and seamlessly terminate them under the streets of Boston.

After the initial success of the Green Line plans were drawn up to expand the network. The two most famous examples from this time period were the Riverbank Subway plan and the Post Office Square branch.

The Riverbank Subway was a mostly above ground line be built from Park St to Kenmore Sq along the banks of the Charles River. At that time Storrow Dr had not been built. The line was to act as an express bypass for streetcars coming from the suburbs of Brighton, Allston and Brookline. No stations were planned on the route and streetcars would have used a large new loop built next to the Park St station.

Boylston St was chosen instead as it was more centrally located. Provisions were added as part of the extension for a possible branch to Post Office Sq. This new branch would have taken pressure off Park St station which was going to be temporarily converted to heavy rail for the new elevated lines, the future Orange Line before the Washington St Tunnel could be built. The plan was dropped as it was felt that the Washington St Tunnel would provide adequate service.

2: Red Line (1912-1920)

The Red Line was first conceived as an elevated line which would have run from Harvard Sq in Cambridge to Maverick Sq in East Boston. But a dispute between the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy), who were building and operating the lines, and the Boston Transit Commission split the line into two different subways. The Cambridge Tunnel opened to Park St Under in 1912. Beginning in 1915 the line was extended to South Station and by 1918 had been extended to Andrew station.

South of Andrew BERy originally considered continuing the line as a traditional subway through Uphams Corner and south along Washington St to Talbot Ave. Instead of building a new subway, BERy chose to purchase the Shawmut Branch Railroad from the NY, New Haven & Hartford Railroad (New Haven Railroad) and convert it to rapid transit. This became the Ashmont and Mattapan Branches.

At the time BERy considered continuing heavy rail through to Mattapan but residents opted for a high-speed trolley instead. BERy considered building a second branch of the Red Line which would run from Andrew station to a new line paralleling the Fairmount Branch railroad to Blue Hill Ave where it would loop back via an ungraded Mattapan Line. With Mattapan staying as a high-speed streetcar this plan was ultimately shelved.

4: Orange Line (1901-1920)

The Orange Line started as an elevated train network which featured branches from the South End (Dudley Sq, now Nubian), & Charlestown. Elevated lines through Dorchester, Cambridge, Everett, Chelsea, and South Boston were also proposed but dropped. Trains originally ran along the outer tracks of the Green Line subway Pleasant St portal to North Station. A second branch ran along Atlantic Ave to serve the seaport. In 1908 a permanent tunnel for the Orange Line was opened under Washington St and streetcar service was returned to the Green Line.

The Orange Line was soon extended to serve the growing suburbs. In 1909 it was extended from Dudley Sq to Forest Hills. A decade later the northern end was extended from Sullivan Sq to Everett. The terminal in Everett was meant to be temporary and the extension planned to run north along Main St to Malden Center. An elevated line was opposed and the plan was eventually dropped.

5: Green and Blue Lines to Heavy Rail (1920s-30s)

The Boylston St Subway was originally built to a portal east of Kenmore Sq but traffic in the square delayed streetcars so an underground station was soon proposed. As part of this project planners developed a proposal to convert the whole of the Green and Blue Lines from streetcars to heavy rail and create two new rapid transit lines.

The first route would have run from Lechmere to Brigham Circle. By utilizing the eastern two tracks at Park St the line would run south through Boylston to a new subway tunnel running from the Pleasant St portal to Back Bay station, then along the New Haven RR tracks before swinging west to Huntington Ave. The subway would ascend to the surface, as the E branch does today, and have run southwest along Huntington Ave to a large loop terminal at Tremont St and Brigham Circle.

The second route would have run from Brighton to East Boston. The Blue Line was to make a large curve south from Scollay Sq or Bowdoin stations and connect to the western two tracks at Park St. From here the line would have run west along the existing Boylston St Subway to a new station under Kenmore Sq. After Kenmore the subway was to continue west under Commonwealth Ave to Warren St where a large transfer terminal was to be built (today the Franciscan Children's Hospital stands in this location). The streetcars from the A and B branches were to terminate here.

In 1924 the Blue Line was converted to heavy rail but was not extended west. Kenmore station was built so that the center two tracks were lower than the outer tracks for a “future conversion” to heavy rail. The portal for the B branch on Commonwealth Ave was built to be temporary for a future extension west.

Plans for a Huntington Ave subway evolved into the 1930s when a final plan for the subway as we know it were finalized in 1933. Funds were provided by the WPA and the two new stations and portal at Gainsborough St were all built to allow for future conversion to heavy rail. The Huntington Ave subway opened in 1941.

6: Green Line to Newton and Needham ( 1945-1959)

The Boston & Albany Railroad ran west through Newton and featured a large loop line through the leafy suburbs known as the Riverside Line. In 1945 the Coolidge Commission proposed to convert this loop, along with another branch to Needham, into rapid transit service and connect it to the Green Line through a new tunnel under South Cove to the Tremont St Subway. The section of the Green Line from Park St to Scollay Sq was to be expanded from two tracks to four.

In 1959 the Riverside Line was successfully incorporated into the Green Line as the D branch but was connected to the network at Kenmore Sq rather than Boylston. The line proved so popular that streetcars had to be transferred from other lines to serve the new branch. This ultimately led to the abandonment of many of the remaining streetcar lines in the system, including the A branch.

7: Green Line to West Medford and Woburn (1945-Present)

Ideas to extend the Green Line north of Lechmere station had existed since the 1920s but were formalized in the Coolidge Commission which proposed extending it along the Lowell Line to Woburn. In the 1990s the Commonwealth began to seriously look at extending the Green Line north through Somerville. Planning began in 2006 and ground was broken in 2012.

Two branches were proposed: D trains would run to College Ave in Medford and E trains would run to Union Sq in Somerville. The original concept included two more stations at Medford Hillside and West Medford but due to the extra costs involved with bridging the Mystic River these have been deferred to a future phase. The extension is planned to open by the end of 2021.

8: Green Line Watertown and Arborway Branches (1969-2005)

Beginning in the 1920s the streetcar lines of Boston were systematically converted to buses and the tracks ripped up. In 1962 the last lines ran through the Pleasant St Portal and the southern branch of the Tremont St Subway was abandoned. Unlike the B and C branches, most streetcars ran on narrow city streets and not in their own traffic-separated medians. Subways had been planned which were to replace the A, B and E branches but only the Huntington Ave Subway was built for E trains.

In 1969 the A branch, from Watertown Sq to Packard’s Corner in Brighton was “temporarily” replaced with buses due to a shortage of streetcars. The overhead wires were removed in 1994 and the tracks in 1996. Since then, there have been no serious proposals to bring the A branch back.

The E branch runs in a dedicated median along Huntington Ave until Brigham Circle, after which it runs on tracks in the middle of traffic to a loop at Heath St and South Huntington Ave. Formerly the line ran all the way to Forest Hills and was known as the Arborway Line. In 1985 the street-running portion past Brigham Circle was replaced with buses as it was assumed that the soon to be open Orange Line Southwest Corridor line would serve Jamaica Plain better.

As part of a law suit against the Commonwealth in the 1990s, service to Arborway was to be reinstituted as mitigation for the Big Dig. The City of Boston opposed streetcar service and began ripping the tracks up in 2005, ending any hopes of returning service on the line.

9: Red Line South Shore Branch (1945-1980)

After World War II the South Shore saw massive suburban growth while at the same time the Old Colony Railroad was going bankrupt. The Coolidge Commission proposed that the Old Colony tracks be bought and converted to one or more branches of the Red Line. Initially a branch was to run from Savin Hill to Braintree. A second proposal in the 1960s included extending the Ashmont branch across the Neponset River to Granite Ave in East Milton to build a large Park-and-Ride terminal

As plans developed into the 1950s the branch connection was moved up to Andrew station as a kind of bypass of Dorchester. An original station from the Old Colony Line at Atlantic (Quincy Shore Dr) was eventually dropped. Secondary branches off the Braintree extension were proposed with one to Holbrook and one to South Weymouth. The South Shore extension was opened in phases, first to Quincy in 1971 and eventually to Braintree in 1980.

10: Red Line Northwest Extension (1945-1985)

Two plans were conceived to extend the Red Line past Harvard station. The Red Line proper was to be extended west from Harvard Sq to East Watertown along what is today Greenough Blvd. The Lexington Branch railroad running through Arlington and Lexington was to be converted into a high-speed trolley (similar to the Mattapan Line) and would run to East Watertown via the Watertown Branch railroad through what is now Alewife.

In 1947 a more sensible alternative was proposed which extended the Red Line north to Porter Sq and then west along the Fitchburg Branch railroad to Alewife. As this plan was further developed possible extensions to Waltham or Arlington were included and a station at Davis Sq was added.

After Governor Francis Sargent suspended highway construction in the Boston area in 1972 former highway funds were available for subway expansion. The Red Line was formally proposed to be extended from Harvard to Arlington Heights as a first phase and a then to Route 128 in Lexington as a future second. Arlington residents protested as they believed a “temporary” terminal in their town would bring too much traffic. The Arlington section was cut and the extension to Alewife was opened in 1985.

11: Blue Line to Wonderland and Lynn (1945-Present)

The Boston, Revere Beach & Lynn Railroad was a narrow-gauge railroad running from East Boston to Winthrop, Revere and Lynn serving mostly summer beach goers. It had been eyed for rapid transit conversion early on in the development of the subways and this was formally proposed as part of the Coolidge Commission (the branch to Winthrop was abandoned).

Between 1952 and 1954 the section from East Boston to Revere Beach was converted to the Blue Line. Due to lack of funds the further extension to Lynn was postponed indefinitely. Today the former right-of-way has been allowed to be redeveloped so any potential extension to Lynn will most likely run parallel to the Newburyport Line instead.

Alternatively, in the 1960s a proposal was floated to extend the Blue Line one station west to the Salem Turnpike where a large Park-and-Ride terminal would be built.

12: Red-Blue Connector (1970s-Present)

In the latter half of the 20th Century as the tech and life science industry began to boom in Cambridge, it was proposed to extend the Blue Line from its terminal at Bowdoin one stop to Charles/MGH to create a new transfer point in the core of Boston. A connection once existed between the two lines using streetcar tracks but this was only used for non-revenue moves to send Blue Line trains to the yard in Harvard (the portal at Joy St was covered up in the 1950s). The Red-Blue Connector as it’s known was included as a Big Dig mitigation project in the 1990s but was ultimately dropped due to lack of funds.

13: Orange Line Southwest Corridor (1945-1987)

After World War II planners saw the need to extend the Orange Line ever deeper into the suburbs. South of the Forest Hills terminal the Needham and Dedham Branch railroads were to be converted to rapid transit with the Orange Line extending through West Roxbury and south to Dedham or west to Needham.

When the Federal Interstate Highway program was funded planners saw a way to take advantage of the new highways by designing the proposed Southwest Expressway with the Orange Line relocated down the median (as had been done in Chicago). An alternative subway along Shawmut Ave to Dudley Sq was deemed too expensive. The Southwest Expressway was to replace much of the defunct New Haven Railroad (now the Northeast Corridor) with all remaining rail traffic being moved to the Fairmount Line.

As part of the relocation the Orange Line was to be extended to Needham and also to Route 128 via Hyde Park. Much of the route through Roxbury was cleared for the highway as protests erupted against the road. In 1972 Governor Francis Sargent canceled all new highways inside of Route 128, including the Southwest Expressway, and transferred the funds to mass transit. The cleared land through Roxbury was reimagined as a transit and ribbon park corridor. The Orange Line was relocated along the Southwest Corridor along with expanded commuter rail lines which were chosen by the more suburban residents of West Roxbury and Hyde Park over Orange Line service.

14: Orange Line North (1945-1975)

BERy had attempted to extend the Orange Line north in the 1920s but was stopped by local opposition to elevated trains. In 1945 the Coolidge Commission proposed to convert the Reading Branch of the Boston & Maine Railroad to rapid transit as an extension of the Orange Line to Route 128. The extension would have begun at Haymarket station and run in a new tunnel to Charlestown where it would come to the surface and run north. This allowed the elevated tracks from North Station to Everett to be demolished. Planning began in the 1960s and included the first express track in the system so that trains from Reading could bypass Charlestown.

While construction was ongoing in the late 1960s and early 1970s, residents of Melrose, Wakefield and Reading objected to Orange Line service and fought for restoration of commuter rail. The MBTA eventually gave in as they didn’t have the funding the extend the Orange Line north of Oak Grove in Malden. The third express track, partially built, was never used for revenue service and commuter rail service through Reading is limited to one track because of the confined right-of-way next to the Orange Line. A station at Edgeworth was dropped from the original plan. In 2014 an infill station at Assembly Sq was opened.

15: Silver Line (2000-Present)

The Washington St Silver Line opened in 2001 as a Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line from Dudley Sq (now Nubian) to Temple Place in downtown Boston. It was chosen over light rail to replace the demolished Washington St El after the Orange Line had been relocated to the Southwest Corridor.

The second phase, using the new South Boston Piers Transitway, opened in 2004 with service to Logan Airport and City Point in South Boston. Other potential branches were hinted at but ultimately none were ever implemented and the City Point branch was cut back to the South Boston Design Center in 2009.

Phase 3 of the Silver Line was to be a complex tunnel below the Theatre District which would have connected both sides of the line. The tunnel required buses to drive a convoluted route under narrow streets and, in one version, completely rebuild the existing but unused Tremont St tunnel south of Boylston St. The costs and complexity killed the plan in 2009 and the MBTA shifted focus to the Green Line Extension through Somerville. As a result, the Washington St Silver Line was split into two street running services, one to Temple Pl and the other to South Boston.

A southern extension of the Silver Line to Mattapan and Ashmont were proposed early on. This would have converted the 28 and 22 or 23 bus lines to BRT under the Silver Line brand. In 2008 Federal funds were secured to build a BRT line, the 28X, along the route but was killed by local opposition that claimed the funds were secured without consulting residents beforehand.

16: Urban Ring (1990s-Present)

The Urban Ring was a multi-phased proposal to create a new, circumferential transit way around the core of downtown Boston so that riders wouldn’t have to go all the way downtown to transfer. The first phase was a reorganization of the crosstown bus lines and implementation of new crosstown bus lines, mostly through Cambridge and into Boston.

Phase 2 was to encircle Boston with a series of Bus Rapid Transit lines running in dedicated lanes and connecting to subway stations and major job centers. The projected cost for these lanes was $2.2 billion in 2008. Phase 3 was to build a fixed rail line along a corridor from Sullivan Sq to MIT, to Kenmore Sq or just west of it, and through the Fenway and to Dudley Sq (now Nubian). This would have either been light rail as a branch of the Green Line or a heavy rail branch of the Orange Line.

In 2018 a new branch of the Silver Line was opened from East Boston to Chelsea along part of the projected route of the Urban Ring. Running mostly along a dedicated right-of-way, this branch of the Silver Line is being considered as a first step towards a new Urban Ring with possible extensions west or north.

17: North-South Rail Link (1890s-Present)

Early steam railroads each had separate terminals around the outskirts of downtown Boston. In the 1890s two new terminals, North Union Station and South Union Station, were built to simplify operations. Since then, it has been a dream to connect the two via a tunnel under downtown Boston. Freight trains once ran between the two terminals via Atlantic Ave as they served the warehouses and shipping industries, but as these declined so too did the need for the rail service. The Atlantic Ave El once connected riders from South Station to North Station but was demolished in the 1930s due to declining ridership.

When the Central Artery and Tunnel Project was first proposed in the 1980s it was the transit-friendly Governor Michael Dukakis who insisted that a North-South rail link be included. As the cost and scope of the project ballooned the rail link was soon dropped but the highway tunnels were designed so that a future rail tunnel could be built below them with no obstacle.

The North-South Link has been studied as recently as 2018 as either a two-track or four-track tunnel. Plans have called for up to three stations: at North Station, South Station, and a Central Station near the Aquarium station on the Blue Line.

18: Track 61 (2010s-Present)

In 2013 the MBTA and MassDOT proposed using a track, known as Track 61, for passenger service from Back Bay to serve the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center (BCEC). Track 61 was once part of the Boston & NY Central Railroad which ran along the present-day Fairmount Line to a terminal near South Station (crossing Fort Point Channel). Passenger service ceased in 1896 when it was moved to the new South Station, after which the track served only freight to the warehouses along the waterfront. It’s the only rail connection to the South Boston Waterfront and extends to Black Falcon Pier along the Reserve Channel.

New passenger service would run from Back Bay station to the Fort Point Channel, turn south to Widett Circle and loop back north. A new flyover track would need to be built above the MBCR and Red Line tracks. Alternatively, trains using the Fairmount Line would terminate at BCEC as well as South Station.

New Diesel Multiple Unit trains were to be used on the extension as well as to convert the Fair-mount Line to rapid transit-like service. The order for these trains was canceled in 2015 and no funding has been found for either the new trains or service.

19: West Station and Grand Junction (2010s-Present)t

In 2013, as part of the development of the Beacon Park Yard and straightening of the Mass Pike through the area, MassDOT proposed a new station along the existing Worcester Line in Allston that would serve new development in the area. West Station, as it is known, would also serve trains using the Grand Junction Railroad through Cambridge to North Station. Current plans for the sta-tion have a completion date of 2040.

3: Blue Line (1904)

The Blue Line opened in 1904 as the first rapid transit line to run under a body of water. The tunnel was used by streetcars but designed for heavy rail and ran from Court Sq, near Government Center, to Maverick Sq in East Boston. Since it was built for the same streetcars as the Green Line alternative plans were drawn up which would have built the tunnel under an alignment which would have allowed East Boston cars to connect to the Green Line under Scollay Sq (now Government Center). This alternative alignment would have run through the heart of the North End and provided two stations for residents.

1Green Line

Riverbank Subway

16Urban Ring

19West Station &

Grand Junction Service

19Grand Junction Service

16Urban Ring

5Blue Line

East Boston-Brighton Line

3Blue Line

AlternativeEast Boston Tunnel

1Green Line

Post Office Sq Branch

17North-South Rail Link

18Track 61

15Silver Line

Phase III Tunnel

4Elevated Lines

South Boston Branch

2Red Line

AlternativeDorchester Routes

4Elevated LinesEverett Lines

Main S

t

Broa

dway

5Blue Line

East Boston-Brighton Line

5Green Line

Lechmere-Huntington Line

5Green Line

Lechmere-Huntington Line

5Blue Line

Chelsea-East Boston Line

6Green Line

Newton Branch

6Green Line

Needham Branch

7Green Line

West Medford Extension

7Green Line

Woburn Extension

8Green Line

Watertown “A Branch” LineRestoration

8Green Line

Arborway “E Branch” LineRestoration

9Red Line

South Shore BranchAlternative

9Red Line

South Shore BranchAlternative

10Red Line

East WatertownExtension

10Red Line

Arlington High-Speed Line

10Red Line

Arlington High-Speed Line

10Red Line

Northwest Extension

Red Line NoteBoth the Arlington High-Speed Line and Northwest Extension would have used the Lexington Branch railroad right-of-way but would have been completely separate projects. Both are drawn here: the Arlington High-Speed Line would have made all stops labeled “C” while the Northwest Extension would have only made the stops labeled “B”.

North-South Rail Link NoteThe true purpose of the North-South Rail Link is to merge commuter rail branches from the north with those in the south. The branches as we know them would be reimagined as full-length regional rail lines. Since no exact branch pairing has been proposed, and for purposes of simplicity, all through running lines are indicated with a solid purple bullet.

11Blue Line

Lynn Extension

12Blue Line

Red-Blue Connector

13Orange Line

Dedham Branch

13Orange Line

Hyde Park Branch

13Orange Line

Shawmut Ave Subway

14Orange Line

Reading Extension

15Silver Line

Mattapan andAshmont Branches

How to read this mapThe purpose of this map is to show the history of all official expansion plans for the MBTA subway system from its inception in 1897 until today. The map acts as a “choose your own adventure” where by each variant of every plan is drawn. The reader can pick and choose which lines they think could have been built and what the system might have looked like today if they had.

To show the evolution of these plans over time this map contains different layers of proposals. The current system is drawn as is but proposed lines are drawn with a black outline. Pre-World War II plans are drawn in lighter colors while post-War plans are drawn in darker colors. Some lines show two totally different services at the same time to indicate how service would have differed under alternative plans.

For the majority of proposals specific stations were outlined. Stations which have no official designation are indicated with an asterisk (*). Lines which were proposed but not developed into actual plans, or alternative extensions to existing plans, are indicated with a grey dashed line.

Exact route labeling, if not evident by historical precedent or determined by track layout, is completely speculative and should be viewed as purely for illustrative purposes.

This map is unofficial and is intended for non-commercial, educational, and entertainment purposes only and is not intended for sale, alteration, or distribution without written consent.© vanshnookenraggen 2021 | v.1.0.3 | vanshnookenraggen.com

See Reading &Wakefield Breakout

LYNN

Point-o-Pines

West Lynn

LYNN

Nor

th S

hore

Rd

Lynn

11Blue Line

Lynn Extension

To Newburyport& Rockport

BL

BL

BL

WAKEFIELD

Wakefield Junction

Wakefield

North Wakefield-Rt 128

READING

R

R

R

R

North Ave

High St

Reading and Wakefield

14Orange Line

Reading Extension

To Lowell, Haverhill

Simmit Ave

Mt. Hood Rd

Greycliff Rd

*8

1. Former North Station portal2. Abandoned original Haymarket Sq Green Line station and central tracks3. Former Joy St portal 4. Unused Brattle Loop platform5. Original Green Line tunnel to Adams Sq (demolished)6. Abandoned Court St terminal7. North Station tracks 11 and 12 provisions8. Former Stoneham Branch RR10. Former Washington St Line a) portal b) supports for tracks above Mass Pike12. Former portals at a) Public Garden and b) Boylston St13. Broadway underground trolley station and portals14. Former Kenmore Sq portal16. Original Riverside terminal platform17. Gate where Red Line connected to street tracks for access to former Eliot Yard19. Abandoned tunnels and portal to Eliot Yard (demolished)20. Abandoned Airport station (original) foundations21. Abandoned ROW of Boston, Revere Beach & Lynn RR a) Winthrop branch b) Lynn branch23. Provisions for Orange Line extension to Reading25. Provisions for Orange Line extension to Needham33. Abandoned ROW of the Saugus Branch RR, now Northern Strand Trail, East Coast Bike Path34. Abandoned ROW of the Medford Branch RR35. Abandoned ROW of the Fitchburg Cutoff RR, now Fitchburg, Alewife, and Somerville Paths37. Abandoned ROW of the Central Massachusetts RR38. Abandoned ROW of the Watertown Branch RR39. Abandoned ROW of the Eastern RR, southern section now East Boston Greenway a) Suffolk Downs branch40. Abandoned ROW of the Neponset Branch RR, now part of Neponset River Reservation41. Abandoned ROW of the Nedham Branch RR42. Abandoned ROW of the Millis Branch RR43. Former East Boston Tunnel a) portal b) heavy rail loop c) streetcar loop44. Abandoned streetcar transfer station (surface level) and pedestrian tunnel under Mass Ave45. Former Allston Station (Boston & Albany RR)46. Former Brighton Station (Boston & Albany RR)47. Abandoned northern section of Ruggles Commuter Rail platform48. Abandoned Navy Yard service tracks51. Track remnants of the former Boston Elevated Suffolk Downs branch52. Former temporary Porter Sq commuter rail platform

Abandoned Sections & Future Provisions Notes

NbFr

NbFr

NbFr

NbFr

NbFr

4Elevated Lines

Cambridge Branches

4Elevated Lines

Chelsea-Revere Line

BL

BL

GL

GL

BL

BL

BL