TECO Line Streetcar System

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TECO Line Streetcar System
File:TECO Line logo.png
Tecostreetcar.JPG
A TECO streetcar picking up passengers in Ybor City
Overview
Type Heritage streetcar
System HART
Status Operational
Locale Tampa, Florida
Termini Whiting Station
Centennial Park Station
Stations 11[1]
Services 1[1]
Website TECO Line Streetcar System
Operation
Opened October 19, 2002
Owner City of Tampa
Operator(s) HART
Character At-grade
Rolling stock Birney
Technical
Line length 2.7 mi (4.35 km)[2]
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Electrification Overhead lines
Route diagram

The TECO Line Streetcar System is a heritage streetcar transit line in Tampa, Florida, run by the Hillsborough Area Regional Transportation Authority owned by the City of Tampa and managed by Tampa Historic Streetcar, Inc. It connects Downtown and Channelside to the historic Ybor City district. There is also an "In-Town" trolley-replica bus system that connects Downtown, Channelside, and Harbour Island.[1]

The line opened on October 19, 2002.[citation needed] The line is 2.7 mi (4.35 km) long[2] with 11 stations.[1] The system is single-track with several passing sidings. The track mostly follows a reserved right-of-way at a cost of 13.7 million per mile including eight streetcars. The cars themselves costing $600,000 each. Annual insurance cost is $400,000 liability. (2012) most of that cost is the requirement by CSX Transportation for insurance to cross over their freight tracks at Fifth Avenue and also 13th street.

History

Tampa's first electric streetcars were introduced in 1892.[2] Streetcars in Tampa reached their peak of popularity in the 1920s, with almost 24 million passengers carried in 1926.[2] The first line shut down on August 4, 1946.[2] The first streetcar system used the Birney Safety Car and, probably, other streetcar types.

Streetcars returned to Tampa in 2002, when the initial 2.4 mi (3.86 km) long[2] heritage line was opened. Its operating costs are financed through a "Special tax assessment" (.33 per thousand) on businesses in the streetcar district and a streetcar endowment stemming from settlement money received in 2006 by the city for the demolition of the Harbor Island People Mover.

In its first year of operation, the streetcar carried 420,000 riders, 20% more than projected. In 2005, 434,498 passengers used the streetcar. In 2011, Streetcar ridership from October 2011 through May is down 8.3 percent to 265,148 with a total for the year of 358,737 riders.

A new 0.333 mi (0.54 km) extension,[2] costing $5.5 million, opened for revenue service on December 19, 2010. The extension runs north along Franklin Street to Whiting Street and the Fort Brooke parking garage,[2] connecting the Convention Center as well as the rest of the TECO Line to the downtown core.[3]

Station list

Rolling stock

The system has eleven operating streetcars: nine modern replica double-truck Birney cars, one restored original Birney car, and one replica open-bench "Breezer". All except the original Birney were built by the Gomaco Trolley Company.

The replica Birney cars have a welded steel body with cosmetic rivets added to make them look older. The cars are wheelchair-accessible, air-conditioned and have automated stop announcements. The seats are made of wood and are reversible for when the car changes direction. The cars are also equipped with on-board ticket dispensers; however, they do not provide change.

The original Birney #163 streetcar ran on the Tampa & Ybor City Street Railway between 1923 and 1946. It was found in 1991 in Sulphur Springs, a neighborhood in Tampa, where it had been used as an apartment and later a storage shed. After extensive restoration the car is back to its former condition and is used for special events, such as Streetcar Fest in mid-October. It is Florida's only operational historical streetcar.[4]

Financing

The agency that operates the streetcar is a non-profit.[5] On October 22, 2014, the Tampa Bay Times published an editorial on the leverage a subsidy the Tampa Port Authority gives to the streetcar system. However it also wrote that the system "is not dependent" on the subsidy. They also reported that the system has to pay almost half a million dollars in insurance to cover the risk of streetcars crossing an active freight rail line.

Gallery

See also

References

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  4. Streetcar Vehicles - Birney Car
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External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons