Orange Line (Montreal Metro)

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Orange Line / Ligne Orange
Montreal Metro.svg
Lucien-L'Allier 1.jpg
Metro arriving at Lucien-L'Allier Station
Overview
Type Rapid transit
System Montreal Metro
Locale Montreal, (Quebec), Canada
Termini Côte-Vertu
Montmorency
Stations 31
Operation
Opened October 14, 1966
Operator(s) Société de transport de Montréal (STM)
Depot(s) Plateau d'Youville, Saint-Charles, Montmorency, Centre d'attachement Duvernay, Snowdon tail tracks and connecting track, Côte-Vertu (planned)
Rolling stock Bombardier/Alstom MPM-10 (Azur)
Technical
Line length 30.0 km (18.6 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Operating speed 40 km/h (25 mph)
Route map
Orange Line
to Laval
Montmorency Garage
24pxBois-Franc
Poirier
Montmorency
De La Concorde
Cartier
Rivière des Prairies
Laval
Montreal
Côte-Vertu
Saint-Charles Garage
Du Collège
Henri-Bourassa
De La Savane
Namur
Sauvé
Youville Shops
Plamondon
to Blue Line
Crémazie
Côte-Sainte-Catherine
Jarry
Jean-Talon16px
16pxSnowdon
Beaubien
Villa-Maria
Rosemont
Vendôme
two single tunnels
Laurier
Place-Saint-Henri
Mont-Royal
Green Line
to Angrignon
Sherbrooke
MtlMetro1.svgLionel-Groulx
Berri-UQAM
formerly Berri-de-Montigny
MtlMetro1.svg MtlMetro4.svg
Duvernay sidings
Berri service platform
Georges-Vanier
24pxLucien-L'Allier
Yellow Line
to Longueuil
Champ-de-Mars
24px VIA Rail Canada simplified.svgBonaventure
Place-d'Armes
Square-Victoria

The Orange Line (French: Ligne orange) is the longest and first-planned of the four subway lines of the Montreal Metro in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It formed part of the initial network, and was extended from 1980 to 1986. On April 28, 2007, three new stations in Laval opened making it the second line to leave Montreal Island.

The Orange Line measures 30 kilometres (19 mi) in length and counts 31 stations. It is the longest subway line in Montreal and the second-longest in Canada after the Line 1 Yonge–University of the Toronto subway. Like the rest of the Metro network, it is entirely underground. The line runs in a U-shape from Côte-Vertu in western Montreal to Montmorency in Laval, northwest of Montreal.

History

The line was planned to run between Crémazie and Place-d'Armes.

Work on the Orange Line began on May 23, 1962 on Berri Street just south of Jarry Street.[1] In November 1962, the city of Montreal learned that it had been awarded the 1967 International and Universal Exposition (commonly known as Expo 67). To better meet the anticipated demand for transit during Expo 67, it was decided on August 6, 1963 to add the Sauvé and Henri-Bourassa stations in the north, and the Square-Victoria-OACI and Bonaventure stations in the south.

On October 14, 1966, the section between Henri-Bourassa and Place-d'Armes opened, forming part of the original Metro network. Completion of smaller sections were delayed by several months. On February 6, 1967, the segment from Place-d'Armes to Square-Victoria-OACI opened, followed on February 13, 1967, by Bonaventure.

Prior to the inauguration of the initial network, extensions were proposed in all directions, including the West Island. In its 1967 Urban Plan, entitled "Horizon 2000",[2] the city of Montreal planned to build a network of almost 100 miles (160 km) by the end of the twentieth century. On February 12, 1971, the council of the Montreal Urban Community authorized the borrowing of C$430 million to extend the Metro. This amount increased to C$665 million in 1973, and to C$1.6 billion in 1975. This expansion plan included the costs of extending the Orange Line westward, a distance of 20.5 kilometres (12.7 mi), adding 16 new stations, as well as the construction of a new garage.[3] The terminus station, Salaberry, would have been an intermodal station with Bois-Franc commuter rail station.

From the beginning, the plan was to expand the Metro to the northwest, but massive cost overruns on the expansion of the Green Line in preparation for the 1976 Summer Olympics, led to several years of delays, including a moratorium on underground expansions in 1976. To cut costs, three planned stations (Poirier, Bois-Franc, De Salaberry) and a maintenance workshop at the end of the track were eliminated.

In 1979, the Minister of Transport, Denis de Belleval, proposed to complete the subway extension to Du Collège and to extend the rest of the line above ground. This transportation plan was rejected by the mayors of the Montreal Urban Community. The moratorium was lifted in February 1981, with a new agreement that approved the construction of one additional station, Côte-Vertu. Du Collège was considered inappropriate to play the role of a terminus.

The western segment was constructed in the 1980s and was opened in several stages. On April 28, 1980, it was extended from Bonaventure to Place-Saint-Henri. From there, the line was extended to Snowdon on September 7, 1981, on January 4, 1982 to Côte-Sainte-Catherine, on June 29, 1982 to Plamondon, on January 9, 1984 to Du Collège, and finally on November 3, 1986 to the western terminus of Côte-Vertu.

Laval extension

After a break of more than two decades of expansion, the eastern segment was extended from Henri-Bourassa by three stations into the city of Laval. The 5.2 kilometres (3.2 mi) section required digging a tunnel under the Rivière des Prairies. The three stations were Cartier, De la Concorde and Montmorency. Montmorency station is near Collège Montmorency and the Laval campus of the Université de Montréal.

The Laval extension was inaugurated on April 26, 2007, and it opened to the public on April 28. It was completely financed by the Government of Quebec, which mandated for the former Agence métropolitaine de transport (AMT) (now ARTM) to realize the project. The STM acted as a subcontractor for the AMT and was responsible for the installation of fixed equipment. The project extended the Orange Line by 5.2 kilometres (3.2 mi), 4.9 kilometres (3.0 mi) not including the depot past Montmorency, at a cost of roughly C$143.27 million/km, which is slightly below the average cost for Metro extensions in other major cities. The total cost of the extension was $745 million.[4] To that amount, $12.4 million was added in 2008 to build a second entrance to Cartier station in Libellules Park, located northeast of the intersection of des Laurentides and Cartier.

The three stations on the extension are wheelchair accessible, with elevators and other features for disabled persons, and are the first such stations on the Metro system. Since those stations opened, some of the older stations have been retrofitted to be made accessible. More stations are being or are planned to be rebuilt, as funding permits.

Future extensions

In the medium term, there are plans for the Orange Line to be further extended toward the northwest from Côte-Vertu. The extension would include two new stations: Poirier and Bois-Franc. The latter would create a transportation hub with the existing Bois-Franc station on the Réseau de transport métropolitain's Deux-Montagnes line.[5]

After the extension of the line into Laval, Gilles Vaillancourt, a former mayor of Laval, suggested for a further six stations tp be added to the line. Three of them would be in Laval and three in Montreal, which would together turn the Orange Line into a loop.[6] In 2011, the City of Laval proposed addimg 8 more stations to the line, including 5 in Laval, to complete the loop and to serve the Carrefour Laval terminus.[7]

On 18 June 2019, the Autorité régionale de transport métropolitain approved a report for extending the Orange Line by 6.4 km to the north and east of the current Côte-Vertu terminus in St-Laurent to Montmorency station in Laval, which would create a loop. Five new stations would be built located at Poirier Street, Bois-Franc, and Gouin Boulevard in Montreal, and at Chomedey and Notre-Dame Boulevard near Autoroute 15 in Laval. The extension would cost an estimated $4.5-billion and put the project in line with the estimated $4.5-billion cost of the Blue Line extension to Anjou.[8]

Infrastructure

File:Inside-Montreal-trainNight.jpg
The interior of a MR-73 train.

Maintenance

The Metro trains are stored in the Saint-Charles Garage, north of Henri-Bourassa station, and in the garage at Montmorency station for passenger cars. They are maintained at the Plateau d'Youville, which is located between Crémazie and Sauvé stations. Centre d'attachement Duvernay, which is connected to the Green Line, is used for maintenance of way equipment. The Snowdon tail tracks and connecting track, which is connected to the Blue Line, is also used for maintenance of way equipment.

A new garage is currently being built immediately north of Côte-Vertu station that is expected to open in 2021, expanding the capacity of the Orange line by 25% and reducing wait time between trains from 2 minutes and 30 seconds to only 2 minutes across the entire line.[9]

Rolling stock

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At the line's opening in 1966, MR-63 cars were used on the Orange Line. In the early 1980s, MR-73 cars replaced the older MR-63 cars, which were used again on the Green Line. Introduced in 1976, the MR-73 is the second generation of high-performance Metro cars, identified by rectangular cab headlights, blue and dark orange interiors, 124 kW (166 hp) traction motors that growl while they accelerate out of a station, side vents, and a unique three-note sound signature when the train pulls out of a station.

With the introduction of the newer MPM-10 trains in 2016, the MR-73 trains in service on the line were gradually transferred over to the Green, Yellow, and Blue Lines. On 20 June 2018, a decorated MR-63 train gave a final "farewell tour" of the Orange Line before the model was retired from the entire system the following day. All remaining MR-73 cars operating on the line had been transferred over to the other lines by the end of 2018.

List of stations

Station Inauguration date Odonym Namesake Transfers/Connections Location
Côte-Vertu Handicapped/disabled access September 3, 1986 Côte-Vertu Road Notre-Dame-de-la-Vertu
(Our Lady of Virtue; 18th century name for the area)
Autobusmontréal.svg Terminus Côte-Vertu Saint-Laurent
Du Collège Handicapped/disabled access January 9, 1984 Du Collège Street Cégep de Saint-Laurent (local cégep)
De La Savane De la Savane Street savane
(a savanna or Québécois for swamp)

Côte-des-Neiges–
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce
Namur Namur Street Namur, Belgium
Plamondon June 29, 1982 Plamondon Avenue Antoine Plamondon (Québécois painter)
Rodolphe Plamondon[10] (Québécois lyric artist)
Côte-Sainte-Catherine January 4, 1982 Côte-Sainte-Catherine Road Côte Sainte-Catherine, 18th century name for area of Outremont
Snowdon Handicapped/disabled access September 7, 1981 Snowdon Street; Snowdon neighbourhood Name of area's former landowner 16px Blue Line
Villa-Maria Villa-Maria High School Latin form of Ville-Marie (former name of Montreal)
Vendôme De Vendôme Avenue Likely from the French Dukes of Vendôme At Vendôme: <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Place-Saint-Henri April 28, 1980 Place Saint-Henri A parish church named for Saint Henry II
(to commemorate Fr. Henri-Auguste Roux)
Le Sud-Ouest
Lionel-Groulx Handicapped/disabled access Lionel-Groulx Avenue Fr. Lionel Groulx, Quebec historian MtlMetro1.svg Green Line
Georges-Vanier Georges-Vanier Boulevard Georges Vanier, Governor General of Canada
Lucien-L'Allier Lucien-L'Allier Street Lucien L'Allier
(General Manager of the Transit Commission when the Metro opened)
At Lucien-L'Allier: <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>

Autobusmontréal.svg Terminus Centre-Ville

Ville-Marie
Bonaventure Handicapped/disabled access February 13, 1967 Place Bonaventure Bonaventure Station, in turn for former Bonaventure Street
St. Bonaventure, Italian cleric
At Montreal Central Station: <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>

Autobusmontréal.svg Terminus Centre-Ville

Square-Victoria-OACI February 7, 1967 Victoria Square;

International Civil Aviation Organization

Queen Victoria
ICAO headquarters
Place-d'Armes October 14, 1966 Place d'Armes Historical rallying point for city's defenders
Champ-de-Mars Handicapped/disabled access Champ de Mars Park Common term for military exercise ground
(Mars, god of war)
Berri-UQAM Handicapped/disabled access Berri Street
Université du Québec à Montréal
De Montigny Street
Simon Després dit Le Berry and Testard de Montigny <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Street John Coape Sherbrooke
(governor-general of British North America)
Le Plateau-
Mont-Royal
Mont-Royal Mount Royal Avenue Mount Royal
Laurier Laurier Avenue Wilfrid Laurier, Prime Minister of Canada
Rosemont Handicapped/disabled access Rosemont Boulevard; Rosemont neighbourhood Named by developer U.-H. Dandurand for his mother, née Rose Phillips Rosemont–
La Petite-Prairie
Beaubien Beaubien Street Prominent landowning family
Jean-Talon Jean Talon Street Jean Talon, intendant of New France 16px Blue Line Villeray–
Saint-Michel–
Parc-Extension
Jarry Jarry Street Stanislas Blénier dit Jarry père, landowner
Honoré-Bernard Bleignier Jarry
Crémazie Crémazie Boulevard Octave Crémazie, Quebec poet
Sauvé Sauvé Street Name of a landowner At Sauvé station: <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> Ahuntisic-
Cartierville
Henri-Bourassa Handicapped/disabled access Henri Bourassa Boulevard Henri Bourassa, Québécois journalist and politician Autobusmontréal.svg Terminus Henri-Bourassa
Cartier Handicapped/disabled access April 28, 2007 Cartier Boulevard Sir George-Étienne Cartier Québécois politician, Father of Confederation Autobusmontréal.svg Terminus Cartier Laval
De La Concorde Handicapped/disabled access De la Concorde Boulevard Place de la Concorde in Paris At De La Concorde station: <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Montmorency Handicapped/disabled access Collège Montmorency François de Montmorency-Laval
(first Roman Catholic Bishop of Quebec and landowner of Île Jésus)
Autobusmontréal.svg Terminus Montmorency

See also

References

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  3. Gaston, J., Le métro de Montréal, Montréal : Communauté urbaine de Montréal, Bureau de transport métropolitain, 1976 p.61,
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External links