The North Carolina Department of Transport continues to advance with the development of its part of a high -speed railway corridor that connects Raleigh, NC and Richmond.
Known as the S-line, the collaboration between NCDOT and Virginia Passenger Ferrocarril Authority (VPRA) aims to update a 162 mile CSX line of CSX goods to support the passenger rail service between the two state capitals. The project, scheduled for its completion in 2030, would be part of a high-speed railway route in the southeastern corridor that connects Atlanta with Washington, DC
The proponents of the line say that the region is mature for the expanded passenger rail service, as evidenced by a recent Amtrak report that cites its seasons in Virginia and North Carolina as the most busy southeast. Along with saving more than an hour of travel time between Richmond and Raleigh, Ncdot says that the ability to support the most common and reliable train service will make the DC trip to Washington, competitive with driving times.
Since 2020, NCDOT has received multiple grants from the Federal Railway Administration for the purchase of passage law, surveys, preliminary engineering and location studies for stations. However, the largest adjudication to date, a $ 1.09 million grant funded by virtue of the Federal-State Partners of the Rail Intercity Rail Program (FSP), was among the Secretary of Transportation of the United States, Sean Duffy, recently said that the congress was 3,200 non-onalized grades that his agency had stopped for his revision.
Northern Carolina officials, including Governor Josh Stein (D) and State Transportation Secretary Joey Hopkins, have gathered with Duffy to promote the preservation of the grant, which finances the design and construction of the 18 mile segment segment of the S line from Raleigh to Wake Forest, NC, the work includes the new and updated route and the replacement of the with a motorway/railway surface. The NCDOT railway division, which held an innovative ceremony for last July, continues administrative work related to the project launch in anticipation of the original start -up date of the 2030 service, according to local media.
Earlier this year, NCDOT announced that it will administer a federal grant of $ 13.2 million to design and build a “ mobility center ” in Wake Forest, which includes a S-Line Passenger Rail Service and access to “ last mile ” solutions for passengers such as public transport, walking, bicycle and walking services. Ncdot claims that other cities in the hallway have also begun planning stations and other facilities to support Line Service S.
However, there are many other needs for NCDOT, including acquiring approximately 10 kilometers from the route below the state line. With the 110 mph passenger trains planned for line S, much of the aisle also requires updated signals and other improvements in the infrastructure to adapt to the safely served freight capacity.
As part of an agreement of 2021 with CSX, VPRA acquired its 75 mile portion of the S-LINE Corridor, which has been out of service since the late 1980’s. According to an Agency spokesman, VPRA has been working with NCDOT and other partners to review the service planning, the runner’s alignment and other elements of the project in the preparation for the next design work that will be held with the Federal Subsidiary Award. The Agency has also begun the recruitment of design services for the improvements of the infrastructure of runners.
“VPRA is confident that progress in line will continue and the financing that has been granted above will be obliged by a subsidy agreement,” says a spokesman for the agency.