Dublin/Pleasanton – SFO/Millbrae Line

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      Dublin/Pleasanton - SFO/Millbrae Line
Info
Type rapid transit
System Bay Area Rapid Transit
Locale Bay Area including Dublin, Pleasanton, Castro Valley, San Leandro, Oakland, San Francisco, Daly City, Colma, South San Francisco, San Bruno, San Francisco International Airport and Millbrae
by county: Alameda, San Francisco and San Mateo
Terminals Dublin/Pleasanton
Millbrae
No. of stations 22
Operation
Opened May 10, 1997
Operator(s) BART
Technical
Gauge 5' 6" (broad)
Electrification third rail
Highest elevation underground, elevated, at grade, underwater (Transbay Tube)
Line map
KBFa
Dublin/Pleasanton
eBHF
West Dublin/Pleasanton
BHF
Castro Valley
ABZrg
Richmond-Fremont, Fremont-Daly City
BHF
Bay Fair
LUECKE BHF leer
San Leandro
CPICl CPICr FLUG
Coliseum/Oakland Airport Amtrak
LUECKE BHF leer
Fruitvale
TUNNELa
tBHF
Lake Merritt
tABZrf
Richmond - Fremont Line
tABZlg
Richmond-Daly City, Pittsburg/Bay Pt-DC
TUNNELe
BHF
West Oakland
TUNNELa
leer tWASSER uLUECKE
Transbay Tube
leer tCPICl utCPICr
Embarcadero Muni Metro
leer tCPICl utCPICr
Montgomery Street Muni Metro
leer tCPICl utCPICr
Powell Street Muni Metro
leer tCPICl utCPICr
Civic Center Muni Metro
leer tBHF uLUECKE
16th Street-Mission
tBHF
24th Street-Mission
leer tBHF uLUECKE
Glen Park
leer tCPICl uCPICr
Balboa Park Muni Metro
leer TUNNELe uLUECKE
BHF
Daly City
BHF
Colma
TUNNELa
tBHF
South San Francisco
tBHF
San Bruno
leer TUNNELe FLUG
leer eABZ_ld BHFl
San Francisco International Airport
TUNNEL1
KBFe
Millbrae

The Dublin/Pleasanton - SFO/Millbrae Line of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system in the San Francisco Bay Area consists of 22 metro stations from Dublin and Pleasanton to Millbrae. It passes through Castro Valley, San Leandro, Oakland, San Francisco, Daly City, Colma, South San Francisco, San Bruno, and serves San Francisco International Airport.

BART lines are usually not referred to by the color that identifies them on official system maps, thus, this line is rarely called the Blue Line. However, the term has been used by BART officials, most notably when announcing the service changes of September 12, 2005 in the BART Times newsletter. It is usually called the Dublin/Pleasanton Line.

Starting on January 1, 2008, this line will be identified on maps as the Dublin/Pleasanton – Millbrae Line, which will include service to/from all the stations between Daly City and Millbrae on weeknights and weekends only. The SFO station will be served by the Pittsburg/Bay Point – SFO line during all of BART's operating hours.[1]

The West Dublin/Pleasanton station will be located in the median of I-580 just west of the I-680 interchange between the Castro Valley and Dublin/Pleasanton stations. Construction estimates for this station are US$100 million, with funding coming from a unique public-private partnership and transit-oriented development (TOD) project on adjacent BART-owned property. Construction on the station began in October 2006, and is slated for completion in 2009.[1]

When BART officially opened an extension of the line to the San Francisco International Airport on June 22, 2003, the Dublin/Pleasanton line was the only BART line that served the airport. On February 9, 2004, in order to attract more riders, BART truncated this line back to Daly City in favor of using two other lines that generally carried more passengers to serve the airport: the Richmond - Daly City Line and the Pittsburg/Bay Point Line. However, at the urging of SamTrans (San Mateo County Transit District), which paid the operating expenses for the SFO extension under the joint venture operating agreement then in force, BART announced on August 11, 2005 that trains from Dublin/Pleasanton would once again be the only ones that would travel to the airport.[2] SamTrans' assertion of its right to regulate San Mateo service also caused tension in early 2006 when BART, without informing SamTrans, unilaterally extended trains from six to eight or nine cars in order to serve increasing ridership on the East Bay section of the Dublin/Pleasanton line. SamTrans, which was not given the opportunity to exercise its veto power, refused to pay the extra expense of operating additional cars. SamTrans also once considered discontinuing weekend service to the San Bruno and South San Francisco stations, which were suffering from extremely low ridership. In February 2007, SamTrans and BART settled their disputes with a new agreement. Under the new agreement, SamTrans would give up control and the financial responsibility of the line in San Mateo County to BART. In return, BART would receive additional funding from San Mateo County and other sources. [2]

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