Valley Line LRT | TransEd/Marigold | City of Edmonton

I agree, Lewis Farms could also be used for testing, even though it's smaller capacity. I'm thinking there will be a lot of use of both facilities in the later stages of testing.
 
There’s not a chance the testing is anything beyond basic in a small area. Still a ton of segments without trackbed, let alone rail. 102ave will take until mid 2027 to be ready for trains on that section at all. Feels like people are misunderstanding what cbc is reporting here.

We are 3 full years away still. And that won’t be mostly 2 years of testing. No stops exist yet, most overhead lines won’t be installed for another year still.
They seem to say it in different ways in a few different spots that thye think they can be done next year, seems unfathomable to my eye, but wow would that ever change things around downtown and to the west if they come even close to that goal.

Let er rip, it’s about time we started to get serious again about getting stuff done and productivity as a key goal.
 
Definitely getting ahead of myself here but if these ahead of schedule milestones are met, I think it would be foolish not to have MIP as the contractor for the next LRT Leg (metro north?). I know there’s procedures & bidding that has to happen but thier record with this line should be seriously considered. At the same time I hope its not 2029 before metro north breaks ground 🙃
 
They seem to say it in different ways in a few different spots that thye think they can be done next year, seems unfathomable to my eye, but wow would that ever change things around downtown and to the west if they come even close to that goal.

Let er rip, it’s about time we started to get serious again about getting stuff done and productivity as a key goal.
I will buy 10 people on here drinks if we have a train moving passengers by Sept 2027.

They also said gantry work complete by end of 2024 was a goal in 2023 fall. They didn’t finish till this year. So idk.
 
I can't speak for MIP, but I have very good reasons to believe testing will not be possible on the VLW tracks until the entire extension is commissioned.

The Hyundai Rotem trains will be tested on the VLSE tracks.
I was thinking about this yesterday. Marigold is responsible for only the infrastructure, not the vehicles or operations. It would make sense that before anyone can go testing LRV's on the VLW, Marigold is going to have to have finished all of their work and released the line to the City. This was how things were done in the past on the SLRT and NLRT extensions. Once construction was completed, from what I observed ETS would first run a selection of the MoW equipment along the line. This was then followed up by towing LRV's with clearance gauges, and then testing the trains under power, first at a slow speed and increasing in speed with each pass, and then finally full speed testing and training. For the SLRT extension to Century Park the catenary was finished around November 2009 with the MoW run done in early December, clearance testing a few weeks later, and powered testing and commissioning in early January 2010, with further testing and training following, with the opening coming on April 25, 2010. I didn't see as much of the testing on the NLRT extension (a lot was done overnight/ very early morning rather than midday), but it was certainly once construction was complete. That was unlike the VLSE where construction, vehicles, and operations all fell under TransEd who probably had more flexibility in regards to getting LRV's out onto the rails as a result.
 
I think Crossing arms would be definitely important to see on certain intersections that can tend to be a lot busier than others. Starting from the south I would probably put one at 34th Avenue, one at White mud, one at Roper Road, possibly one at Whyte Ave. The other intersections I think are quiet enough that it would not be necessary
 

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