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An Alternative Underground Track for High Speed Rail

A peninsula activist campaigns for an innovative but unlikely solution to the high-speed rail debate.

Imagine a park over 40 miles long, stretching from San Francisco to San Jose filled with restaurants, cafes, and eco-friendly housing and businesses. Families could rent bikes and make a day excursion, returning on the train.

This is not a fantasy, rather, a plan proposed by Ben Toy, President of the San Mateo United Homeowners Association, and Dan Ionescu, a Peninsula-based architect, whose work focuses on sustainable urban development.

Toy and Ionescu propose a system of putting Caltrain and the High-Speed Train underground, leaving the land around the existing tracks to be converted into a green-belt.

Ionescu, originally from formerly communist Romania, puts the situation bluntly.

“Politicians have two choices. They can either put the train underground now or they can do it later.”

Toy points to successful advocacy efforts for tunnel systems in San Francisco and in Anaheim as an illustration that densely populated areas with attractions to preserve are being spared the impact of a noisy and disruptive above-ground system.

The peninsula, both men say, warrants the same treatment.

“We live in small town USA within a large metropolitan area,” said Toy

That ‘small-town’ feel of the peninsula downtowns is at risk, according to Toy’s projections.

The above-ground train system would either have 2-tracks, where there would be excessive train traffic, leading to delays and safety hazards, or could have three or four tracks, in which case more surrounding land would need to be demolished.

In addition, the gentlemen claim that the plan faces a similar hurdle in deciding between level crossings and elevated crossings. Level crossings present a safety hazard, and also may present a significant delay to traffic given the frequency of the proposed service. Elevated crossings can be a dwelling for the homeless underneath and can also have a divisive impact on the community. Toy points to the state of the surrounding areas of the Embarcadero Freeway in San Francisco, demolished in the early 1990s, as an example of this impact.

Among other issues, Ionescu expressed concern for the increase in noise pollution from fast, frequent trains.

“The hills amplify sound,” he said.

Ionescu, who specializes in civil architecture, said that an underground system can be constructed at 100 feet below the ground without such noise impact.

Though the cost of such a system is significantly more, Toy pointed to constantly shifting cost projections as evidence that the cost difference may not be as significant as once thought.

Though the projections originally speculated that the underground system would cost $1 billion per mile, those costs have significantly sunk as low as $500 million per mile. In comparison, the same studies suggest that above-ground rail would cost near $350 million per mile.

The additional cost, both gentlemen say, is money well spent, and need not be funded by taxpayer dollars.

Due to the high value of peninsula real estate, Toy and Ionescu say that some of the land currently occupied by the train tracks can be sold to developers with the proceeds going to fund the construction of the tunnel.

“All the properties around the train will become prime properties,” said Ionescu. Toy added that the whole venture can be run more as a business than a typical government construction project.

As part of the plan, Toy and Ionescu plan for the current station buildings to stay, becoming coffee shops or restaurants, with the train stations being located underground, accessible by escalator or elevator.

Parking structures would also be underground, but would be built in an ‘atrium’ style as to decrease the claustrophobia in typical underground stations.

The park, Ionescu says, could be called “Peninsula Park," similar to New York City’s Central Park.

Toy acknowledges that many may see his effort as futile and his plans bizarre, but he stressed that support for the proposal is building. Union leaders, previously skeptical of the plan, have come to support it due to the increase in lucrative work they would have. Residents Associations have long supported the underground plan, but are now gravitating towards it in increasing numbers.

Both men hope to expand the coalition of advocates for the plan by being actively engaging in the local political scene.

If the trains are truly put underground, train lovers may miss the regular sight and sound of the engines. However, Ionescu comforts them by insisting that,

“The best infrastructure is the one you don’t see and works.”

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Vanessa Castañeda (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 11:35 am
Pamela, are you following a conversation that's taking place on Patch?
Bret Baird May 18, 2013 at 09:05 am
Thank you for posting this. As a teacher who represents 500 teachers, we routinely pay out of ourRead More own pockets to support our students.
Linda Allen April 10, 2013 at 02:02 pm
Jennifer, thank you for all your wonderful work on Patch. Life is a journey and you're on yours.Read More It will be an amazing change for you and family. Real estate will definately be cheaper, which is my bigest gripe with rentals in the bay area. I wish you all the happiness you deserve. Linda Allen
Kate Ashley April 5, 2013 at 06:18 pm
Tot ziens en veel geluk Jennifer!
Jacqueline Whittier Kubicka April 5, 2013 at 04:03 pm
Jennifer: I really enjoyed working with you on the story about the Barnes family and Ballet AmericaRead More back in December. Also liked "following you around town" on the other stories you covered. There will be lots of great people and exciting news back east -- not to worry. Best of luck.
Buck Shaw March 31, 2013 at 01:15 pm
So why do you keep voting for bigger Government? Seems the consumers have solved the problemRead More without "It's" help.
Lou Covey, The Local Motive March 31, 2013 at 12:43 pm
This is a much more effective means for dealing with the issue. Legislation is not.
roberta peters March 31, 2013 at 12:26 am
I agree, the public has the right to know what they are eating. It is absurd to be purchasing foodRead More that contains GMOs and not be able to know it is in the food.... why the secret if it is so safe??? I will not shop at any food stores that refuse to provide the public with information on what I am eating or serving to the people I care about. Trader Joes and Whole Foods have my loyalty for having the courage to stand up against the big guys and set an example by doing what is right for the consumer and not folding to pressure from Monsanto, Dupont and the other corporate giants that could care less about our safety and only care about how much money they can rake in.