Green Line (San Diego Trolley)

The Green Line is a 23.6-mile (38.0 km) light rail line in the San Diego Trolley system, operated by San Diego Trolley, Inc. an operating division of the San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (MTS).[1] The route serves downtown San Diego, Mission Valley, and the cities of La Mesa, El Cajon, and Santee.[6][7] The Green Line has the second highest ridership of the San Diego Trolley's three regular lines, transporting 13,673,926 riders during FY 2014 according to the MTS.[8]

Green Line
A Green Line trolley at Convention Center station
Overview
OwnerMetropolitan Transit System
LocaleSan Diego, California
Termini
Stations27[1]
Websitesdmts.com/schedules-real-time-maps-and-routes/trolley
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemSan Diego Trolley
Route number530 (in internal documents only)[2][3]
Operator(s)San Diego Trolley, Inc.
Rolling stock3-car trains (one SD-100 between two S70s of either length)
Daily ridership23,068 (FY 2023) [4]
Ridership7,926,568 (FY 2023)[4]
History
OpenedJuly 10, 2005; 18 years ago (2005-07-10)[1]
Technical
Line length23.6 mi (38.0 km)[1]
Number of tracks2 tracks (Gillespie Field–Santee Town Center: 1 track)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line600 V DC
Operating speed21 mph (34 km/h) (average)[Note 1]
55 mph (89 km/h) (max)
Route map
Map Green Line highlighted in green
Orange Line
Storage &
Maintenance Yard
12th & Imperial
Gaslamp Quarter
Convention Center
Seaport Village
Santa Fe Depot
Amtrak
County Center/Little Italy
Middletown
San Diego International Airport (via Middletown station (San Diego Trolley))
Washington Street
Old Town
Amtrak San Diego International Airport (via Old Town Transit Center)
Morena/Linda Vista
Fashion Valley
Hazard Center
Mission Valley Center
Rio Vista
Fenton Parkway
Stadium
Mission San Diego
Grantville
SDSU
Alvarado
70th Street
Grossmont
Amaya Drive
El Cajon
Arnele Avenue
Gillespie Field
Santee

Multiple
services
Handicapped/disabled access
All stations
are accessible

The line is one of four lines in the Trolley system, the others being the Blue, Orange, and Silver lines.

History

Siemens S70 Green Line train at SDSU's underground station, on the station's opening day (July 10, 2005)

The Green Line is the third line in the San Diego Trolley system with service beginning on July 10, 2005, upon the completion and opening of the 5.9 miles (9.5 km)[1] Mission Valley East extension.[9]

The line operates on this extension as well as segments previously served by the Blue Line between the Old Town Transit Center and Mission San Diego, and by the Orange Line east of the Grossmont Transit Center. It traverses Mission Valley, San Diego, which is the valley of the San Diego River, and runs parallel to Interstate 8 for this segment.

The San Diego State University (SDSU) stop on the Green Line is the San Diego Trolley system's only underground station.

2012 realignment

During a system redesign which took effect on September 2, 2012, as part of the Trolley Renewal Project, the western portion of the Green Line was extended from Old Town south through downtown and the Bayside, terminating at 12th & Imperial Transit Center's Bayside Terminal.[7][10] This redesign allowed for two "universal" transfer points among all three lines, at the 12th & Imperial Transit Center, and at the adjacent Santa Fe Depot/America Plaza stations.[10]

Naming rights

In October 2017, Sycuan Casino managed to secure the naming rights for the Green Line when the MTS had sought out to sell out the naming rights for each line in the Trolley system. The line was then named the Sycuan Green Line.[11] However, this is no longer the case.[citation needed]

Stations

Future

Copper Line
Santee
Gillespie Field
Arnele Avenue
El Cajon
Green Line
to 12th & Imperial
Orange Line
to Courthouse

Multiple
services
All stations
are accessible

In May 2024, MTS announced that a new service, known as the Copper Line, would replace the Green and Orange lines between El Cajon Transit Center and the eastern terminus at Santee. The proposal was prompted by service issues caused by the merge of the double track to a single track between the final two stations, creating delays for Green Line trolleys waiting for the track to clear and occasional cancellations at eastern stations when trains had to turn around early to prevent the delays. If the new service gets final approval, the Green Line would shorten by three stations and terminate at El Cajon Transit Center starting in September 2024.[12]

Notes

References

KML is from Wikidata