Pink Line | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Locale | Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Transit type | Rapid transit |
Number of stations | 29 (planned) |
Operation | |
Operation will start | 2025 (planned) |
Operator(s) | Société de transport de Montréal (STM) |
The Pink Line (French: Ligne rose) is a new subway line proposal for the Montreal Metro in Quebec. First proposed by municipal councillor Sylvain Ouellet in September 2011,[1] the Pink Line in its current form was a "central campaign promise" of the mayoral campaign of Valérie Plante, leader of the political party Projet Montréal and now mayor of Montreal. The project was proposed to be finished by 2025, at a cost of an estimated C$5.9 billion.[2]
The project has since been added to Quebec's 10-year infrastructure plan, and feasibility studies for the line's western section began in June 2021.[3]
The proposed route of the line would traverse many Montreal neighbourhoods. It would start in Montreal North, and travel southwest through the city, with connections to the blue line extension, Mont-Royal metro station, and Place-des-Arts station. Given this routing, the section from Montreal North to Pie-IX is generally seen as the successor to the cancelled White Line originally proposed in the 1980s. A second phase of the project would travel southwest from Downtown Montreal, through Westmount, the Notre-Dame-de-Grâce neighbourhood, Montreal West, and end at Lachine.[2] This would be the first Montreal Metro line with above-ground stations.
List of stations
The pink line is proposed to have 29 stations, listed in the table below.[4]
Station | Borough or town | Location | Type |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Montreal North | Léger & Langelier Blvds | Underground |
2 | Rolland Blvd | Underground | |
3 | Place Bourassa | Underground | |
4 | Saint-Léonard | Saint-Léonard–Montréal-Nord station, Mascouche line | Underground |
5 | Viau & Lavoisier | Underground | |
6 | Saint-Michel | Jarry & Pie-IX/Provencher | Underground |
7 | Jean-Talon & Pie-IX | Underground | |
8 | Rosemont | Collège de Rosemont | Underground |
9 | Rosemont & St-Michel Blvds | Underground | |
10 | Masson | Underground | |
11 | d'Iberville & St-Joseph | Underground | |
12 | Plateau-Mont-Royal | Mt-Royal Ave & Papineau/De Lorimier | Underground |
13 | Mont-Royal Station, Orange Line | Underground | |
14 | Saint-Laurent Blvd & Rachel | Underground | |
15 | Pine & Park Aves | Underground | |
16 | Ville-Marie | Place-des-Arts station, Green Line | Underground |
17 | Complexe Guy-Favreau and Palais des congrès | Underground | |
18 | Montreal Central Station | Underground | |
19 | E-Commerce Place, René-Lévesque | Underground | |
20 | Canadian Centre for Architecture | Underground | |
21 | Westmount | Greene Avenue | Surface |
22 | Notre-Dame-de-Grâce | Vendôme station, Orange Line | Surface |
23 | Regent St | Surface | |
24 | Cavendish Blvd | Surface | |
25 | Montréal-Ouest station, commuter lines | Surface | |
26 | Lachine | Old Ville Saint-Pierre | Underground |
27 | Victoria & George-V Sts | Surface | |
28 | Victoria St & LaSalle Park | Surface | |
29 | Victoria St & 32nd Avenue | Underground |
References
- ↑ Normandin, Pierre-André (4 November 2017). "Visions d'après-élections". La Presse. Vol. 134, no. 3. Montréal. p. A4.
- 1 2 D'Alimonte, Michael (11 October 2017). "Montreal To Potentially Get New "Pink" STM Metro Line By 2025". MTL Blog. Narcity Media. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
- ↑ "Pink line a key campaign promise once again for Projet Montréal - Montreal | Globalnews.ca".
- ↑ Gerbet, Thomas. "Découvrez où seraient les stations de la ligne rose (French)". Radio-Canada. Retrieved 9 November 2017.