Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Brian (IA) http://blhanel.rrpicturearchives.net.
Quentin
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar Sure...most railfans would like all railroad ROW's to be active again...Just a comment on # 9: Much of it is a beautiful paved walking and biking trail now....We have close to 35 plus miles continous available to us here and more being finished now, in Muncie, In. {Old C&O route}.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar A G.....Not knowing if you are familiar with Muncie...I'll guide you right to the "Depot". Get off I-69 at the Muncie exit that puts you on Rt. 332. Turn east and follow it into northern Muncie where it becomes McGalliard...Continue from I-69 east into Muncie for about 9 or 10 miles and you will finally pass our Muncie Mall....and cross a railroad. The NS. Turn right on Broadway and head south for almost 2 miles....you will cross that railroad again and the Trail....Now you have the depot on your right...Turn in and check it all out.
QUOTE: Originally posted by blhanel #3 will never happen, especially on the original ROW. There's already a four-lane divided highway running down it through the north side of Cedar Rapids, and they're in the process of erecting a commercial building on the ROW across from where I work.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR Back to the original question: I'm not sure that resurrecting any of these lines, for the purpose of re-establishing lost railroad capacity that will probably need to be restored, is practical. In most cases, there is a railroad currently running from Point A to Point B. Are we suggesting that a competitor come in and build a new line over the old right-of-way (which, as been pointed out, is often no longer available for use in many areas)? An example: Who would want to run the old MILW route from Savanna (which is in Illinois, by the way) to Omaha? At Omaha, you have two railroads that go west out of town: UP and BNSF. UP has its own line from western Illinois to Omaha; so does BNSF. What company would want to build essentially a new line to go from the Mississippi River to Omaha? You've got four railroads in the Chicago-to-Omaha corridor already. Would a fifth one be necessary to take traffic from somewhere in Illinois to be handed over to UP or BNSF? Nope--the four railroads that do it today are down from six (seven, if you count Wabash!) for a reason. And neither UP nor BNSF needs a new choice for giving away some of their business from the west-- I'm not familiar with all of the suggestions made here. One--the old C&O of Indiana--might have some justification if traffic between Chicago and Cincinnati took a big swing upward. There is no real direct route any more between those two points. But here, the C&O right-of-way wasn't very direct, either. If a railroad desperately needed to be built between Chicago and Cincinnati, wouldn't it make more sense to strike out on a completely new, more direct route (perhaps cobbling portions of existing lines together to make said route)? Keep in mind that building a new track would not be a cheap propostion, and you couldn't get away with building an unsignaled single track for low-speed operation. A "vision" is no longer enough--you'd need hard facts to get the money, and the least expensive railroad-building technology (from a labor standpoint) would build you a railroad that would have to be supported by plenty of traffic, requiring at least a single-track CTC operation with plenty of second track along the way, and track that could handle gross rail loads well beyond what the abandoned track was designed for (the 286K issue). Again, no "third" company would do that--it'd have to be one or the other of CSX and NS.
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