The first light-rail trains linking the downtowns of St. Paul and Minneapolis will rumble along University Avenue beginning June 14, doubling the size and scope of the Twin Cities' 10-year-old light-rail system.
"This is just such an exciting day, I don't even feel cold," said Metropolitan Council Chairwoman Susan Haigh, who announced the long-awaited start-up date Wednesday outside Union Depot in downtown St. Paul as windchills dipped below zero.
Transit officials are counting on balmier weather June 14, when the kickoff weekend for the Green Line, formerly called the Central Corridor, will be marked with celebrations and free rides at light-rail stations along the 11-mile route.
The project, which cost $957 million — half of it supplied by federal funds, with the balance divided among state, regional, county and city governments — includes 18 new stations in addition to five to be shared with the Blue Line in downtown Minneapolis.
By 2030, the Met Council projects, more than 40,000 people will be boarding the Green Line each weekday. The bus lines that now travel the same stretch, Routes 16 and 50, carried 24,000 riders on an average weekday in 2010.
The June starting date beats the federal deadline for completion by nearly six months and also ensures that fans can take the Green Line July 15 to the Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Target Field.
With 98 percent of construction complete, it looks as though the Green Line's opening will avoid the confusion that marked the start 10 years ago of the Hiawatha line, now the Blue Line. That opening date was pushed back five months to help fund the state's deficit. The line eventually opened in two phases, eight months apart.
Private investment
Officials heralded the economic development promised by the Green Line, which will link the two downtowns and the University of Minnesota via University Avenue. The Met Council estimates that the line so far has yielded $1.7 billion in private development already built or still to come.