Line 2 (O-Train)
Line 2, also known as the Trillium Line, is a diesel light rail line in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Operated by OC Transpo, it runs north–south between Bayview and Limebank stations, using main line trains.
The first line in the O-Train system, Line 2 opened on October 15, 2001. It operates on a dedicated right-of-way with a mix of single and double-track sections. Although it serves as a public transit line, Line 2 is legally classified as a federally regulated mainline railway. It operates under the official name "Capital Railway", which appears on the trains alongside the O-Train logo.
Service on Line 2 has evolved over time. From October 2001 to March 2015, trains operated every 15 minutes on an route between Bayview and Greenboro using three-module Bombardier Talent trains. In March 2015, the line switched to two-module Alstom LINT trains, with service frequency improving to every 12 minutes.
May 2020 marked the shutdown of the line for the Stage 2 expansion project. Originally expected to be completed by September 2022, service resumed on January 6, 2025. The expanded line now extends to Limebank, with trains running every 12 minutes using either four-module Stadler FLIRT trains or coupled pairs of two-module Alstom LINT trains.
History
Pilot project
The Trillium Line was introduced on October 15, 2001, as a pilot project to provide an alternative to the Transitway bus rapid transit on which Ottawa had long depended exclusively for its high-grade transit service. The single-track line operated with five stations and a single passing loop at Carleton station.As a pilot project, the Trillium Line system was built at the cost of, relatively little compared with the hundreds of millions of dollars usually required to build a new transit line. It runs on an existing Canadian Pacific Railway track, so the only construction work necessary was to build the stations themselves and the passing tracks necessary to allow trains to operate in both directions. The track is shared with Ottawa Central freight trains south of Walkley Yard, which occasionally serve the National Research Council of Canada's Automotive and Surface Transportation Research Centre.
From 2001 until 2015, the system used three diesel-powered Bombardier Talent BR643 low-floor diesel multiple unit trains. It was, however, described as "light rail", partly because plans called for it to be extended into Ottawa's downtown as a tramway-like service, and partly because the Talent vehicles, though designed for mainline railways in Europe, are much smaller and lighter than most mainline trains in North America, and do not meet the Association of American Railroads' standards for crash strength. Ottawa is also authorized to run trains with only a single operator and no other crew, something rare on mainline railways in North America.
Until late 2014, the official name of the diesel-powered, north–south line was "O-Train". After construction started on a second, east–west urban rail line, the O-Train name was applied to the entire system, and the north–south line was renamed the "Trillium Line".
Original service
Ticketing on Line 2 originally worked entirely on a proof-of-payment basis; there were no ticket barriers or turnstiles, and the driver did not check fares. Occasionally, OC Transpo Special Constables or other employees prompted passengers for proof-of-payment. Tickets can be purchased from a vending machine on the platform, and certain bus passes are also valid for Line 2. Line 2 tickets were exchanged for bus transfers upon boarding a bus. Although bus transfers can be used to board the O-Train, prepaid bus tickets cannot.The European trains were narrower than the North American standard. In order to enable night-time use of the line by standard-width freight services, retractable platform extenders were mounted at each station other than Bayview. Passengers gain access to Line 2 on these extenders. When a freight train needs to pass through a station, the extenders are retracted, allowing the wider train to pass through.
The 15-minute headway combined with a travel time of 12 minutes end-to-end made it possible to run the line with a fleet of just three trains and a single track, apart from passing sidings at Carleton station.
The Trillium Line hit the 1-millionth rider mark on May 29, 2002, the 5-millionth mark on January 21, 2005, and the 10-millionth in late 2010. In mid-2011, the Trillium Line carried an average of approximately 12,000 riders each day.
Awards
In June 2002, the O-Train Light Rail Transit project received the Canadian Urban Transit Association’s Corporate Innovation Award.On January 16, 2003, the Ontario chapter of the American Public Works Association presented the City of Ottawa, Canadian Pacific Railway and Morrison Hershfield with the APWA Public Works Project of the Year award in the transportation category. This award was established to highlight excellence in the management and administration of public works projects by recognizing the alliance between the managing agency, the consultant and the contractors who, working together, complete public works projects.
A third award the Trillium Line Light Rail transit project received was in May 2003, in the sustainable transportation category of the FCM-CH2M Hill Sustainable Community Awards.
Criticism of pilot project
The main complaints about the Trillium Line pilot have revolved around its placement and ridership levels. The Trillium Line's route was determined by existing railway tracks, rather than the parts of the city that needed public transport, which would have required new tracks to be laid. Carleton University students, however, have benefited from the connection to the busy Ottawa Transitway system.The other criticism is that there is low ridership of the trains compared to some crowded bus lines, such as the 90–99 series routes. A fully loaded Line 2 train carries 285 passengers compared to 131 passengers for an articulated bus. The O-Train schedule is limited by track capacity.
Early extension plans
In July 2006, Ottawa City Council approved a north–south light rail expansion project. The project would have terminated diesel light rail service on the Trillium Line so as to reuse its right-of-way for a double-track, electric light rail line that would have extended west from the University of Ottawa to Bayview then south to Leitrim and then west to Barrhaven. However, in December 2006, Ottawa City Council cancelled this project, thus leaving the diesel-powered Trillium Line unchanged.Service improvements
On May 18, 2011, OC Transpo approved a $200,000 study to expand the Trillium Line. The $59-million proposal included the purchase of six new trainsets and track improvements that would decrease headways from 15 minutes to 8 minutes. The project would finally cost $60.3million.In mid-2013, service on the Trillium Line was suspended for four months to implement service and track improvements such as new station platforms and two new passing tracks. Upgrades were also made to the signal system, train controls, stations, tracks and train yard. A new centralized traffic control system was installed to improve safety and efficiency. Six new Alstom Coradia LINT 41 trainsets and the two extra passing loops allowed the number of trains on the line to double to four.
Expanded service began on March 2, 2015, but suffered numerous problems during the first week. Although the changes were intended to improve frequency to eight minutes, the Trillium Line would ultimately operate at twelve minute frequency. After the completion of the Stage 2 project, the line was originally planned to continue operating using single-car trains; however, because of the lower-than-intended frequency, the city was forced to adjust the Stage 2 plan to include longer trains and platforms to compensate.
Derailment
On August 11, 2014, train C3 derailed while traveling northbound over the switch just south of Carleton station. The cause was determined to be a faulty spring switch that had not closed properly as well as the operator failing to follow regulations and physically inspect the switch after spotting a signal irregularity. No serious injuries occurred as a result of the derailment; however, train C3 received damage and was taken out of service. C3 was never repaired and never returned to service and as a result the line continued to operate with only two operational trains until the following March when the new Alstom LINT trains entered service. In June 2017, the spring switches at Carleton were replaced with powered switches.Stage 2 expansion
As part of the city's Stage 2 LRT project, the Trillium Line was extended south from Greenboro to Limebank using a new grade-separated railway with four new stations at South Keys, Leitrim, Bowesville and Limebank. At South Keys, the extension connects to the new Line 4, a branch line to Macdonald–Cartier International Airport.The project added a new pocket track, passing track and crossover tracks at South Keys station, and the tracks from the Leitrim Road overpass to Limebank station were double-tracked. In addition, two more stations were built along the existing portion of the line at Gladstone and Walkley. The project also included a number of other significant upgrades, including lengthening all existing passing tracks, purchasing seven new trains, doubling the length of all existing platforms, building a grade separation over the Via Rail line, rehabilitating rail bridges over the Rideau River and the Dow's Lake rail tunnel, upgrading the signalling system to implement positive train control, constructing several new pedestrian tunnels and overpasses, and numerous guideway and vehicle rehabilitation projects.
The contract for the project was approved on March 7, 2019, by city council, with construction of the airport spur beginning in mid-2019. The project was expected to be completed by the fourth quarter of 2022 but was delayed initially to October 2023, then to April 2024, then to mid-2024. On December 6, 2024, an opening date was announced, with revenue service beginning January 6, 2025.
The Line 4 runs from Macdonald–Cartier International Airport north to South Keys station, where riders need to change trains to continue to Bayview station. South Keys station features an island platform to facilitate cross-platform transfers for passengers arriving from the airport branch to trains bound for Bayview station. The spur's funding came from the federal and provincial governments, as well as the airport authority, instead of from the city itself.
On February 22, 2019, the city announced that the selected proponent to construct the project was TransitNEXT, a wholly owned subsidiary of SNC-Lavalin. This decision was controversial as the federal government and SNC-Lavalin were involved in a political scandal at the time, which led to extra scrutiny by city councillors, with some calling for a delay on the vote to approve the contract in order to allow more time for review. Ultimately Council voted not to delay the approval and the contract was approved on March 7, 2019. It was later revealed that TransitNEXT's bid had not met the minimum technical scoring threshold in order to be considered, which continued the controversy. The city eventually explained that the decision to award the contract to TransitNEXT was done at the discretion of city staff to get a better deal for the city and was within the rules of the procurement process. An investigation conducted by the city's auditor general later confirmed that the authority delegated by council gave city staff sole discretion on whether to allow a bid to proceed even if it had not met the minimum scoring threshold, and that staff had otherwise correctly followed the entire procurement process that had been approved by council.
Work on the Stage 2 extension began in mid-2019, starting with the clear-cutting of trees along the corridors used by the extension. Construction of the airport spur was expected to be completed in 2020 to give the airport authority time to rebuild the terminal and connect it to the future station.
File:Trillium_Line_LRT_interior.jpg|thumb|left|Stadler FLIRT train interior on display for Doors Open Ottawa 2023
On May 3, 2020, the line was shut down for the expansion project. The project was originally expected to be complete by September 2022 but was delayed several times. On May 26, 2023, the Light Rail Transit Sub-Committee received an update on the progress of construction for Lines 2 and 4, noting that construction was going well and that handover of the system to the city was expected in approximately the first or second week of October 2023, though that was subject to shifting earlier or later pending the results of operational testing across both lines. Michael Morgan, the director of rail construction, reaffirmed that all signs were pointing to Lines 2 and 4 beginning revenue service by the end of 2023 and stated that Line 4 would likely be the first of the two branches to open to the public. It was also revealed that, due to lessons learned from the launch of the Confederation Line in late 2019, parallel bus service would be retained across both lines through the end of the first winter they were in operation, so as to mitigate unforeseen disruptions caused by any remaining unexpected events related to the construction. Final testing of the line began in October 2024, with successful completion of trial running by October 31.
The line reopened on January 6, 2025, beginning with a 5-day service week, which expanded to a 6-day service week on January 25; and expanded to 7-day service on March 16.