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Expo Express

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Former rapid transit system in Montreal, Quebec
For the train service for the Expo 2000 world fair at Hanover, seeICE 3.

Expo Express
Front view of Expo Express train at Place d'Accueil terminal in Cite du Havre
Overview
StatusDemolished
OwnerExpo 67
City of Montreal (1968)
LocaleMontreal, Quebec, Canada
Termini
Stations5
Service
TypeRapid Transit
Rolling stockHawker SiddeleyH1 variant; 8 × 6-car sets
History
OpenedApril 1967
ClosedOctober 1973
Technical
Line length5.7 km (3.5 mi)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)standard gauge[1]
ElectrificationThird rail 600VDC
Route map

Maintenance center
La Ronde
LeMoyne Channel
Notre Dame East
opened
1969
Notre Dame
LeMoyne Channel
Saint Helen
Habitat 67
closed
1967
Place d’Accueil
closed
1969
This diagram:

TheExpo Express was arapid transit system consisting of five stations and a 5.7-kilometre (3.5 mi) route, running fromCité du Havre toLa Ronde inMontreal, Quebec,Canada. Built for the 1967World's Fair (Expo 67) at a cost of aroundCAD$18 million, the trains carried 1,000 passengers each and ran approximately every five minutes.

In 1968, the cars were sold to theCity of Montreal for $1.8 million and operated by the Montreal Transit Commission (now theSTM).[2] The train remained in limited service forMan and His World for six additional years, however, on a shortened route from 1969-onwards when tracks were cut back toSaint Helen's Island. Service ended in 1973.

Vehicles

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Interior of Expo Express train looking toward front
Interior of Expo Express train looking toward rear of car

Not to be confused with theMinirailmonorail which ran within the perimeters of the Expo Site, the Expo Express used standard railway technology, with two running rails and athird electrified rail identical to those of theToronto subway. In fact, the trains used were a modified version of theHawker SiddeleyH series used by theToronto Transit Commission with one fewer door on each side, 3 instead of 4 andstreamlined ends.[3] Consequently, unlike theMontreal Metro with rubber tires, the Expo Express used traditional steel-wheeled trains. The Expo Express also featured fully air-conditioned passenger cars, also unlike Montreal's underground Metro (a deficiency that still exists to present day).

The fleet of rolling stock consisted of 48 cars in total, with the name of a sponsoring Canadian city or local municipality inscribed in large lettering on both sides of each car (e.g. "Richmond, B.C.", "Town of Mount Royal", "Point Claire, Quebec", "Cornwall, Ontario"). The 16 streamlined end cars all hadmotor-generator (MG) sets but noair compressors; 8 of them also had ATO equipment. Of the 32 intermediate cars, 24 had compressors and 8 had MG sets. Typical consists were: one end car with ATO equipment; 3 intermediate cars with compressors; one intermediate car with MG; and one end car without ATO equipment.[4]

Background

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The Expo Express was the first fully-automated rapid transit system in North America, utilizing anAutomatic Train Operation (ATO) system based onaudio frequency track circuits furnished by theUnion Switch & Signal division ofWestinghouse Air Brake Company. This fact, however, was not widely publicized during the fair, as it was felt the public would not readily board a train controlled entirely by a computer. Operators from Montreal's transit union were placed in cabs at the front and given mundane tasks such as opening and closing the doors of the train to reduce boredom.

This resulted in a minor incident during the fair, at La Ronde station. The conductor had pressed the button to close the doors and proceed, but his train had already sensed an oncoming express from Notre Dame Island and automatically delayed the go command to let it roll in. In the meantime, the driver realized he had forgotten his lunch. However, he could not exit through the passenger doors because his train was in a "wait" state and would not allow the doors to open. Instead, he crawled through the small cab window. By the time he had fetched his lunch, however, the oncoming train had pulled in and his train had taken off on its own. It crossed the bridge over the Le Moyne Channel, proceeded along the seaway, and came to a smooth stop at Notre Dame Island station where an Expo official was waiting. This person crawled back through the cab window and pressed the button to open the doors and let the passengers disembark.[citation needed]

Route

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Model board at Expo Express control centre at Place d' Accueil terminal showing line layout
Control console at Expo Express control centre at Place d' Accueil terminal

The route had 5 stations:Place d'accueil,Habitat '67,Place des Nations,Ile Notre-Dame andLa Ronde.

The line started at the southern end of Cite du Havre, with thePlace d'accueil station adjacent to theBonadventure Expressway. It headed north, where a half-mile down was theHabitat '67 station (eliminated early on, due to low use) after which it turned east and crossed over the Saint Lawrence river by means of theConcordia Bridge. The next stop was on Saint Helen's island, with thePlace des Nations station situated on the Concordia bridge, between Places Des Nation and Swan Lake. It was followed by a crossing over the Moyne Channel to Notre-Dame Island, with theIle Notre-Dame station further up on the Pont des Iles bridge, next to the Man the Producer pavilion. From there, the line turned north and traveled alongside the Saint Lawrence seaway until crossing the Moyne Channel again, via a westwards train bridge toLa Ronde station–the terminus at the fairground entrance.

The line was double-track throughout, except for a single-track section at Cité du Havre, where people exited on one side of the train and boarded on the other. Shortly after Expo opened, due to unexpected visitor congestion, the Cité du Havre line was changed to double-track to accelerate passenger movement. All the Maintenance facilities were located northwest of La Ronde station: past that point service tracks extended to the Expo Express' maintenance yard and its rolling stock storage tracks.

In 1969, the Cite du Havre line was permanently closed and the starting point was cut back toPlace des Nations onSaint Helen's Island (initially single-tracked). That same year theHabitat '67 station (closed in early 1967) was physically relocated toNotre Dame Island, near the Man and Agriculture pavilion, and renamedNotre-Dame East station. TheHabitat '67 station (outbound only), and its eventual replacement, theNotre-Dame East station (inbound only), only allowed for bordering trains in one direction.

In 1972, all stations on Notre Dame Island closed, making the route direct fromPlace des Nations toLa Ronde station with no stops in between.

History

[edit]
This sectionis inlist format but may read better asprose. You can help byconverting this section, if appropriate.Editing help is available.(June 2024)

The Expo Express ran from April 1967 to October 1973. After Expo, when service continued during the early days ofMan and his World, the Express only ran for two months during the summer each year.

In 1968, theNew York City Transit Authority looked into the feasibility of modifying the cars for use on theStaten Island Railway, but this plan never came to fruition.[5] That same year, the Societe des Transports Rapides Incorporated made a bid to modify the cars for a monorail system running from Laval to Montreal, but that plan also fell through.[6] In the end, the Montreal Transit Commission (now the STM) purchased the cars for $1.8 million and took over operation of the train–simply renamedThe Express, and kept its rolling stock, route and stations unmodified throughout 1968.

In 1969, service at Cite du Harve was ceased, and the line south-west of St. Helen's Island was demolished along with its two stations. That same year St.Helen's Island became the new starting point for the train and theNotre-Dame East station opened.

In 1972, both stations on Notre-Dame Island closed (Notre Dame Island was inaccessible to the public that year onward), making it a non-stop ride to La Ronde.

In 1973, the Express saw its final year of operations. At season's end, the trains were moved and put in storage on Pont des Iles bridge, between Saint Helen's and Notre Dame Islands.

In 1974, the line north of Notre-Dame Island was demolished for the construction of theOlympic basin, leaving the trains stranded on the bridge with the line now cut in both directions.

In 1979, the trains were sold to a Montreal business man for $380,000[7] and that summer the trains were moved again, to thePort of Montreal via a temporary track, and stored at the nearby CN Point St-Charles Shops.[8]

In 1984, unable to resale the trains, and concerns about returns on the investment, they were sold to Pemik Enterprises and the cars were moved from Point St-Charles to an outdoor field storage facility inLes Cèdres.

In 1988, after four years of failed plans, including a reported sale to theNew Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, Pemik proposed the Government of Quebec renovate the cars and use them for a new commuter train route betweenSt Hilaire and Montreal, withBombardier interested in renovating the cars, but this too failed.

In 1995, after several unrealized schemes and the deteriorated state of the rolling stock, the cars were finally scrapped.

Virtually nothing remains of the Expo Express today. The only evidence is at La Ronde, where a train bridge deteriorates in the river and remnants of the La Ronde station have been converted into the main park entrance. The area where Place d'Accueil stood is now a parking lot, and part of the track route is a pavedbicycle path.

References

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  1. ^Andy Riga (3 February 2010)."expo 67's lost steel wheels".Montreal Gazette. Retrieved4 September 2016.After the fair, despite the efforts of its engineers and the city of Montreal, the Expo Express was eventually cut up for scrap. Though its design was based on the same cars as Toronto's subway system, the track width of the Expo Express had been modified to the world-wide "standard" rail gauge for eventual use on CN's suburban line between Montreal and Deux Montagnes. CN was already losing money on the line, however, and had no interest in spending millions more to adapt its level-grade platforms and stations to accommodate the higher doors of the Expo Express.
  2. ^La Roche, Roger (2014)."Expo Express"(PDF) (in French). Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 4 March 2016.
  3. ^Klauder, Louis T (July 1968),Report to the City of New York Transportation Administration on the Feasibility of the Purchase of the Expo Express Transit Cars for use on the Staten Island Rapid Transit Railway(Consulting Engineers' Report), Philadelphia, retrieved22 January 2013{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^Rapid Transit in Canada, © J.W. Boorse, Jr.; Almo Press, Philadelphia, 1968
  5. ^"New York may purchase Expo 67 rolling stock".Railway Gazette International: 687. 15 September 1967.
  6. ^"Monorail to Laval: How Montrealers blocked a plan to link Laval to the Montreal metro system".
  7. ^"Expo Express cars sold at last".Railway Gazette International: 503. June 1979.
  8. ^"Quebec".Canadian Railway Yards, Water Towers, Round Houses, Control Towers and Freight Sheds.

External links

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