71-529: The M-Line Trolley (previously McKinney Avenue Trolley ) is a heritage streetcar line in the Uptown neighborhood of Dallas , Texas . The trolley line, which has been in service since 1989, is notable for its use of restored historic streetcar vehicles, as opposed to modern replicas. The M-Line Trolley operates 7 days per week, 365 days per year. The line runs along McKinney Avenue between West Village and Klyde Warren Park before leaving McKinney to service
142-463: A 1,400-foot subway. It was rebuilt as a double-ended car and given a more "modernized" appearance in Fort Worth — stainless steel siding and blue roof trim. This modification did not completely conceal its standard PCC design heritage. Old 1506 was renumbered as M&O #2. No. 2 served as a Tandy Center Subway car until the line was abandoned on August 30, 2002. Despite modifications to soften
213-466: A K-3, 6 charter school of Uplift Education, is in Downtown Dallas. It used to be called Laureate, but there were other schools with the name and if they did not change it they would have been sued. Residents are also served by First Baptist Academy of Dallas , a college preparatory Pre-K through 12 school located in the city center district of downtown Dallas. Holy Trinity Catholic School
284-599: A full restoration in 2000, the front end of the car was even restored by volunteers however plans soon changed as the Ex-Dallas pcc was acquired and all available funds were moved to that project. Car 189's front was then moved to the Canopy hotel on the M-line route and is still on public display as of 2023. 323 is a 13-window Stone & Webster "turtleback" type street car built in 1915 as part of an order for 26 such cars for
355-587: A lease for the Bowen Avenue car barn. New rails were first laid in September 1988 near Hall Street. The initial infrastructure would be in place in the summer of 1989. On July 22, 1989, Dallas saw a return of the streetcar as car 122 broke a celebratory banner. In 1995, the agency had to fix subsidence in Cole Avenue causing a dip in the tracks between Hall and Bowen Streets. About 200 feet of track
426-525: A lengthy debugging process of 754's electronic control system, the car began regular service in March 2014. Toronto was once the largest operator of PCCs in the world with 745 cars. Eventually only nineteen Toronto PCCs remained and these were used on only one route — the 509 Harbourfront . The Toronto PCC era ended on December 8, 1995, when the last such cars ran on that line. These PCCs were built in 1951 by CC&F (A8 Class) and extensively rebuilt by
497-824: A more North American appearance. In 2008, the car was equipped with air-conditioning (eight roof-mounted units, powered by an inverter hidden under a seat). Car 636 was built in 1920 as part of an order for 25 streetcars for the Dallas Railway Co. from the J. G. Brill Company. Petunia, a "Birney Safety Car," (or Birney , for short) is named after its designer, Charles O. Birney of the Stone & Webster Co. The design incorporated numerous operational and safety improvements over earlier streetcars that permitted one man operation and thereby allowed street railway companies to reduce their expenses. Birneys were known for their bouncy riding qualities and were never very popular with
568-430: A rewiring of the motor control system. 754, a 19- short-ton (17.2 t ), 48- foot (14,630 mm ), 56-seat streetcar was built in 1926 by American Car Company for Dallas Railway and Terminal Co. It was originally a Peter Witt center entrance car. The DR&T later removed 754's center doors when the company rebuilt each of its Peter Witts for one-man operation. The 754 was on the active DR&T roster until
639-435: A second Brill car of the same type and age was purchased to provide the 2 car service that the company and the city of Dallas agreed to. The car was almost ready to be put into service but was at the time stored behind a local uptown restaurant as the car barn was still having the roof raised by 7 feet to accommodate the overhead power wires. In the winter of 1985 two children broke into the trolley car and set it on fire, luckily
710-630: A series of theaters , residential space, retail, parks, and a gleaming, 42-story residential tower known as Museum Tower that opened in 2013. One of the prominent attractions in the Arts District is the Dallas Museum of Art . Of all the changes in downtown Dallas, the Trinity River corridor is undergoing the most dramatic. Currently, the river runs in an artificially straight line a large distance from any part of downtown, but Dallas
781-494: A transition as dozens of residential conversions and new high-rise condominiums bringing more permanent residents to the downtown area. (See: North Central Texas Council of Governments (NCTCOG). ) As of 2017, an estimated 10,766 residents lived within the area. Its redeveloped Main Street has recently become more of a place for Dallasites to play after several restaurants, hotels , and residential towers opened their doors along
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#1732779792035852-442: Is a Brussels-built single-end Westinghouse All-Electric PCC that was bought by MATA in 2013. Trams from the ( 7000 and 7100 series [ fr ] ) were built between 1951 and 1971. The last subtype (7156–7171) were built in 1970 using salvaged components from Johnstown Traction Company PCC trams. MATA modified the car for their operations, including new left-side doors. The car entered regular service in mid 2015. Built by
923-683: Is a nearby centrally located private school providing early education to three-year-olds through eighth grade. It is supported by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas . El Centro College of the Dallas College is in downtown. The University of North Texas , located 40 miles (64 km) to the northwest in Denton, opened a law school downtown. The University of Texas at Arlington , Texas A&M University-Commerce , and University of North Texas offer degree programs at
994-485: Is in the process of returning the river to its natural course, creating two large lakes to border the downtown area, and has commissioned two large cable-stayed bridges to be built across the river and new lakes. Dubbed the Trinity River Project by local officials, plans are also in place for improved levees to protect downtown from possible flooding. Separated from Victory Park and the Arts District by
1065-608: Is located in Downtown Dallas. The Texas Fifth District Court of Appeals is located in the George L. Allen, Sr. Courts Building in Downtown Dallas. The United States Postal Service operates the Downtown Dallas Post Office at 400 North Ervay Street. J. Erik Jonsson Central Library , the largest and main library of the Dallas Public Library system, is located downtown. Downtown Dallas
1136-555: Is one of four box motors built in the Northern Texas Traction Company interurban railway shops in 1912. When NTT ceased operations in 1934, a farmer near Granbury, Texas (southwest of Fort Worth) bought 332 and used it for grain storage. John Landrum, MATA's Chief Operating Officer, purchased the car in 1986 and for many years volunteers worked on its restoration in the MATA car barn. However, restoration of
1207-704: Is operated by the McKinney Avenue Transit Authority (MATA), a non-profit organization. The trolley is free to the public thanks to donations, as well as a joint operating subsidy from Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) and the Uptown Improvement District. Metropolitan Dallas had an extensive network of streetcar lines from the late 19th century through 1930s. Before the McKinney Avenue Transit Authority (MATA) began operations in 1989,
1278-646: Is served by the Dallas Independent School District . Three schools: Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts , Dr. Wright L. Lassiter Jr. Early College High School at El Centro College , and the Pegasus School of Liberal Arts and Sciences are located downtown. The Pegasus Complex is also in downtown. The neighborhood schools for Downtown are outside of the loop. Almost all of Downtown (inside
1349-443: Is surrounded by a major highway loop composed of, from the north and clockwise, Spur 366 (Woodall Rodgers Freeway), unsigned Interstate 345 (connecting U.S. Highway 75 (Central Expressway) to the north and Interstate 45 to the south), Interstate 30, and Interstate 35E. The loop is the center of Dallas's hub-and-spoke highway system, which can be likened to a wagon wheel. U.S. Highway 67 is carried through downtown on Interstate 35E to
1420-463: Is the second-largest business district in the state of Texas. The area termed "Downtown" has traditionally been defined as bounded by the downtown freeway loop, bounded on the east by I-345 (although known and signed as the northern terminus of I-45 and the southern terminus of US 75 ( Central Expressway ), on the west by I-35E , on the south by I-30 , and on the north by Woodall Rodgers Freeway . The strong organic growth of Downtown Dallas since
1491-587: The Arts District of Downtown, Dallas will be the only city in the world that has four buildings within one contiguous block designed by four separate and distinguished Pritzker Architecture Prize winners. Downtown Dallas has also gained more recent national attention for the 2016 shooting of police officers and the 2019 courthouse shooting. In July 2024, a historic church in Downtown Dallas, First Baptist Dallas Church, caught on fire. There were no injuries during this fire. The area has been undergoing
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#17327797920351562-504: The DART light rail system and get off at CityPlace station and board the streetcar to Uptown. Effective May 6, 2002, all service on the line became free. The extension increased the line's length to 3.8 miles (6.1 km). The line was given the name "the M-Line" in the local transit system at this time. The City of Dallas and MATA worked together to further expand the streetcar system past
1633-692: The Dallas Arts District . It connects to the DART light rail system at Cityplace/Uptown on the northern end and St. Paul on the southern end. The "M-Line" name was officially adopted in 2002 following the route's expansion beyond McKinney Avenue, but locals sometimes refer to it using its previous "McKinney Avenue Trolley" name. To avoid confusion with the Dallas Streetcar , a separate modern streetcar operating in northern Oak Cliff , M-Line vehicles are typically referred to as "trolleys" or "cars", not "streetcars". The trolley
1704-649: The Trammell Crow Center . The KPMG Centre in Downtown Dallas has the Dallas offices of KPMG and Sidley Austin . Which Wich? has its headquarters in Downtown Dallas. Deloitte has its offices in the JPMorgan Chase Tower . Visitdallas , the 501(c)(6) contracted by the City of Dallas to increase tourism and attract conventions, is headquartered in downtown Dallas . Downtown Dallas
1775-673: The assassination of President John F. Kennedy . Both President Kennedy and Texas Governor John Connally (who survived) were shot as their motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza in what is now the West End Historic District . Part of the former Texas School Book Depository is now the Sixth Floor Museum , with exhibits about Kennedy and the assassination. Nearby is the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial . The building boom of
1846-564: The $ 200 million, 42-story Museum Tower residential skyscraper in the Downtown Dallas Arts District was completed in 2013. Importantly, the Trinity River Corridor is poised to undergo a significant transformation (the Trinity River Project ) into a giant urban park. The park is expected to include an equestrian center, lakes, trails, and three bridges designed by Santiago Calatrava . Funding over
1917-623: The 1970s and 1980s produced a distinctive contemporary profile for the downtown skyline influenced by nationally prominent architects. At the same time, the establishment of the West End Historic District in the 1980s preserved a very large group of late 19th-century brick warehouses that have been adapted for use as restaurants and shops. With the construction of the Dallas Center for the Performing Arts in
1988-400: The 20-story "One Victory Park" office tower (2009), and near Victory Park the new "Perot Museum of Nature and Science", a $ 185 million, 14-story, ultra-modern addition to Downtown Dallas that opened in late 2012. The Dallas Arts District, already one of the world's largest, recently completed the final stages of a massive 10-year construction project that resulted in a 2,300-seat opera house ,
2059-744: The Belo Building. 7-Eleven has its corporate headquarters in the One Arts Plaza building. Energy Future Holdings Corporation has its headquarters in the Energy Plaza complex. Greyhound Lines is located at 350 North St. Paul Street. The Dallas Morning News has its headquarters in Downtown. Neiman Marcus has its headquarters in One Neiman Square in Downtown. The Trammell Crow Company has its headquarters in
2130-608: The Cedars District, and jumping over Interstate 35E to the west to include the Design District and Lower Oak Lawn. In total, 15 districts now form "Downtown". Downtown Dallas is now viewed as an interconnected grouping of dense and urban center city districts, that while unique in their own right, also share strong urban linkages to each other and collectively participate in their role as Downtown Dallas. Downtown Dallas achieved notoriety on November 22, 1963, with
2201-574: The Convention Center corridor. Victory Park, named one of the nation's most successful brownfield reclamation projects, is home to the American Airlines Center , built in 2001, and several new high-rise hotels, residential towers, and office buildings, including the 33-story "W Dallas Victory Hotel and Residences" (2006), the 28-story "Cirque" residential tower (2007), the 29-story "The House" residential tower (2008), and
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2272-463: The Dallas riding public. Nevertheless, 636 ran in Dallas until 1947 when it was replaced by more modern equipment. MATA's Ed and John Landrum, Frank Schultz and Dean Smith designed and built 636's current 8-foot-long truck using parts from the extra Melbourne trucks purchased along with Car 369. MATA later added shock absorbers to smooth out the Birney's characteristic bouncy ride. 636 is the first of
2343-537: The Downtown CBD is the Convention Center corridor , which hosts the over 2 million-ft Dallas Convention Center . The Omni Dallas Hotel is a new, 23-story, convention-center hotel that opened in 2011. Dallas hopes these changes will bring more permanent residents into the downtown area; as of the 2010 Census the downtown population has grown to 5,291 from the 1,000 citizens who lived in downtown at
2414-905: The Fairmont Company of Fairmont, Minnesota , around the turn of the 20th century. Cars of this type were widely used by railways all over the world for track inspection. Volunteer Richard Fowler donated Miss Daisy to MATA in complete, but not operable condition. Used with a welder trailer and a rail grinder trailer, Miss Daisy enables MATA personnel to perform minor rail repairs. Built as a single-ended PCC (Presidents' Conference Committee) streetcar by St. Louis Car Company in 1945 for (Washington) DC Transit . Operated by DC Transit as car 1506 until abandonment of that system in February 1962. Bought by Fort Worth 's Marvin and Obediah Leonard for their rail shuttle line from their vast parking lot to their downtown department store's basement station via
2485-678: The Green Dragon to running order in 1989. 369 was built in 1925 by James Moore, Ltd. for the Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board in Melbourne , Australia . The W2-class car was in continuous service in Melbourne for six decades before being purchased by MATA in 1986. Matilda arrived in Portland, Oregon, by ship and was then trucked to Dallas. Acquired in running order, Matilda only required cosmetic modifications to give her
2556-612: The M-Line, a free trolley service that runs down St. Paul Street from Uptown and terminates at Ross Avenue. North from downtown, it travels to McKinney Avenue from St. Paul, runs through the LoMac neighborhood, and finally loops around the West Village along Blackburn and Cole Avenues. A spur adjacent to the West Village runs to Cityplace Station . Greyhound Lines operates a terminal at 205 South Lamar Street. DART operates
2627-543: The Mckinney Avenue Transit Authority for a few days in 1993 before going to Memphis. 1979 would be sold in 2021 to MATA(Dallas) along with Ex-Melbourne W2 1978(Original number is 353). This car is under restoration. One change the car will have is that it is single ended, unlike 122/Rosie which is double ended, due to it being damaged in a wreck. See No. 4614 above. 4614 has been refit and put in service, while 4613 still remains in storage. 332
2698-697: The Morning Star was stopped and it was moved off-site in order to make space for the 2015 expansion of service. MATA acquired this double-ended PCC in late 2009. It first operated in Dallas as #612, and was then sold to the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA), in Boston . Most recently, it was in the Lake Shore Electric Railway (museum) collection. After a thorough assessment of
2769-581: The Northern Texas Traction Company of Ft. Worth. 323 is the only known surviving example of the Stone and Webster "stretch" streetcar, in late 2022 car 323s roof collapsed causing massive amounts of damage to the already aged carbody. The car is no longer considered for restoration and slowly is being picked apart as spare parts for car 186. 1979 is a Gomaco built replica of a Brill car(Similar to 122/Rosie) built in 1993. 1979 visited
2840-542: The TTC in the early 1990s (as A15 Class), making them the equivalent of almost brand-new streetcars. Not wanting to see these last PCCs scrapped, John Landrum helped Tom Twigge, a Toronto Transit Commission employee, form a coalition of trolley museums to save the remaining cars from being scrapped and find new homes for them. MATA bought two cars, 4613 and 4614. 4614 was refit with a left side door and put in service in 2019. No. 4613 still awaits modification and restoration. 7169
2911-876: The West and East Transfer Centers as hubs for its public bus system. The Denton County Transportation Authority operates an express commuter bus route that serves two stops in Denton , one stop in Lewisville , and another that makes two stops, one in Denton and another in Carrollton . The Dallas Pedestrian Network is a system of grade-separated walkways covering 36 city blocks under Downtown Dallas. The system connects buildings, garages, and parks through tunnels and above-ground skybridges. The network contains an underground city of shops, restaurants, and offices during weekday business hours. The Dallas CBD Vertiport , located at
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2982-497: The Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.237 via cp1104 cp1104, Varnish XID 203150918 Upstream caches: cp1104 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 07:43:12 GMT Downtown Dallas Downtown Dallas is the central business district (CBD) of Dallas, Texas , United States, located in the geographic center of the city. It
3053-549: The barn. These problems have been solved and 122 is currently the oldest streetcar in daily service in North America. In July 2020, MATA unveiled an extensive restoration of Car 122 to preserve and restore its distinctive woodwork, stained glass, and metalwork. 186 was built by the St. Louis Car Co. for Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway in 1913. The car served for 43 years in Dallas before being retired in 1956, when
3124-519: The booming development occurring in the Downtown Dallas Arts District, which together help further the continuing growth and redevelopment of Downtown Dallas. The park is often called an "urban oasis" due to its unique location and features. AT&T is headquartered at the Whitacre Tower in Downtown Dallas; AT&T moved to Dallas from San Antonio in 2008. Mayor of Dallas Tom Leppert said in 2008 that he hoped that AT&T would stay in
3195-446: The car body. When all of his children and grandchildren had grown up, Mr. Carpenter decided it was time to donate the trolley to MATA. 754 was partially restored at EIKON International . On June 21, 2009, 754 was brought by truck to the MATA barn where it was fitted with trucks, AC traction motors, and other various operation components. This car is the first at MATA equipped with AC traction motors and computerized controls. After
3266-410: The car's condition and structure, the car itself was deemed to unfit for restoration in late May 2017. Years of service on the streets of Boston had left the car structurally unsound and MATA therefore made the hard decision of scrapping the body of the car. Most of the electrical components have been saved, as well as the trucks for use in future restorations of other PCC cars. After MATA bought car 122
3337-527: The car's lines, it retained a distinctive shape reminiscent of a Winnebago — hence the nickname. In the 2005-2006 timeframe, attempts were made to put Winnie in service, but it had a series of recurring air-conditioning, mechanical and electrical problems. The car was moved off-site after it was decided repairing Winnie was unfeasible given the need for expanding service. 183 and 189 were built for Dallas Railways in 1913 by St. Louis Car Company. They are typical Stone & Webster designed streetcars, sisters to
3408-648: The central city. Comerica is headquartered in the Comerica Bank Tower . TM Advertising has its headquarters in the same building. Tenet Healthcare is headquartered in the Fountain Place building in Downtown Dallas. The company announced in 2008 that it was moving from the northern suburban areas of Dallas to Fountain Place due to high gasoline prices and the revitalization of Downtown Dallas. Belo and A. H. Belo have their headquarters in
3479-599: The early 2000s and continuing into the present has now resulted in Downtown Dallas, Inc.'s expansion of the term "Downtown" to include the explosive growth occurring immediately north of the Woodall Rodgers Freeway in the Victory Park and Uptown/ Turtle Creek Districts, as well as past Central Expressway to the east in the Deep Ellum and Bryan Place Districts, past Interstate 30 to the south with
3550-582: The end of operations in January 1956. Shortly after system abandonment, Ben Carpenter (son of the president of Dallas Railway and Terminal Company from 1927 to 1935) moved 754 to his family's Hackberry Creek Ranch in Irving, Texas , and placed it on concrete blocks. 754 spent its retirement years there serving as a playhouse for the Carpenter children and grandchildren. The family built a miniature town around
3621-530: The end of the 20th century. The City of Dallas, along with several nonprofit organizations, constructed a $ 110 million urban deck park over Woodall Rodgers Freeway to create a physically seamless Uptown /Downtown District; the urban deck park opened in 2012. The 5.2-acre urban green space , named the Klyde Warren Park , further strengthens the existing synergy between the Uptown real estate market and
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#17327797920353692-461: The event by offering free samples and discounts. The rails are planned to be connected to the (newer) Dallas Streetcar line. Car 122 was built to a standard American design by the J. G. Brill Company of Philadelphia in 1909 for export to Porto , Portugal . Rosie is similar to early streetcars that once operated in Dallas. 122 was retired from service on the Porto streetcar system in 1978, and
3763-471: The first new-construction office building projects downtown in over 20 years broke ground in 2005— One Arts Plaza , a 24-story mixed-use office, retail, residential development in the Arts District, which is the new home of 7-Eleven 's world headquarters; and the vibrant, 17-story Hunt Consolidated office building, with its spectacular, state-of-the-art LED exterior lighting, which is the national headquarters for and fully occupied by Hunt Oil. Additionally,
3834-409: The last streetcar ran in Dallas until January 1956. Numerous maps of the old trolley routes are available online. During the 1980s, there was a movement to restore streetcar service in Dallas's Uptown neighborhood after some of the original rails were uncovered on McKinney Avenue. At 2:08 a.m. on January 14, 1986, 30 years exactly after the last scheduled service of Dallas streetcars, MATA signed
3905-757: The loop) is zoned to Ben Milam Elementary School, with a small section zoned to Ignacio Zaragoza Elementary School. All residents of Downtown (inside the loop) are zoned to Alex W. Spence Middle School and North Dallas High School . City Park Elementary School in Cedars served southern parts of Downtown until it closed in 2012. Other elementary schools that formerly served Downtown include Martin Luther King Jr., Sam Houston, and Esperanza "Hope" Medrano. Middle schools formerly serving sections include Billy Earl Dade and Thomas J. Rusk. James Madison High School formerly served parts of Downtown. Luna Academy,
3976-551: The mechanics of the car remained intact but the electronics and wooden body frame were damaged beyond repair. The parts were salvaged and used as spares on 122, on January 23, 1987 the replacement for 166 arrived that being MATA car 369 Matilda. In late 2014, GPS-based AVL system was installed in the cars, allowing for real-time location information. Other transit in the United States: Heritage streetcar Too Many Requests If you report this error to
4047-496: The new downtown extension. The line extended past Ross Ave., making a loop along Federal St. and Olive St. and then reconnecting to the line on McKinney Ave. The new line formally opened on June 5, 2015 followed by a public celebration event held on June 6, 2015. The event encouraged citizens to ride the free trolley and send pictures via social media for a chance to win one of several prize packages from local businesses. Two dozen other local uptown and downtown businesses participated in
4118-404: The operating 186. In 1991, John Landrum discovered the two cars built into a home in Lewisville , a few miles north of Dallas. Since the building was about to be demolished, on January 10, 1994, MATA volunteers went to Lewisville and tore the warehouse down to expose and recover the cars. Car 183 was turned into a parts car but is still visible at MATA storage, car 189 (Green Goddess) was slated for
4189-417: The original cars to be equipped with air-conditioning. A single unit was installed in 2007 as a test, with three more units later installed on the roof to provide full cooling. After a collision with a cement truck in mid-2013, 636 was out of service for several months while one end of the car was completely reconstructed. At the same time it received a general overhaul that included new wheels, new roof, and
4260-678: The south and Interstate 30 to the east, and U.S. Highway 175 and the Dallas North Tollway join with other major highways within a mile of downtown. Downtown is the center of the Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) light-rail system. The Blue and Red light-rail lines run through, from south to north, Convention Center , Union , West End , Akard , St Paul , and Pearl stations. The Trinity Railway Express commuter train, which connects Downtown Fort Worth with Downtown Dallas, terminates at Union Station. Union Station also has Amtrak service, with trains connecting to Chicago and Los Angeles . The McKinney Avenue Transit Authority operates
4331-438: The south end of the Convention Center, is claimed to be the world's largest elevated heliport/vertiport . The facility has two 60 x 60 ft. (18 x 18 m) concrete helipads and 169,000 square feet (15,700 m ) of flight deck, and is capable of handling tiltrotor aircraft such as the Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey . D Magazine , Dallas Morning News , WFAA , and KDFW are headquartered in Downtown. Dallas City Hall
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#17327797920354402-527: The southern terminus further into downtown. The plan was for a line to split off from the current line at McKinney and Olive Streets and travel down Olive to the light rail transit mall downtown near Pearl Station. Part of the money needed for the expansion was put to voters in the form of a bond. On November 7, 2006, the voters of Dallas approved Proposition One, which asked voters if they would like to approve "The Issuance of $ 390,420,000 general obligation bonds for street and transportation improvements." The bond
4473-455: The streetcar system was abandoned. 186 was stripped of its running gear and electrical wiring and sold to a private individual who used it for a hay barn in far North Dallas. Ed Landrum, one of MATA's founders, acquired the car in 1979 and cosmetically restored it. The Green Dragon was originally displayed in the Texas Sports Hall of Fame in Grand Prairie, Texas . When the museum closed, Landrum removed 186 and donated it to MATA, which restored
4544-404: The streetcars were rerouted, sometimes with a shoofly . For several months the north loop was inaccessible due to utility work at Allen and McKinney. The first expansion of the system opened in 2002. Both Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) and MATA desired the streetcar to meet up with DART's CityPlace subway station a few blocks from the route. The first new track for the CityPlace extension
4615-430: The strip. Downtown's growth can partially be attributed to Dallas Area Rapid Transit 's four light rail lines and one commuter line Trinity Railway Express that run through Downtown and an aggressive stance taken by the city to drive development at all costs. The city has invested $ 160 million of public funds in Downtown Dallas for residential development that attracted $ 650 million of private investment. Two of
4686-416: The years, however, has been a constant problem, though serious work on the project now appears imminent, with the first two bridges having received significant private backing. Downtown Dallas has undergone a series of important changes that city officials believe will drastically improve the city's core. These changes are located in four downtown areas: Victory Park, the Arts District, the Trinity River, and
4757-481: Was approved 87.4% to 12.6%. Engineering for the project was to follow, with construction planned for 2010. On Thursday, July 8, 2010, it was announced that the federal government would grant an additional $ 5 million for the M-Line trolley project, specifically to help complete the downtown loop for the McKinney Avenue trolley line, and the line will be able to run faster, more modern cars and penetrate deeper into downtown . On May 4, 2015 MATA started running trolleys on
4828-463: Was brought to the U.S. in the early 1980s by Gales Creek Enterprises (GCE), of Oregon, purchased by Portland businessmen Bill and Sam Naito for possible use on a then-proposed heritage streetcar line in Portland. GCE refurbished it at the Oregon Electric Railway Museum for use, on loan, in the first San Francisco Historic Trolley Festival , in summer 1983, and car 122 operated intermittently in service on San Francisco's Market Street in that year; it
4899-399: Was laid on Cole Avenue south of Blackburn in June 2001. In the summer of 2002 while the tracks were being laid, construction crews unearthed history as old center-of-the-street rail from Dallas Railway and Terminal tracks were discovered. On May 6, 2002, the extension was opened for the public (after a ceremonial opening on April 13, 2002, without service starting). It is now possible to ride
4970-471: Was painted yellow-and-cream, the colors of its sponsor in the Trolley Festival, Eastman Kodak . In fall 1984, No. 122 was sold to MATA, and it arrived in Dallas around the beginning of 1985. Having previously been refurbished for use in San Francisco, 122 only needed minor work to bring it into service on MATA's opening day. However, in the late 1990s car 122 received a more extensive restoration. Shortly afterward, 122 developed motor problems which kept it in
5041-415: Was replaced. By the late 1990s, it became apparent that the 110-year-old brick pavement on McKinney Avenue could no longer support modern-day car, truck and bus traffic. Repairs began in July 1999 and were completed in December 2000. The street was repaved with concrete brick and most of the old brick was saved for sidewalks and other amenities. Work was done on one lane of the street at a time. Many times
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