User Contributed Dictionary
Adjective
- Of, pertaining to, involving or joining two or more urban centres
Extensive Definition
- In Australia, "interurban" is a general term for intercity rail.
North America
The first interurbans were constructed in the 1880s, following the successful development of the electric traction by Frank Sprague. By 1900 just over of track had been laid and mileage peaked in 1916 with over 15,500 miles. From approximately the end of the First World War the industry was in decline, accelerated by the growth of the private automobile. The Great Depression of the 1930s drove most into closure and only a couple survived beyond the 1960s.To minimize cost of construction, an interurban
typically ran along public right-of-way,
either next to a public highway in rural areas, or within city
streets in urban areas. It was somewhat less common for interurbans
to have lengthy stretches of private right-of-way. Occasionally
interurbans were operated along mainline steam railroads. Fares
were cheaper than steam railroads and service was more frequent but
typically slower. Due to the characteristics of the electric
motor, interurbans could operate on steeper grades,
going where steam
engines could not.
With the demise of the interurban, many routes
were taken over by intercity bus
services. Most local intercity services have since been
discontinued; buses now typically run express between cities. A few
interurbans, built to rather high standards, have survived, as have
several that still operate only freight service, but the vast
majority are long abandoned.
Definition of "Interurban"
Real-world lines fit on a continuum between
wholly urban street
railways and full-fledged railroads. George W. Hilton and John
F. Due, in The Electric Interurban Railways in America, define an
interurban as a system which shares most or all of four
characteristics:
- Electric power
- Passenger service as primary emphasis
- Heavier, faster equipment than urban streetcars
- Operated on street trackage in cities but on roadside tracks or private rights-of-way in rural areas
The definition of "interurban" is necessarily
blurry. Some streetcar systems evolved into partly interurban
systems with extensions or acquisitions, while other interurban
lines became, effectively, light rail
systems with no street running whatsoever, or became primarily
freight-hauling railroads with a progressive loss of passenger
service.
Another distinction is made between "interurban"
and "suburban". A suburban system is oriented toward a particular
city center in a single urban area, serving primarily commuters who
live in the suburbs of a city. An interurban is more like a regular
railroad local train service, moving people from one city center to
another with no single center. However, unlike a local train, the
interurban serves a smaller region and has more frequent service,
and is oriented to passenger rather than freight service, although
some small-load freight service was common, especially in the days
before trucks (lorries).
Interurban technology
In general, interurbans operated with technology somewhere between that of a streetcar line and a full-scale railroad. The vast majority of interurbans were electrified, utilizing simply strung overhead wire, or, on heavily trafficked high speed lines, the more complicated wiring system known as catenary. In either case, power was transferred from the wire to the locomotive (in the case of an interurban freight line) or interurban passenger car by way of a trolley pole or pantograph. A few systems, usually in heavily populated urban areas, transferred electricity to the trains by way of a third rail running parallel to, and outside of, the rails holding and guiding the train. Power was transferred to the train using a "shoe" attached to the locomotive or car. Engineers working for Michigan United Railways devised a shoe with steel cutters which could remove ice from the tracks.Electrification
Most interurban railways in North America were electrified using low-voltage direct current systems popular with street railways. This enabled interurbans to use urban street railway systems with ease. However, these systems had difficulty in maintaining voltage over long distances. Thus, interurbans developed the practice of generating power at higher voltages and stepping down power to the 600 volts needed to power the cars at substations spaced out along the line. By 1905, 600 volts had become the industry-wide standard.The interurbans also had to develop their own
powerhouses for electricity as there were few commercial power
companies in existence at the time. Some of these power houses
produced high-voltage AC power that would be stepped-down and
converted to DC at the substations. Because of this choice, many
interurban railway companies became electric companies.
Most power was distributed to the cars using
overhead trolley
wires or pantographs.
Some companies preferred outside third rail.
Third rail was cheaper to maintain and improved conductivity, but
it was more expensive to construct as it did not mitigate the
construction of transmission lines and poles. Third rail was also
more dangerous to trespassers and animals. Also, in the winter,
third rails were difficult to keep clear of ice.
In 1904, a single-phase alternating
current system became available and was distributed by
Westinghouse and General
Electric. But the system soon proved expensive to maintain and
operate, and it increased wear and tear on equipment and track. It
was a short-lived experiment and none were installed after
1910.
Another experiment in electrification came in
1907 with high-voltage DC (1200 volts). This system was allowed for
easy conversion from other DC systems and was cheaper to maintain.
But it was developed so late that few railways adopted it.
Gauge
Most interurbans were built to standard
gauge, but there were a fair number of exceptions. Interurbans
often used the tracks of existing street railways through city
streets, and when those street railways were not built to standard
gauge, the interurbans had to use non-standard gauges as well or
face the expense of building their own trackage through urban
areas. Many municipalities had ordained the use of non-standard
gauges so that railroad freight cars could never be switched on the
public streets.
Exceptions
- See [[List of rail gauges#Broad gauge railways, by gauge and country|5 ft 4 in, 5 ft 2in and 5 ft 2in (1638 mm, 1588 mm & 1581 mm)]]
Passenger service
Freight service
Those interurbans carrying freight were typically the last to disappear. The Insull lines focus on freight allowed freight revenues to subsidize money losing passenger operations. Most of the smaller interurbans only carried LCL freight in box motors, while the bigger interurbans carried car load freight. The North Shore was an early adopter of TOFC trains, and the South Shore operated three 800-class "Little Joe" electric locomotives. Not only were these locomotives large for an interurban, they were some of the most powerful and large locomotives ever made for any railroad. Typical interurban freight operations, when not hauled in LCL fashion, were hauled behind box-cab or steeple-cab motors, with a footprint dimension similar to a GE 80-tonner diesel. Some interurbans had an auxiliary battery power system on their locomotives for operation on un-wired spurs.North America
United States
In the late 1890s, electrified systems called
streetcars, which had
been developed by Frank
Sprague, expanded rapidly. By 1900, just over of track had been
laid, and by 1916, at their peak, over were in service. Most of the
interurban track that had been laid was located in Ohio and Indiana; both
states had of track. In Michigan and
Illinois
there was another of track which was interconnected. In Texas and in California,
thousands of miles of additional track was also laid down by
different companies. The first Interurban in Texas was the Denison
and Sherman
Railway, completed in 1901. In central Virginia,
interurban lines connected City
Point and Hopewell
with Petersburg,
and Petersburg with Richmond. Another connected Richmond
with Ashland.
In the early 1900s,
interurban transportation was very popular in both rural areas and
cities. Although slower in speed than steam driven passenger
trains, the interurban system made up for speed by increased
frequency of service. After 1910, the popularity of the Ford Model
T automobile
began to diminish the interurban passenger load, and during the
1920s, many interurban systems were declared bankrupt. Many
were also bought out in the
Great American Streetcar Scandal and deliberately destroyed. As
a result of this shift in transportation methods, the small and
unprofitable lines were discontinued. By the 1930s, most of the
interurbans had disappear, although some of their rail lines were
taken over for the use of freight drawn by steam engines. Most were
replaced with buses. By the 1960s, very few lines remained; the
Pacific
Electric Railway in California was
abandoned in 1961, and the
Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad near Chicago
in 1963.
Remaining lines
Few historic interurban lines are still operated in their original form, although a number of more recently-constructed transit lines could be considered interurbans by Hilton and Due's standards above.- The South Shore Electric Line running from Millennium Station in Chicago to South Bend, Indiana is the successor of the passenger operations of the Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad, part of Samuel Insull's once-great interurban empire. The line now serves commuters to Chicago from the suburbs of Northwest Indiana. It still includes a street running section in Michigan City, Indiana, but has evolved into many characteristics of a commuter rail operation, including sharing the trackage of the Metra Electric Line (formerly the Illinois Central Railroad) into downtown Chicago.
- The Chicago Transit Authority's Yellow Line, otherwise known as the Skokie Swift, is the southernmost five miles (8 km) of the Chicago North Shore & Milwaukee's 1924 high speed Skokie Valley Route. The North Shore was also part of Samuel Insull's interurban empire.
- The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority's SEPTA Route 100 (also known as the Norristown High Speed Line) operates over the old Philadelphia and Western Railroad's Norristown, Pennsylvania line. The line has full grade separation, third rail electrification and high platforms, characteristic of rapid transit systems but uses smaller cars with on-board fare collection, like light rail systems.
- In Los Angeles, the LACMTA Blue Line uses much trackage that was the Pacific Electric's route between Los Angeles and Long Beach. There is street trackage at both the Long Beach and Los Angeles ends of the line, and a short subway section at the Los Angeles terminus.
Other lines that have some characteristics of an
interurban include:
- SEPTA Routes 101 and 102 Media and Sharon Hill lines, operating as light rail service mostly on dedicated rights of way but with some street trackage.
- The Green Line "D" Branch in Boston, a streetcar line on a grade-separated right-of-way formerly belonging to the Boston and Albany Railroad, a steam railroad
- The Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line in Boston, a streetcar line on a right-of-way formerly belonging to the Dorchester and Milton Branch Railroad, a steam railroad
- The IRT Dyre Avenue Line in New York City, a rapid transit line on a section of the former New York, Westchester and Boston Railway, an interurban.
- The Iowa Traction Railroad (former Mason City and Clear Lake Railway) still operates electric freight service.
- Several former interurbans, such as the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Railway and Central California Traction Company now operate their trackage as diesel locomotive powered freight lines. The Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad also cotinues to operate freight service along the passenger South Shore Line.
Other portions of interurbans remain in service
as parts of regular freight-hauling railroads; for instance,
portions of the
Sacramento Northern Railway were operated by the Union
Pacific Railroad. The longest surviving portion of the
Sacramento Northern is now owned by the Sierra Northern Railroad.
Most of the Tidewater
Southern Railway is still operated by the Union Pacific.
Another California interurban company, the
Central California Traction Company, still operates diesel
freight service on its one-time electric line between Stockton
and Lodi.
Canada
In 1887 the
St. Catharines and Niagara Central Railway, the first
interurban line in the world, started operations. It ran between
St.
Catharines and Thorold,
Ontario,
Canada. Not
only was this the first interurban line in the world, but it was
also one of the first commercially successful implementations of
electric streetcars in the world.
In Southern Ontario, intercity
streetcar lines were called radial railways, because their routes
generally radiated from a central city. The longest routes from
Toronto
included one running to Lake Simcoe
and another to Guelph. A
portion of one of these lines is preserved and plays host to a
working museum of streetcars and other transit vehicles at the
Halton County Radial Railway in Rockwood.
A notable feature of Toronto's radial railways was that because the
city streetcar tracks of the Toronto
Railway Company (later taken over by the Toronto
Transportation Commission) were built to a wider gauge (which
is still used to this day), radial cars from the outlying areas
could not pass the city limits, requiring passengers to change
trains.
Some of the closer sections of Toronto's radial
railways were assimilated into the city's streetcar
network, and with the city's expansion, some communities once
linked by radial railway now have relatively central stations on
the Toronto
subway. On a regional level, GO Transit's
commuter railway network is designed on a similar radial principle,
though it uses much heavier-capacity mainline trains.
There were also significant radial systems
operating from Hamilton,
St.
Catharines, Windsor,
and throughout the Grand
River Valley, the last of which may see a revival should
Grand
River Transit obtain funding to build a light railway
between Waterloo,
Kitchener,
and eventually Cambridge,
running partially on the tracks of the former Grand
River Railway. Hamilton and the
Niagara Region are also investigating the possibility of
reviving former interurban railway routes as modern light
rail.
In British
Columbia, five interurban lines were operated by the
British Columbia Electric Railway Company. The private
right-of-way of the Central Park line, between Commercial Drive in
Vancouver
and New
Westminster, is now used by the SkyTrain's
Expo
Line. The Fraser
Valley Line became the British Columbia Hydro Railway when BC
Electric was nationalized in the 1960s; it was later privatized and
is now the
Southern Railway of British Columbia, a local shortline freight
railway. The BCER also operated interuban trains between Vancouver and
Marpole,
and between Marpole, Steveston and
New
Westminster on the
Vancouver and Lulu Island Railway, which it leased from
Canadian
Pacific. This railway is also known as Arbutus Corridor route.
Likewise, the Millennium
Line of the SkyTrain connects the same communities as the
former Burnaby
Lake Line; however, the new SkyTrain line does not follow the
original right-of-way, which is now the route of Highway 1 through
Burnaby. The fifth BCER interurban connected Victoria
and Patricia Bay
on the Saanich
Peninsula. Its right-of-way is commemorated by Interurban Road
in Saanich.
In Quebec, the
Montreal and Southern Counties Railway operated electric
interurban lines from central Montreal across
the St.
Lawrence Seaway to Longueuil and
Granby from
1909 to 1956.
Mexico
In the first decade of the 20th century, Canadian
investors purchased the Mexico City
tram operator Compañía de
Tranvías de México, and attempted to create an interurban
radial-railway system on the Canadian model, beginning work on
lines that were intended to reach Toluca and Puebla. Typical US
style interurban electric cars built by the St.
Louis Car Company were imported for the service. Expenses due
to Mexico's difficult terrain and political instability that
culminated in the Mexican
Revolution combined to end this project although lines were
completed as far as La Venta and Tulyehualco and
a popular suburban line was built to San Angel and Coyoacán. A
portion of the ex-Puebla line operates today as the Xochimilco
Light Rail system. Another Mexican system that would have been
considered of an interurban type was the Playa Miramar high-speed
line in Tampico.
The Mexican state of Yucatan had
approximately 1,500 kilometers of interurban tramway network,
mostly narrow
gauge and either animal powered (mule or horsecars) or gasoline
powered.
Europe
In Europe, lines that fit the interurban
definition were rare historically. A whole large interurban system
in continuous service exists however since 1894 at Upper
Silesia in Poland connecting
cities and towns of this densily populated region (See Silesian
Interurbans for more information). More common were either
wholly urban, street-running tram systems or light rail
systems operating wholly on dedicated rights of way. See tram-train for
information about modern European systems running on the streets in
cities but on railway lines outside them.
The Netherlands
Holland used to have a "tram-system" that came very close to the American style interurban. The standard gauge NZH trams in the area between The Hague, Leiden and Haarlem were fairly big electric trams running on 1200 volt with in-street running in towns and quite a lot of private right-of-way outside towns. Especially the "Budapester" trams (see picture) resemble American interurban cars. A typical tram was made up by coupling a motorised unit (A400 or A500 series) with one or two trailors (B400/B500). In common with American practice the NZH also had local streetcar lines in The Hague, Leiden and Haarlem sharing some of the track with the interurban routes. Power supply was entirely by overhead wire. Although there was a connection between tram and train tracks in Leiden it was not possible to convey railway cars on NZH track due to differing track and wheel geometry, curve radius and loading gauge.Belgium
The Belgian Coast Tram, which has been in service since 1885, is a notable example of interurban tramway which survives to this day. With 70 stations along its 68-kilometre line, connecting the cities and towns along the enitre Belgian (West Flanders) coastline, it is the longest tram line in the world.Germany
In Germany, Interurbans that fit the whole definition were uncommon. However, in many instances the definition is almost met.One of these cases are the many early sondary
(connecting) railway lines that were built in the onset of the 20th
century. Many of them were street-running in urban and suburban
areas while using a dedicated right of way in less populated areas.
Those lines were usually operated with mainline stock, however very
few were electrified. Most of them have disappeared or were moved
onto a full dedicated right of way due to increasing street traffic
and safety concerns. One of the few such railway lines still in
service is the steam operated narrow-gauge Molli train between
Bad
Doberan and Kühlungsborn
West on the shore of the Baltic Sea in
the north-eastern state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
which is street-running inside Bad Doberan and has its own right of
way on the rest of the line.
Another not uncommon case are interurban
tramways. Germany has numerous areas where several larger cities
are clustered together, and there were always places not served by
mainline railway lines. Often urban tramways companies jumped at
the opportunity and built over-land tramway lines, sometimes
linking two existing tramway networks together. Those lines were
run with standard tramway cars.
After World War
II these Interurban tramways were modernised and now dubbed
Stadtbahn. All of
them are street-running in city areas and use a dedicated right of
way between cities, and all of them are electrified. Rolling stock
used is either standard tramway cars or special heavier cars which
still qualify for tramway use in street-running lines as regulated
in BOStrab.
Generally, the stadtbahn systems fit the definition of an
interurban once their network leaves city boundaries.
One particularily large effort was the Stadtbahn
Rhein-Ruhr which was meant to grow to a length of 300 km (180
miles), spanning over 10 cities of the Ruhrgebiet
industial area, building upon already existing interurban and urban
tramway lines. Although those plans were later abolished due to
exploding costs, 17 stadtbahn lines between Krefeld in the west
and Dortmund in the
east were finished and today one can travel from Krefeld to
Bochum
without using a single mainline train. The only link missing is
between Bochum and Dortmund.
Asia
Japan
Influence of US
In Japan, no clear distinction of the interurban from the ordinal heavy rail has not been settled, but most of the major private railway companies, which now play important role in public transportation, had been influenced greatly by the systems of U.S. interurbans, such as motors and controllers of General Electric, Westinghouse Electric, air brakes of Westinghouse Air Brake Company, trucks of J. G. Brill and Company and Baldwin Locomotive Works, just to name some.Pioneers
The first interurban in Japan was the Hanshin Electric Railway's main line which opened in 1905 between Osaka and Kobe. In the Greater Tokyo area in the same year, the present Keihin Electric Express Railway (Keikyū) extended its main line to the station of Kanagawa in Yokohama, to connect Tokyo. The followers of this earlier period were Keihan Electric Railway's main line between Kyoto and Osaka in 1910, Nagoya Electric Railway (present Nagoya Railroad) in Nagoya to surrounding towns such as Inuyama (present Inuyama Line) and Tsushima (Tsushima Line). The latter had operated throuh to the center of Nagoya via streetcar line, though the former had planned so in Osaka but the administrating authority refused.Second generation
The second boom of Japanese interurban were in 1920s to 1930s, unlike the counterparts in the US that declined in this period. The difference of the countries is the motorization, in Japan until 1960s private automobile was not common. The operators of this generations built their exclusive tracks with heavier rail (e.g. 100 lb. per feet), less curves and rarely laid tracks on roads.In Kansai region mostly from Osaka
-
Kobe Line of Hankyū Electric Railway (present Hankyu
Corporation)
- competing Hanshin's Main Line in the same region
- Kobe - Himeji Electric Railway
- western half of the main line of present Sanyo Electric Railway connecting Akashi and Himeji
- Shin-Keihan Railway
- concurrent to Keihan, later transferred to Hankyū
- Hanwa Electric Railway
- later merged to the governmental network under wartime condition, presently Hanwa Line
- Osaka Electric Tramway's main
line (present Kintetsu)
- for Nara
- Nara Electric Railway's line
(presently Kintetsu)
- Kyoto and Nara
- Sangū Kyūkō Electric Railway
- Together with Osaka Electric Tramway line, from Osaka to Ise, exceeding 100km in distance
- Tōbu
Railway'
Nikkō Line
- preceding main line Isesaki Line applied sterm traction, but a long branch to Nikkō was built electrified, more than 100km from terminus Asakusa in Tokyo on the main line.
- Odawara Express Railway's
main line (present Odakyu)
- to Odawaara
- Keisei
Electric Railway's main
line
- to Narita
- Aichi Electric Railway's main line (eastern half of present
Nagoya
Railroad's
Nagoya Main Line)
- Nagoya to Toyohashi
- Kyūshū Railway (2nd) (present Tenjin-Ōmuta Line of Nishi-Nippon Railway)
- Fukuoka to Ōmuta
Development
During the Japanese post-war economic miracle (1955-1975), rapid urbanizations increased the traffic and required the capacity expansion. Descendants of interurbans also extend the length of trains. presently, especially in and around Tokyo, companies such as Keikyū, Tōbu, Odakyū operate trains of 200 m length.References
- The Electric Interurban Railways in America
- The Interurban Era
- A Trolley Car Treasury: A Century of American Streetcars—Horsecars, Cable Cars, Interurbans, and Trolleys
See also
- List of interurbans
- :Category:Interurbans
- Railway electrification
- Box motor - an interurban car for freight transport
- Steeplecab - a style of electric locomotive popular on interurbans for freight service
- Boxcab - another style of electric locomotive
External links
- Interurbans: The technology of economical local transport in the United States
- Interurban Electric Trolley Cars by Robert G. Koch
- [http://206.103.49.193/index.html Dave's Electric Railroads], a collection of electric railroad, interurban, and streetcar photography from many eras
- Principle (sic) Interurban Car builders of the U.S
- Roster of Preserved North American Electric Railway Cars
- The Last Interurbans
- Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "Electric Interurban Railways" (accessed March 31, 2007)
- South Shore Line Photos "The last interurban"
interurban in German: Überlandstraßenbahn
interurban in Dutch: Interurban
interurban in Japanese: インターアーバン
interurban in Polish: Interurban
interurban in Russian: Междугородный и
пригородный трамвай
interurban in Swedish:
Interurbanspårväg
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Amtrak,
baggage train, burghal,
cable railroad, choo-choo, citified, city, civic, cog railroad, cog railway,
downtown, el, electric, electric train,
elevated, express, express train, flier, freight, freight train, freighter, funicular, goods train,
lightning express, limited, local, metro, metropolitan, midtown, milk train, monorail, municipal, oppidan, parliamentary,
parliamentary train, passenger train, rack-and-pinion railroad,
railroad train, rattler,
rolling stock, shuttle,
shuttle train, special,
streamliner,
suburban, subway, town, train, tube, underground, uptown, urban, village, way train