State Awarded Grant for Transit-Oriented Development in West Hartford and Other ‘Hartford Line’ Towns
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Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and members of Connecticut’s Congressional delegation announced Tuesday that state has been awarded a grant to advance transit-oriented development in West Hartford as well as Enfield, Newington, North Haven, Windsor and Windsor Locks.
Submitted by the Office of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy
Governor Dannel P. Malloy and the members of Connecticut’s Congressional delegation announced Sept. 15 that the State of Connecticut has been awarded a $700,000 grant from the Federal Transit Administration to conduct a study of transit-oriented development (TOD) opportunities in the New Haven-Hartford-Springfield rail corridor, also known as the Hartford Line. The federal funding will be matched by $200,000 in state funds.
“We are working to transform how we travel, to boost efficiency, grow our economy, and build a Connecticut for the future. The economic opportunities across the Hartford Line corridor – from New Haven, through Hartford, and extending to our northern border – are exceptional. This grant will help us identify the projects that will give the biggest bang for our buck,” Governor Malloy said. “Investments in transit are investments in growing our economy and expanding jobs. The significant interest in new development around our CTfastrak bus stations is what we’re hoping to – and going to – replicate around the Hartford Line, because the same potential exists to connect people, their employers, and their communities.”
“Investment in transit is about more than transportation – it is about growing jobs and strengthening our local economy,” the members of Connecticut’s Congressional delegation said in a joint statement. “The Hartford Line will unlock new economic development possibilities up and down the corridor, connecting commuters to newly accessible employers, and creating prime, new sites for transit-oriented housing and business development. This grant provides important planning funds to ensure Connecticut is making the most of this powerful opportunity, and we look forward to continuing to support the Hartford Line and the growth that it brings.”
Connecticut was selected on a competitive basis through the United States Department of Transportation’s Transit-Oriented Development Pilot Planning Program. The Connecticut Department of Transportation (CTDOT) will receive funding to advance TOD at four new stations – in North Haven, Newington, West Hartford and Enfield – as well as the two stations that will be relocated in Windsor and Windsor Locks. This grant will guide CTDOT and its partners toward the implementation of a corridor strategy for TOD to increase ridership, enhance affordable housing opportunities, create mixed-use development to activate station areas, and link people to jobs through multimodal transportation connections along the entire corridor.
“As a result of the expanded passenger rail service provided by the new rail service, we anticipate TOD projects in many towns along the 62-mile rail corridor,” CTDOT Commissioner James P. Redeker said.
The new Hartford Line will provide more frequent, convenient and faster passenger rail service between New Haven, Hartford and Springfield by increasing the number of round trip trains from six daily Amtrak intercity and regional trains to a total of 17 round trip trains a day to Hartford, and 12 trains per day to Springfield (i.e. every 30 minutes during peak rush hours and every 60 minutes on off‐peak times).