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The Hiawatha Line is a light rail corridor in Minneapolis, Minnesota that extends to the southern suburb of Bloomington. Ground was broken for the line on January 17, 2001, and regular service began on June 26, 2004 with two days of free rides. Prior to opening, the line was tested for months and simulated regular service in the final few weeks. A second phase of the project is scheduled to open on December 4. At that time the line will link three primary destinations on a 12 mile (19 kilometer) route: downtown Minneapolis, Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, and the Mall of AmericaThe Mall of America (also MOA or MoA is a shopping mall located in the Twin Cities suburb of Bloomington, Minnesota. The mall became the largest shopping mall in the United States when it opened in 1992. However, the mall is not and has never been the lar. It is operated by the Metro TransitThere are also other systems named named Metro Transit''. Metro Transit is the largest operator of bus service in the seven-county region surrounding Minneapolis and St. Paul area in Minnesota with over 900 buses on about 130 routes, and the Hiawatha Line division of the Metropolitan CouncilThe Metropolitan Council is a governmental organization in Minnesota made up of representatives of local governmental units in and around the seven county metro area (see Minneapolis-St. The council manages public transportation provided by the subsidiary, which is also the largest operator of busThis article is about the form of transport. See computer bus or electrical bus for the use of the term in computing and electronics respectively, or places like Bus, Pas-de-Calais and Bus-Saint-Remy. The Bus, established by Mayor Frank Fasi, is Honolulu'es in the area.
The Minneapolis-St. PaulThe Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul and the surrounding area is the most highly-populated area in Minnesota and the 15th-largest metropolitan area in the United States as of the 2000 census. Minneapolis is the largest city in the state, and nearby area once had an extensive network of streetcars (operated for many years by Twin City Rapid TransitThe Twin City Rapid Transit Company TCRT , also known as Twin City Lines TCL , was a business that primarily operated streetcars, and buses in the area of Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, but also tested out other types of transportation including taxicab, a precursor of Metro Transit), but the tracks were removed and services were eliminated in the 1950s. The line's opening date is 50 years and one week from when the last regular-service streetcars ran in the city.
Passengers who ride the rail system are charged the same fare as they would pay for the local Metro Transit bus system, and they are able to use their bus transfer cards to switch between the two different modes of transportation without making another payment. A new payment system using smart cards (known as Go-To Card s) was initially expected to be introduced along with the rail line, but software bugs have delayed introduction.
Basic service will see one train operating every 10 minutes, though rush hour should see one train every 7½ minutes, and late-night operation will only be once every half hour. Vehicles have a capacity of 66 seated passengers plus 120 standee s. Two vehicles may be linked together to double capacity in busier periods. If the need ever arises for three-vehicle trains, some stations are already designed with that capacity, and others were built to be easily expandible to handle the longer trainsets. Predicted daily ridership is 19,300 for 2005 and 24,600 for 2020.
The line is named for Hiawatha Avenue, also known as Minnesota State Highway 55, which runs parallel to the train tracks for much of its distance. To integrate the train route with the rest of the area bus system, it was also given the name Route 55. Shuttle buses connect the stations south of Fort Snelling as Route 155 until the rest of the line is completed later in the year.
Each of the 17 stations along the route are designed to have a unique architecture reflecting the neighborhood they stand in. This is not an entirely new idea for the region, as many of the higher-traffic bus stops around the city have distinct designs. Due to the unique makeup of Minneapolis's population, ticket-dispensing machines will present instructions in four languages: English, Spanish, Somali, and Hmong. The 17 stations are listed below. Travel time is two to three minutes between each stop.
There are two stretches where tunnels are used. A short tunnel parallel to Hiawatha Avenue travels under Minnehaha Parkway just north of the Minnehaha Park station. At the airport, twin tunnels (one each for the northbound and southbound trains) go underground to reach the Lindbergh Terminal station, the only stop that is totally underground. Trains return to the surface as they near Humphrey Terminal. Some of the sections under the airport required the use of a tunnel boring machine.