News & Reviews News Wire Dallas Area Rapid Transit awards contracts to build Cotton Belt commuter line

Dallas Area Rapid Transit awards contracts to build Cotton Belt commuter line

By Angela Cotey | December 26, 2018

| Last updated on October 1, 2021

26-mile line will extend from DFW Airport to Plano

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Cotton_Belt_Map
The route of the 26-mile Cotton Belt commuter rail project in the Dallas area. (Archer Western Herzog)

DALLAS — Dallas Area Rapid Transit has awarded $872 million in contracts to design and build its 26-mile Cotton Belt commuter rail line, the Dallas Morning News reports.

The contract was awarded to a joint venture of Archer Western Construction, based in Irving, Texas., and Herzog Contracting, based in Fort Worth. Construction is scheduled to begin in 2019 with service projected to start in 2022. The firms’ website notes the line will extend from DFW International Airport to Plano, with up to 11 stations. It will connect to three existing DART light rail lines, as well as the DFW Skylink people mover and the Tex Rail regional rail line.

The Morning News reports that the contract figure includes $815 million for construction and another $49.2 million for a company to represent DART’s interests during the project. The construction contract is contingent on receiving a federal loan.

The DART board may still elect to spend an additional $90 to $120 million to double-track the route, the newspaper reported.

One thought on “Dallas Area Rapid Transit awards contracts to build Cotton Belt commuter line

  1. This is the project that should have been done by the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County (METRO) for the ex-MKT line between Downtown Houston and Katy.
    Not only did the line hold a potential for commuter rail. It could have provided Amtrak’s “Sunset Limited” a direct route to San Antonio and beyond. About 12 miles would have been trimmed from the train’s route that neanders several miles south and then west through southwest Houston, Sugar Land and Richmond. On the direct Katy line, the train could then rejoin its old route in Brookshire.
    Instead, lacking in foresight and wisdom, TexDOT removed the former MKT rail line to widen the parallel Katy Freeway (I-10) over the right-of-way.

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