Nathan
@kalinsky.bsky.social
580 followers 400 following 130 posts
he/him | Urban Studies student in Baltimore | Mostly transit, urbanism, and Baltimore stuff | Opinions mine, likes/reposts/follows ≠ endorsement.
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kalinsky.bsky.social
Still just through the website, the steam version is apparently going to cost $40 instead of $30 as well
kalinsky.bsky.social
The northeast is the single greatest region in the world, I left home at 6:45 AM and 5 hours later I am in Flushing Queens after taking a high speed train and an express subway line
kalinsky.bsky.social
Good morning from the Amtrak NextGen Acela, my first ride on the new trainsets.
kalinsky.bsky.social
The southern branch to Dundalk gets slightly higher ridership at its unique stations, but carries significantly more riders overall for some reason, I just run both lines at 10 minute headways for a 5 minute combined trunk.
kalinsky.bsky.social
Some of the more bizarre alignment choices of the 1960s transit planners become very apparent on a geographically accurate map, such as the western line on Edmondson Avenue in Catonsville, and the northeastern line via Sinclair Ln and Cedonia Ave, largely avoiding the Belair Rd corridor.
kalinsky.bsky.social
Sketched out the 1968 Baltimore Region Rapid Transit System plan in Subway Builder. The game simulates about 122,000 daily riders on the system's five lines and 62 stations.
kalinsky.bsky.social
It took two buses and 45 minutes to get from the light rail at Pratt and Howard to Eastern and Patterson Park Avenue. This sucks.
kalinsky.bsky.social
Trying to take transit in Baltimore City on a Saturday evening is so painful, Navy and 65 don't show, nothing is tracking.
kalinsky.bsky.social
Sorry, didn't see this until now, but why not just use the BWI rail station? The airport runs shuttle buses every 10 mins or so to the rail station and all regionals stop there.
kalinsky.bsky.social
The specifications outlined in the RFP seem to closely match the dimensions of the Siemens S700, which is in-use on about a dozen streetcar and light rail systems across the United States.
kalinsky.bsky.social
MDOT MTA's request for proposals for new 70% low floor LRVs for the Central Light Rail line is out. The base order includes 52 LRVs, with options for up to 50 additional LRVs for the Baltimore Red Line project.
kalinsky.bsky.social
The Metro Transit Green Line through the University of Minnesota campus comes to mind
kalinsky.bsky.social
In spite of a tough state budget year, today's MTA Maryland service changes modestly expand transit service in the Baltimore region. This is in stark constrast to the 20% SEPTA service cuts which went into effect in Philadelphia today. The public transit death spiral is an avoidable policy choice.
MTA Maryland fall service changes: service enhancements on five routes and additional trips on four additional routes.
kalinsky.bsky.social
This route averages like 1200 daily riders, on a weekday this would be weird, it's unheard of on a Saturday.
kalinsky.bsky.social
Nova LFS articulated on the 70?
MDOT MTA LFS-A on the 70
kalinsky.bsky.social
Really am not liking the proliferation of privately operated automated license plate readers. It'd be one thing if they were county operated and integrated into automated traffic enforcement, but they're owned and maintained by an AI surveillance firm, seems rife for abuse.
A Flock AI automated license plate reader on Maryland Route 2
kalinsky.bsky.social
Challenge: post your last photo taken in DC to show what a hell-hole it is
View from a rooftop in NoMa overlooking the Uline Arena and Washington Union Station throat, with the dome of the Capitol in the background
kalinsky.bsky.social
Low floor does not necessarily mean pedestrians cross the tracks at grade. Many of Sound Transit's side platform stations have fencing preventing this.
Shoreline North 185th Station on the Seattle 1 Line Tukwila International Blvd station
kalinsky.bsky.social
Recently rebuilt within the past few years, these locomotives will likely outlive the MPIs that are almost 40 years younger.
kalinsky.bsky.social
A 56 year old GP39H-2, originally built in for the B&O in 1969, still in active service on the MARC Penn Line.
MARC 73, a GP39 at Baltimore Penn Station
Reposted by Nathan
marcuscnelson.bsky.social
That would be neat if it worked particularly well at all. Unfortunately for everyone, most of all Jacksonville, the "Ultimate Urban Circulator" doesn't.

Here's my experience of the Jacksonville Transportation Authority's NAVI "autonomous" shuttle system:
medium.com/@marcuscnels...
kalinsky.bsky.social
Truly incredible how the more I read about this godawful bill the worse it gets, these idiots triggered $500bn/10y in statutory PAYGO cuts to Medicare by blowing up the deficit. Quite literally one of the worst bills of all time.
Reposted by Nathan
mkorman.bsky.social
@mta.maryland.gov released the MARC Growth and Transportation plan to chart the next 25 years of our state's commuter rail service. You can read the plan here: tinyurl.com/bdf46n75

Here’s what it would mean for the three commuter rail lines, including the Brunswick Line that serves Montgomery Cnty
Reposted by Nathan
sprawlhater.bsky.social
You, a rube: all politics is gender

Me, enlightened: all politics is car
poolontheruf.gg
the data backs this sentiment up!