D Line (RTD)

The D Line is a light rail line which is part of the rail system operated by the Regional Transportation District in the Denver–Aurora Metropolitan Area in Colorado. The D line was the first line in the system when it opened in 1994, traveling from downtown Denver to I-25 and Broadway as the Central Corridor. It was extended along the Southwest Corridor in July 2000. Because it was the first and only line in the system it had no letter or color designation until the Central Platte Valley Spur opened on April 5, 2002, although on maps it was designated as Route 101.

D Line
 D 
D Line at Convention Center station
Overview
OwnerRegional Transportation District
LocaleDenver metropolitan area
Termini18th & California/18th & Stout
Littleton–Mineral
Stations12
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemRTD Rail
Operator(s)Regional Transportation District
History
OpenedOctober 7, 1994
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line, 750 V DC
Route diagram

 L 
 F  H 
18th & Stout | California
16th & Stout | California
 L 
Theatre District–Convention Center
Colfax at Auraria
 C  E 
10th & Osage
Alameda
I-25 & Broadway
Fare Zone Boundary
 E  F  H 
Evans
Englewood
Oxford–City of Sheridan
Fare Zone Boundary
Littleton–Downtown
Littleton–Mineral  C 

Route

The D Line's northern terminus is in downtown Denver, at 19th Street. On trips from Littleton, the line runs along 14th Street and California Street before reaching the northern terminus; on trips leaving downtown, the line goes along Stout Street. Then the line follows Stout Street and Colfax Avenue, and follows a railroad right-of-way, where it joins with the C Line at 10th & Osage station. They run in tandem until they reach their southern terminus at Mineral Avenue in Littleton.[1]

The line previously went as far north as Five Points, but was truncated to downtown with the commencement of L Line service in January 2018.

Stations

Station Municipality Opened Fare
zone
Major connections & notes
18th & California (northbound)
18th & Stout (southbound)
Denver October 8, 1994 A  F  H  L 
Flatiron Flyer
16th & California (northbound)
16th & Stout (southbound)
 F  H  L 
MallRide
14th & California (northbound)
14th & Stout (southbound)
October 8, 1994 Closed November 27, 2004
Theatre District–Convention Center November 28, 2004  F  H 
Colfax at Auraria October 8, 1994  F  H 
10th & Osage  C  E  F  H 
Alameda  C  E  F  H 
Park and ride: 240 spaces
I-25 & Broadway  C  E  F  H 
Park and ride: 1,248 spaces
Evans July 14, 2000 B  C 
Park and ride: 99 spaces
Englewood Englewood  C 
Park and ride: 910 spaces
Oxford–City of Sheridan Sheridan  C 
Littleton–Downtown Littleton C  C 
Park and ride: 361 spaces
Littleton–Mineral  C 
Park and ride: 1,227 spaces

FasTracks

The 2004 voter approved FasTracks plan will add 2.5 mi (4.02 km) to the Southwest Corridor (C Line and D Line). It will also add a station with 1,000 parking spots at C-470 and Lucent Boulevard in Highlands Ranch.[2]

References

  1. "RTD - Light Rail System Map". Regional Transportation District. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  2. "RTD - FasTracks System Map". Regional Transportation District. Archived from the original on December 23, 2013. Retrieved May 12, 2015.

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