Martinez Subdivision

Union Pacific Railroad section from Roseville to the Bay Area, California
California Zephyr crossing the Benicia–Martinez Bridge over the Carquinez Strait, May 2019
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Martinez Subdivision
Legend
Roseville Subdivision enlarge…
Roseville
Amtrak
Roseville Yard
Sacramento Valley Railroad
RT Light Rail
Marconi Arcade
Sacramento RT Light Rail
RT Maintenance Facility
Swanston
Sacramento RT Light Rail
American River
Fresno Subdivision
Sacramento Subdivision enlarge…
Sacramento Northern Railway
 
Sacramento RT
Light Rail
 
Sacramento Valley Station
Amtrak Sacramento RT Light Rail
Sacramento Southern Railroad
I Street Bridge
over the Sacramento River
West Sacramento
SERA Woodland Subdivision
Davis
Amtrak
Dixon
Fairfield-Vacaville
Amtrak
Suisun-Fairfield
Amtrak
to Valero Benicia Refinery
Benicia
Solano
discontinued
1930
Tracy Subdivision
Martinez
Amtrak
Port Costa
Crockett
Davis Point
Phillips 66 San Francisco Refinery
Hercules
planned
Rheem
Richmond
Amtrak Bay Area Rapid Transit
Berkeley
Amtrak
Emeryville
Amtrak
Emeryville Yard
Oakland Intermodal
Oakland-16th Street
closed
1994
reroute
c. 1997

The Martinez subdivision is a Union Pacific railway line which runs from Roseville, California to Oakland, California.[1] It is informally referred to as the Cal-P line, after the original California Pacific Railroad, who constructed the line from Sacramento to Suisun and Fairfield. (As such, the nickname may only apply to that segment.) The line is entirely double-tracked including bridges, and features extensive sidings.[1]

History

Originally built as a more direct route to the San Francisco Bay to compete with the Western Pacific Railroad, the Cal-P segment opened months prior to the First transcontinental railroad. California Pacific was taken over by the Central Pacific, which in late 1879 completed the line from Suisun-Fairfield to Oakland via the train ferry Solano from Benicia to Port Costa. The present double-track lift bridge across the Carquinez Strait replaced the train ferry in 1930.

The California Pacific became part of the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) which in the 1990s merged into the Union Pacific Railroad, the line's current owner. The subdivision forms part of the modern Overland Route.

The Capitol Corridor Joint Powers Authority is planning to construct a third track between Sacramento and Roseville as part of a plan to expand passenger rail operations in the area.[2]

Traffic

A Union Pacific freight train passes through Fairfield–Vacaville Amtrak station, May 2019

The line hosts several Amtrak passenger routes: the Capitol Corridor, San Joaquins, Coast Starlight, and California Zephyr operate 36 trains daily over the Benicia–Martinez Bridge. Union Pacific operates numerous freight trains over the route, and BNSF has trackage rights in some segments. As of 2003[update] the line between Martinez and Sacramento saw 44 freight trains daily.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b SMA Rail Consulting (April 2016). "California Passenger Rail Network Schematics" (PDF). California Department of Transportation.
  2. ^ Padgette, Rob (7 September 2020). "Union Pacific : Five rail projects to watch in Northern California as the Capitol Corridor adapts to COVID-19". Market Screener. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
  3. ^ Union Pacific Tons per Train (PDF) (Map). Trains. 2003. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
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