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Between September 2009 and December 2010, DART's Red and Blue lines will be joined by the 20-station, 28-mile Green Line stretching from the South Dallas/Pleasant Grove neighborhood, through the Dallas city center, then northwest to Farmers Branch and Carrollton.
When fully operational, the Green Line will link thriving Stemmons-area employment centers to the South Dallas/Pleasant Grove neighborhood where residents will outnumber jobs 3 to 1 in 2025. Along the way, the line will serve Deep Ellum, Baylor University Medical Center, Fair Park, Victory Park, the Dallas Market Center, the UT Southwestern Medical District and Love Field Airport. A 14-mile branch called the Orange Line will extend from the Green Line's Bachman Station in northwest Dallas to the Las Colinas Urban Center by 2011, and to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport by 2013. A community affair Every aspect of the expansion project – from the rail alignments to the look and feel of the stations – has been shaped through hundreds of community meetings. "We really went over the alignment with a fine-toothed comb," says Eugene Thomas, who took a prominent role in the process for the Pleasant Grove segment of the Green Line. "We wanted the Green Line to go right through the heart of the community. We strongly considered different alignments, and the one we'll get is the best in terms of minimizing disruption and attracting development."
Thomas and his neighbors would like to see their community's landscape transition from light industrial uses to more of a retail environment. "We're all confident that the new rail line will be a lightning rod for improving the quality of life in our neighborhood," he says. Residents along the northwest corridor are equally passionate. The neighborhood near the future Royal Lane Station, known as the Asian Trade District, is bustling with community-minded business owners who had strong opinions when it came to art and design elements. "The Asian community knows that the rail station will be a boon, both to business and to the vibrancy of the neighborhood," says Les Tanaka, former executive director of the Greater Dallas Asian American Chamber of Commerce. "Since the Asian Trade District is really diverse – it's Korean, Vietnamese, Indian, Pakistani and more – we decided to go with a pan-Asian theme." Fittingly, the station is inclusive in its reflection of Asian heritage, featuring a prominent "Wan Ja" band – an ornamentation that traditionally symbolizes good luck throughout Asia; columns adorned with images of lotus flowers, representing prosperity and fruitfulness; and landscaping elements designed to link the station to the surrounding community with seasonal displays of color year-round. Tanaka says discussions grew "spirited" at times, but working together for a common cause helped make the community more tightly knit than ever. To keep abreast of the latest developments as construction on the Green Line continues, visit www.DART.org/expansion. ![]() Return to the Inmotion front page |
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