D.L. MacDonald Yard

53°35′42″N 113°25′13″W / 53.59500°N 113.42028°W / 53.59500; -113.42028

Edmonton LRT
CN lines
Clareview
137 Avenue
Belvedere
CN lines
Blatchford Gate
Coliseum
NAIT/Blatchford Market
Kingsway/​Royal Alex
CN Spur End
MacEwan
Stadium
Churchill
Quarters
Central
Bay/Enterprise Square
Corona
Muttart
Government Centre
Strathearn
Holyrood
University
Bonnie Doon
Health Sciences/Jubilee
Avonmore
McKernan/​Belgravia
Davies
South Campus/
Fort Edmonton Park
Southgate
Millbourne/​Woodvale
Century Park
Grey Nuns
Mill Woods
Key
Capital Line
Valley Line
Metro Line
CN tracks

All stations are accessible

D.L. MacDonald Yard is the maintenance facility, garage, and operations centre for the Capital and Metro light rail transit lines operated by Edmonton Transit Service, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Located to the northeast in the Kennedale industrial area,[1] at 13310 - 50A Street, the facility opened in December 1983 at a cost of $28.2 million.[2]

Expansions to the facility to accommodate additional light rail vehicles were completed as part of the South LRT Extension Project. Portions of the expansion were completed in 2008 with the remainder completed in early 2009.[3]

History

Don MacDonald was the Superintendent of the Edmonton Transit System for many years. A well known proponent of electric and light rail transit, his ideas about quality public transit were very influential in shaping the system that exists today.

Edmonton's D. L. MacDonald LRT shops in the city's east end were named after him. In the early 1960s, Don MacDonald already had ideas about the direction Edmonton should take in building a quality public transportation system and was working on them.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kennedale Industrial Area Structure Plan Archived 22 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ ETS LRT Brochure 2007
  3. ^ Direction for LRT Planning in Edmonton (PDF), Edmonton, 19 February 2009{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link), See LRT transportation planning in Edmonton for this station.
  4. ^ Plans for a Rail Rapid Transit System in Edmonton (1964) Archived 20 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine