Train traveling from Jersey Avenue to Liberty State Park in Jersey City.

(King of Hearts, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons)

 

Hudson–Bergen Light Rail logo.

HUDSON BERGEN LIGHT RAIL

The Hudson–Bergen Light Rail (HBLR) is a light rail system in Hudson County, New Jersey, United States. Owned by New Jersey Transit (NJT) and operated by the 21st Century Rail Corporation, it connects the communities of Bayonne, Jersey City, Hoboken, Weehawken, Union City, at the city line with West New York, and North Bergen.

The system began operating its first segment in April 2000, expanded in phases during the next decade, and was completed with the opening of its southern terminus on January 31, 2011. The line generally runs parallel to the Hudson River and Upper New York Bay, while its northern end and its western branch travel through the lower Hudson Palisades. HBLR has 24 stations along a total track length of 17 miles (27 km) for each of its two tracks and as of 2017 serves over 52,000 weekday passengers. Despite its name, the system does not serve Bergen County, into which long-standing plans for expansion have not advanced due to repeated requests for new environmental review reports since 2007.

The project was financed by a mixture of state and federal funding. With an eventual overall cost of approximately $2.2 billion to complete its initial operating segments, the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail was one of the largest ever public works projects in New Jersey. The system is a component of the state's "smart growth" strategy to reduce auto-ridership and to revitalize older urban and suburban areas through transit-oriented development.

 

An HBLR train in Paulus Hook in 2006.

(I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HBLRPaulusHook.JPG)

 

History

Hudson County, New Jersey, is the sixth-most densely populated county in the U.S. and has one of America's highest percentages of public transportation use. During the 1980s and early 1990s, planners and government officials realized that alternative transportation systems needed to be put in place to relieve increasing congestion along the Hudson Waterfront, particularly in the vicinity of the Hudson River crossings. After extensive studies, it was decided that the most efficient and cost-effective system to meet the growing demands of the area would be a light rail system, constructed in several phases.

The design, construction, operation, and maintenance of the system is part of a public-private partnership. In 1996, New Jersey Transit awarded a "DBOM" (design/build/operate/maintain) contract to the 21st Century Rail Corporation, a subsidiary of Washington Group International, an engineering and construction consulting firm later acquired by URS, then AECOM. Under the contract, 21st Century Rail would deliver a fleet of vehicles, a guaranteed completion date, and 15 years of operation and maintenance of the system, for a fixed price. The agreement was later extended to a 20-year period.

Original plans called for extending the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail north to the Vince Lombardi Park & Ride in Ridgefield, south to 5th Street in Bayonne, and west to Droyer's Point in Jersey City. In Hoboken, the line was to have originally been configured as a through-running operation, with an alignment built closer to the river which would have given closer access to both the PATH station entrance and the bus terminal. This was shelved in favor of the current stub-end station in the southern end of Hoboken Terminal and the current route along an existing right-of-way at the foot of the Hudson Palisades on the city's west side.

The light rail opened to the public on April 15, 2000, with an initial operating segment connecting Bayonne 34th Street and Exchange Place, as well as the spur line to West Side Avenue. Later that year, on November 18, the service was extended northward to Pavonia-Newport. On September 29, 2002, service was extended to Hoboken Terminal, which completed MOS-1, the first Minimum Operating Segment (MOS) of the project, at the cost of $992 million.

MOS-2 involved several extensions costing a combined $1.2 billion. The first extension as part of MOS-2, which brought the light rail system southward to 22nd Street in Bayonne, was opened on November 15, 2003. It also involved extending the line west and north of Hoboken Terminal into Weehawken. The line was completed to Lincoln Harbor on September 7, 2004, and to Port Imperial on weekends only on October 29, 2005. The line was extended from Port Imperial to Tonnelle Avenue in North Bergen on February 25, 2006, and light rail vehicles began running seven days a week to Tonnelle Avenue. Bus service on connecting routes was modified so that there would be more direct connections to Hudson-Bergen Light Rail stations. The extension to a southern terminal at 8th Street opened January 31, 2011, at a cost of $100 million.

In early 2019, it was announced that service on the West Side Branch would be suspended for nine months starting in June 2019 to allow for repairs to a sewer line running along the right-of-way and that service would instead be provided by NJ Transit shuttle buses. Partial service was restored on the branch in April 2020 to the Garfield Ave. and Martin Luther King Dr. stations while the West Side Ave. station remained closed due to ongoing Bayfront-Route 440 extension construction. Full service to the West Side Ave. station resumed in May 2020.

 

System map with connecting rail service.

(Original PNG: User:The Port of AuthorityVectorization: User:Pi.1415926535, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons)

 

Service

Routes

There are 24 stations along the routes within the system. Trains run from approximately 5 a.m. to 1 a.m. daily.

  • West Side–Tonnelle between West Side Avenue in Jersey City and Tonnelle Avenue in North Bergen
  • Hoboken–Tonnelle (weekdays only) between Hoboken Terminal and Tonnelle Avenue
  • 8th Street–Hoboken, between 8th Street in Bayonne and Hoboken Terminal
  • Bayonne Flyer, (weekday rush hours) between 8th Street in Bayonne and Hoboken Terminal, stopping at all Bayonne stations, Liberty State Park (southbound only), Essex Street, Exchange Place, Harborside Financial Center, and Newport

 

A graphic showing the initial (in red) and updated (in blue) routes that the Hudson Bergen Light Rail would take through Hoboken including intended stations.

(By United States Department of Transportation - www.oig.dot.gov, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=142143061)

 

Stations

Many of the stations feature public art. A total of 30 artists have created 50 art works with various themes for the stations. For example, the Liberty State Park station features glass tiles representing a number of "fallen flag" railroad logos.

Park and ride lots are available at East 22nd Street, East 34th Street, West Side Avenue, Liberty State Park and Tonnelle Avenue. In total, there are 3,880 parking spaces.

Paid transfer to the Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) is possible at Exchange Place, Newport and Hoboken Terminal, where connections to NJT commuter rail service are also available. Paid transfer to New York Waterway ferries is also available at some stations. NJT and other buses serve most stations.

 

City Station/ Location Weekday Entries (2022) Services Opened Transfers and notes
North Bergen Tonnelle Avenue 740 West Side–Tonnelle, Hoboken–Tonnelle February 25, 2006 Park and ride
Union City Bergenline Avenue 2,586 West Side–Tonnelle, Hoboken–Tonnelle February 25, 2006
Weehawken Port Imperial 834 West Side–Tonnelle, Hoboken–Tonnelle October 29, 2005 Connect to NY Waterway ferries
Weehawken Lincoln Harbor 508 West Side–Tonnelle, Hoboken–Tonnelle September 7, 2004 Connect to NY Waterway ferries
Hoboken 9th Street–Congress Street 2,149 West Side–Tonnelle, Hoboken–Tonnelle September 7, 2004
Hoboken 2nd Street 995 West Side–Tonnelle, Hoboken–Tonnelle September 7, 2004
Hoboken Hoboken Terminal 2,229 Hoboken–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken September 29, 2002 Connect to PATH trains, NJ Transit commuter trains and NY Waterway ferries
Jersey City Newport 4,220 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken November 18, 2000
Jersey City Harsimus Cove 1,098 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken November 18, 2000
Jersey City Harborside 696 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken November 18, 2000
Jersey City Exchange Place 3,739 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000 Connect to PATH trains and NY Waterway ferries
Jersey City Essex Street 732 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000 Connect to Liberty Landing Ferry
Jersey City Marin Boulevard 847 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000 Connect to NY Waterway ferries
Jersey City Jersey Avenue 1,101 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000
Jersey City Liberty State Park 2,112 West Side–Tonnelle, 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000 Park and Ride
Jersey City Garfield Avenue 722 West Side–Tonnelle April 15, 2000
Jersey City Martin Luther King Drive 1,249 West Side–Tonnelle April 15, 2000
Jersey City West Side Avenue 1,368 West Side–Tonnelle April 15, 2000 Park and ride
Jersey City Richard Street 712 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000
Jersey City Danforth Avenue 836 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000
Bayonne 45th Street 841 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000
Bayonne 34th Street 917 8th Street–Hoboken April 15, 2000 Park and ride
Bayonne 22nd Street 1,366 8th Street–Hoboken November 15, 2003 Park and ride
Bayonne 8th Street 1,090 8th Street–Hoboken January 31, 2011 Park and ride

Fares

Like most other light rail services in the United States, the HBLR operates on a proof-of-payment system, in which riders must present their tickets upon request during random fare inspections. Passengers must purchase tickets at NJ Transit ticket vending machines (TVMs) on or near station platforms or from the NJ Transit app. One-way, round-trip, and ten-trip tickets must then be validated at automated validators located near the TVMs, which date and time stamp the ticket for 60 minutes of use. NJ Transit's fare inspectors randomly check tickets on trains and at stations; as of 2014, the fine for fare evasion is $100.

As of 2024, a one-way adult fare is $2.55. A monthly, unlimited pass is $80; holders of monthly passes can transfer to NJ Transit local buses without an additional fare. Senior citizens (62 and older; valid ID may be requested), passengers with disabilities, and children under 12 may travel on the light rail at a reduced fare of $1.25. The option to purchase a combined bus and light rail fare has been removed. Valid NJ Transit weekly and monthly rail passes, as well as 2-zone or greater bus passes, are also good for travel and do not need validation. Like the rest of NJ Transit's other transportation modes, it does not accept the MetroCard nor OMNY although it has plans to create a new fare payment system in the future.

In May 2012, NJ Transit and NY Waterway introduced a monthly or ten-trip discounted combination fare for passengers using the HBLR and ferry at Weehawken Port Imperial. Monthly joint tickets are also available for ferry passengers using slips at Lincoln Harbor and 14th Street (Hoboken).

In February 2013, NJ Transit began offering free weekend parking at Tonnelle Avenue, Liberty State Park, West Side Avenue, 34th Street and 45th Street stations.

 

Exclusive ROW approaching Exchange Place in Jersey City.

(No machine-readable author provided. GK tramrunner229 assumed (based on copyright claims).,

CC BY-SA 3.0 <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/>, via Wikimedia Commons)

 

Infrastructure

The Hudson–Bergen Light Rail system uses a combination of old rail and new exclusive rights-of-way for most of its length, with some grade separation in certain areas. It shares a lane with automobiles on a portion of Essex Street in downtown Jersey City, but for the most part, does not operate with other traffic. At-grade crossings are equipped with transit-signal priority signals to automatically change traffic lights in favor of the light rail.

A new curved viaduct was constructed eastward from 8th Street to 11th Street in Bayonne to join the existing right-of way to Liberty State Park, which was once the main line of the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ), parts of which rest on the bed of the Morris Canal; CNJ's Newark and New York Railroad right-of-way was used for the line west to West Side Avenue. From Liberty State Park to Hoboken Terminal the line uses a new right-of-way. From the terminal to the curve south of 2nd Street, the line runs parallel to NJT yard and tracks, formerly the main line of the Lackawanna Railroad; north of the curve it uses what had been Conrail's River Line, and was originally the New Jersey Junction Railroad. In order to obtain the right-of-way for the line north from Hoboken, NJT paid to upgrade the Northern Running Track, allowing Conrail to shift its operations. The tunnel and cut through the Palisades were originally the West Shore Railroad's main line.

 

Train number 2017A at Pavonia/Newport.

(Injustifiiable at English Wikipedia, CC BY 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons)

 

Rolling stock

The Hudson–Bergen Light Rail system has 52 electrically powered air-conditioned vehicles built by Kinki Sharyo and numbered in the 2000 series. The cars were assembled in Harrison, New Jersey. The original fleet consisted of 54 cars, but 2 cars were transferred to the Newark Light Rail. Each vehicle is 90 feet (27.43 m) long and has four sets of double-opening doors on each side, with seats for 68 passengers and standing room for another 122 passengers.

The Newark Light Rail system uses the same type of vehicle, with slight modifications to the trucks and wheels due to the different rails used.

On July 3, 2013, NJ Transit released lengthened light rail car 2054 as a prototype. The expanded car consists of two new sections, increasing length by 37 feet (11.28 m) to a total of 127 feet (38.71 m). Seating capacity is increased from 68 passengers to 102 passengers, with standing capacity increased accordingly as well. Overall capacity increases from approximately 200 per vehicle to 300 per vehicle. The prototype was placed on rotations through the three lines of the system over the next 6 months, after which, NJ Transit started to expand 26 cars in total, or half of the total fleet. The contract to expand the remaining balance of 25 cars was approved on July 9, 2014. The expanded cars were renumbered to the 5000 series.

 

Overview

Owner: New Jersey Transit
Locale: Hudson County, New Jersey
Termini: Tonnelle Avenue / Hoboken Terminal / 8th Street / West Side Avenue
Stations: 24
Service
Type: Light rail
Services: 3
Operators: Twenty-First Century Rail (AECOM and Kinkisharyo)
Ridership: 13,400,000 (FY2023)
History
Opened: April 15, 2000
Technical
Line length: 17 mi (27.4 km)
Character: Surface and elevated
Track gauge: 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification: Overhead line, 750 V DC