Bombardier is well-known worldwide as a manufacturer of aircraft, snowmobiles, and personal watercraft. The company has annual sales of almost $20 billion USD, and is well diversified into multiple transportation markets. One of these markets is light rail vehicles, commonly known as streetcars.
Many European cities have highly developed light rail/streetcar lines that both complement and supplement subway lines. New subway lines are extremely expensive and can cost over $1 billion per kilometer to build. They also require high urban densities and heavy passenger volumes to be effective.
Light rail lines are much cheaper to build and operate. They can carry higher volumes than buses, while creating virtually no pollution due to their electric propulsion. Light rail lines are usually built on their own right-of-way on street level, but can also be built underground in dense neighborhoods. These underground lines can be converted to subway lines once population densities increase.
That is the current plan for the City of Toronto. The Toronto Transit Commission has just ordered 204 streetcars from Bombardier in the largest single order for light rail vehicles in the world. The contract is valued at $851 million CAD ($735 million USD, €523 Million).
"The contract represents the largest single order ever for light rail vehicles worldwide and solidifies Bombardier's position as the world's leading provider of light rail technology," the company said in a statement.
Canada's largest city plans to replace its aging streetcar fleet with these next generation, low-floor vehicles. The new streetcars will provide improved reliability and lower operating costs for the TTC. The wide range of features for the new streetcars include: a step-less interior allowing easy access at street level, car capacity for more than 240 passengers, increased heating and air conditioning capacity, improved customer comfort, enhanced accessibility, safety and other interior features, locations for bicycles, wheelchairs and strollers, more efficient passenger boarding and exiting, improved passenger communications features, and a regenerative braking system that feeds power back into the TTC's network.
An additional 400 vehicles could also be ordered at a later date as Toronto expands its streetcar network by 120 kilometers (75 miles) of new double-track lines, said Bombardier.
In March 2007, the TTC unveiled a bold $6 billion CAD plan to build seven dedicated streetcar right-of-way routes in an interconnected network intended to incorporate the more distant reaches of the city into its mass transit system. Many of those areas are served by overcrowded buses on congested streets, leading to delays for passengers. This "Transit City" program is contingent on funding from the Province of Ontario and the Canadian Federal government, which has still not been confirmed.
The first prototype streetcars modified to Toronto's specifications will be delivered in 2011. Production vehicles will be delivered over the following seven years, from 2012 to 2018.
More than 450 of these FLEXITY low-floor streetcars are currently in service in Linz and Innsbruck (Austria), Lodz (Poland), Eskisehir (Turkey), Geneva (Switzerland), Brussels (Belgium), Marseille (France), as well as in Valencia and Alicante (Spain). FLEXITY low-floor vehicles will soon enter service in Augsburg and Krefeld (Germany), and in Palermo (Italy).