New Orleans streetcar line to get Super Bowl debut

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In this Nov. 8, 2012 photo, workers continue work on street car track construction on Loyola Avenue in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
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The target is a traveler like Lawrence Freeman, a 50-year-old photographer from Seattle. He had recently arrived at the Union Passenger Terminal by train from Washington, getting in late one evening. He walked from the train station to his hotel.

"I'm a walker, it was no big deal, except that I don't know what this area is, I don't know where I'm going," he said about his walk into downtown. "I just headed for the tall buildings."

If there had been a streetcar, he said he would have taken it. Travelers will be able to do just that by mid-January, when the Loyola line is completed.

But the project also is viewed as a downtown revitalization tool.

"Until the streetcar was announced, there was little activity, or anticipation of development along Loyola," said James Amdal, senior fellow at the Transportation Institute at the University of New Orleans. "That has definitely changed."

The changes along Loyola are palpable. High-rises that had been empty for years — vacant well before Katrina hit — are being renovated. An upscale supermarket opened nearby and a $75 million residential and retail project called the South Market District is set to start soon.

"Streetcars have proven to be an incredible source for revitalizing commercial corridors," said Rachel Heiligman, executive director of the advocacy group Transport for NOLA.

Still, it hasn't all gone smoothly.

The work is running over budget and is behind schedule. The New Orleans Regional Transit Authority pegs the cost at $52 million, about $7 million more than projected.

"When you open up a street in a city this old you find things that you don't expect," said RTA spokeswoman Patrice Bell Mercadel. "This has become more than a streetcar project."

Power company Entergy New Orleans and the city's sewerage department have been brought in and utilities have had to be relocated. Workers found a petrified cypress log and an old underground ice house no one knew existed, she said. The work also has run into an old arched brick sewer main.

Also, some streetcar advocates say putting a line down Loyola was a silly proposition in the first place.

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