Silicon Valley BART extension


The Silicon Valley BART extension is an ongoing effort to expand service by Bay Area Rapid Transit into Santa Clara County from its former terminus at the Fremont station in Alameda County. Planned since at least 1981, the project has seven stations in three sequential phases. The first phase was the Warm Springs BART extension, built by BART at a cost of $790 million, terminating at the new Warm Springs/South Fremont station that opened in 2017. The Warm Springs extension broke ground in 2009, and was originally scheduled for completion in 2014.
The $2.3-billion second phase, known as phase I of Silicon Valley BART extension or the Berryessa extension, includes two new stations, the Milpitas and Berryessa/North San Jose stations. The Berryessa extension broke ground in 2012, and was originally scheduled for completion in 2016. It opened on June 13, 2020.
The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority built the Berryessa extension, and intends to build the final downtown San Jose extension, but BART operates and maintains the completed portion of the extension and will also do so for the final phase when completed. The BART stations in Milpitas and Berryessa ceremonially opened on June 12, 2020, and service began for the public on the next day. Many credited the former Mayor of San Jose, Ron Gonzales, with bringing this project to fruition.
The $5.6-billion third phase to downtown San Jose remains unfunded. Targeted for completion in 2029–2030, it would add three new subway stations south of Berryessa: Alum Rock/28th Street, Downtown San Jose, Diridon, and a surface station in Santa Clara. Initial testing and preliminary construction activities began in January 2019.

Funding

was originally planned to be part of the BART system, but local governments did not approve. Minor service at Palo Alto near San Mateo County had also been planned originally.
In 2000, Santa Clara County voters approved a 30-year half-cent sales tax increase to fund BART, which took effect in 2006. To make up for a shortfall in projected federal funding, an increase in the sales tax by 0.125 percent was proposed if additional federal funding were secured.
The economy worsened in 2009, and the 2000 sales tax was projected to generate $7 billion—short of the originally expected $11 billion. As a consequence, the number of planned stations was reduced. In addition, the line from Berryessa to downtown San Jose was delayed until 2026. pushed back from 2025.
VTA awarded $770 million to Skanska-Shimmick-Herzog in 2011 for the first phase of the Berryessa Extension, and the federal government granted $900 million for the project in 2012. Construction began the same year. It was scheduled to open in 2016.
For phase II, VTA sought funding from the federal New Starts program in 2016. A half-cent 30-year sales tax passed in the 2016 elections, to raise $6.0 to $6.5 billion with up to 25% of this for BART. VTA also sought $1.5 billion from New Starts, and $750 million from the California Cap and Trade program.
In 2018, VTA was awarded $2.6 billion for the project from the state's Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program funded by the 2017 gas tax bill. VTA anticipates receiving a Full Funding Agreement from the FTA in late 2021. In August 2019, the VTA received $125 million from the FTA under a new accelerated funding program.

Phases

The project is broken into three phases.
PhaseNameLengthStationsStartCompleteCost Ref
1Warm Springs 0.79
1Warm Springs 0.79
2Berryessa 2.4
2Berryessa 2.4
2Berryessa 2.4
3Downtown San Jose/ Santa Clara 6.5
3Downtown San Jose/ Santa Clara 6.5
3Downtown San Jose/ Santa Clara 6.5
3Downtown San Jose/ Santa Clara 6.5

;Notes

Warm Springs extension

The extension to Warm Springs was constructed by BART south from the existing Fremont station to the new Warm Springs/South Fremont station; revenue service began in March 2017. The original estimate was $890 million, but the cost of the subway segment under Lake Elizabeth was reduced by 45% from the original estimate of $249 million to $136 million, bringing the total cost to $790 million.
The Warm Springs/South Fremont station opened on March 25, 2017. The extension broke ground in 2009, and was originally scheduled for completion in 2014. Construction of the station began in 2011, and was expected to take three and a half years. However, the opening was delayed repeatedly, and ultimately pushed back to spring 2017.
The Berryessa Extension extends south from the Warm Springs/South Fremont station.

Berryessa extension

The Berryessa extension to north San Jose encompasses the Milpitas station and the Berryessa station. A proposed infill station at Calaveras Boulevard in downtown Milpitas has been deferred until the city secures funding. Milpitas Station connects to VTA's Milpitas light rail station near the Great Mall of the Bay Area via a pedestrian bridge.
Originally the entire Silicon Valley Extension from Fremont to Santa Clara was proposed as one megaproject, but lower than expected federal funding and sales tax revenue eliminated some stations from the original project and caused the division into two phases. Phase 1 extends to Berryessa, and Phase 2 will extend through downtown San Jose to Santa Clara. The Phase 1 scope was set by what VTA could afford. A local industrial park sued in 2011, without success, on environmental grounds claiming that the extension would reduce vehicular access.
The project saw numerous delays, and completion was pushed back many times from the originally-planned 2016.
Milpitas and Berryessa/North San José stations opened on June 13, 2020.

Downtown San Jose/Santa Clara extension

The final Downtown San Jose/Santa Clara leg has been planned through downtown San Jose to Santa Clara at an estimated cost of $5.6 billion. This third phase, long, is largely underground, featuring a tunnel. It would continue south from Berryessa, entering a tunnel to cross the Bayshore Freeway before continuing to a 28th Street/Little Portugal station on the city's "east side". From there, the tunnel would continue west under Santa Clara Street to a Downtown San Jose subway station, which would be an interchange station to VTA light rail lines on the surface at Santa Clara. The original proposal had additional subway stations between Alum Rock and Downtown at Civic Plaza/SJSU and Plaza de César Chávez, but these were consolidated into a single station to cut costs. The line would continue underground to the San Jose Diridon station, a transfer point to Amtrak, Caltrain, Altamont Corridor Express, VTA light rail and bus, and the planned California High-Speed Rail system. The proposed BART subway station would be named "Diridon" to match. The extension would then surface and continue to the site of the current Santa Clara Caltrain Station. A BART maintenance yard would also be created at Newhall as part of this phase, using land just south of Santa Clara station that was purchased by VTA from Union Pacific. Like the Berryessa Extension, it would be built by VTA, but operated by BART.
After funding was secured for Berryessa in March 2012, VTA began looking for additional funding to complete the $5.6 billion second phase. Completion is expected in 2029–2030.
In late 2017, a disagreement arose between VTA and BART over whether the tunnel should have a single bore or dual bores. VTA favored a single bore, configured as a double-deck stack, with one track on the upper level and one on the lower level. VTA preferred a single bore to shorten the construction schedule and avoid cut and cover construction in Santa Clara Street for station sites. City officials believed cut and cover construction would be disruptive to streets and businesses, citing the construction of the Market Street Subway as evidence. The single-bore design is newer, but less tested in the United States. However, BART preferred dual bores, as used elsewhere in its system, to cut construction cost and standardize the procedure for emergency evacuations. The twin bores would each be wide, and separated horizontally. Local businesses, cities and VTA were lobbying for a single bore in 2018. The design decision was postponed for three months; in March, BART and VTA reached agreement on a single bore. The $125 million contract for engineering the single bore tunnel was awarded to a joint venture bid placed by London-based Mott MacDonald and San Francisco-based PGH Wong Engineering.
Initial construction and soil sampling began in January 2019. In September, it was announced that the project would be delayed three to four years, with revenue service to begin in 2029–2030.