Transit
What was up with the one-way Orange-Blue?
I was just looking again at the 1982 Metro map I posted this morning. After the Orange and Blue lines split at Rosslyn and Stadium-Armory, each branch is Orange one way, Blue the other.
Why did they do this? If a train leaves National Airport heading north, it'll be Orange. Then Orange trains go to New Carrollton. When it turns around, it'll be Blue, and Blue trains go to National Airport. So you have one service going from National to New Carrollton, and another from Ballston to Addison Road.Other than the fact that the termini are flipped around from what we have today, why not simply have one color for National-New Carrollton and another color for Ballston-Addison? The whole Orange in, Blue out thing seems pointless and completely nonsensical. What am I missing?
Update: OK, thanks to commenters I think we've explained it. From any station, the Blue trains are headed toward National and Addison, which is where Blue trains go today, and the Orange trains are headed toward Ballston and New Carrollton, which is where those go today. So this gets riders used to boarding the correct color train to go from the central business district to an outlying area. However, they still board the wrong color train heading inbound, but from there, there are fewer choices and less opportunity for error.
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by Joey on Oct 7, 2008 12:28 pm
by Joey on Oct 7, 2008 12:32 pm
by Andrew on Oct 7, 2008 3:16 pm
I'm nostalgic tho for the Orange line conductor who on the way home would say in a sing song voice after leaving Rosslyn, "If you wanted National Airport, you're on the wrong train." On Friday mornings he would say something like, "It's Friday! Smile!," and people would.
by Lynn Stevens on Oct 7, 2008 4:33 pm
by coneyraven on Oct 8, 2008 12:36 am
I will also note, when the east end of the railroad was extended from Stadium-Armory to New Carrollton on 12 20 1978 all trains heading east were labeled Orange, all trains heading west were labeled Blue. Ballston opened 12 01 1979. The maps were not modified to show that fact.
by Sand Box John on Oct 8, 2008 9:01 am