Traffic & Transit

Cost Of Sound Transit's Light Rail Jumps By $460 Million

Adding three stops between Angle Lake and Federal Way will cost about $460 million more than originally thought.

SEATTLE, WA - The cost of extending light rail service from the Angle Lake station in Sea-Tac to Federal Way will be about $460 million more than originally expected, according to estimates unveiled at the Sound Transit board meeting Thursday.

Sound Transit projected the cost of the line would be about $2.09 billion. Now it's up to $2.54 billion. The main thing driving up those costs: construction and buying land to build the line.

However, Sound Transit projects the Federal Way line will still be up and running on time by 2024. Construction could begin as soon as mid-2019.

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The link to Federal Way, which was approved by voters in 2016 in the Sound Transit 3 measure, will add three new stations: One near Highline Community College, another along 272nd Street in the Star Lake area in Kent, and a third near the existing Federal Way Transit Center near South 320th Street.

Land and construction costs have increased, but costs for design and construction have dropped.

The Federal Way link is expected to relieve congestion along I-5 between Tacoma and Seattle. The travel time from Federal Way to Angle Lake will be about 12 minutes, an estimated 36,500 people will be using the line by 2034.

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Part of the construction of the line involves building brand new parking garages. The first two stations will get brand new 500-space garages, and the existing garage in Federal Way will be upgraded from 1,200 to 1,600 spaces.

Many of the cost increases are out of the control of Sound Transit. Costs of commodities like steel and concrete have risen since original cost estimates came out. Sound Transit is also competing for about $500 million in grants from the Federal Transit Administration.

File photo by Neal McNamara/Patch

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