Top Banner
The Florida East Coast Railway Past & Future Richard A. Shores Artwork by John Robbins
11

Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

Dec 01, 2014

Download

Business

FCCRichard

The history and the future of the Florida East Coast Railway.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

The Florida East Coast Railway

Past & Future

Richard A. Shores

Artwork by John Robbins

Page 2: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

| 2

FEC History

• Henry Morrison Flagler

• Key West Extension

• 1935 Hurricane

• 1963 Labor Strike

• End of Passenger Service

• Global Marketplace

FEC Rail Corridor

NY005L5Y_1.wor 2010

Tampa

St. Petersburg

Fort Lauderdale /Port Everglades

Port of Palm Beach

Port of Miami

Daytona Beach

Jacksonville Beach

Fort Pierce

Cocoa Beach

MiamiMiamiMiamiMiamiMiamiMiamiMiamiMiamiMiami

OrlandoOrlandoOrlandoOrlandoOrlandoOrlandoOrlandoOrlandoOrlando

JacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonvilleJacksonville

Titusville Interm odal Term inal

Ports & Terminals

NS Track

CSX Track

FEC Track

FEC Highway Services

4

95

10

75

95

| 2

Page 3: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

Strength Through Innovation

• Key West Extension

• End of Train Device “red man”

• TOFC to Gunderson Well Cars

• Concrete Ties

| 3

Page 4: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

FEC Mainline & Performance

• 351 Mile Class One Mainline (60 to 80 MPH)o Continuous Welded Rail on Concrete Ties

• Record Setting On-Time Performanceo 2000 Consecutive Days Without Service Failure for UPS

• One of The Safest Railroads in The United Stateso Repeated Winner of The E.H. Harriman Award

• Location, Location, Locationo Passes Through The Heart of Many Coast Cities

| 4

Page 5: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

PANAMA CANAL ROUTE: PATH OF LEAST RESISTANCE

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA (UP, BNSF)

Price –Inflation Trend:

- Alameda Corridor Fees

- Environmental Fees

OVER-UTILIZED ROUTE:

- Captive UP & BN Rail Route

- Congestion & Capacity Issues

SOUTH FLORIDA

( FEC-JAX-CSX/NS)

Price-Stability:

- No corridor Fees

- No Environmental Fees

UNDER-UTILIZED ROUTE:

- FEC & Connections to CSX / NS

- Surplus Capacity

- SB Loaded Export Opportunity

| 5

SHIFTING FROM LAND-BRIDGE TO REVERSE LAND BRIDGE

Page 6: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

| 6

The Panama Canal Expansion

• Panama Canal expansion will allow larger vessel passage (expected completion in 2014)− Currently can accommodate 4,800 TEU vessels− Post expansion, Canal will accommodate +13,000 TEU vessels which will

allow for faster all-water times to the East Coast for the more cost efficient “large vessels” (larger vessels are 30% more cost efficient)

| 6

Page 7: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

Port of Miami Prepares For Mega Container Shipswith Nine (9) Super Post Gantry Cranes for large vessels

| 7

• Seaports vs. River portso Maintaining 50ft Deptho Loading Equipmento Clearance Issueso Traffic Congestion

• Improvement Fundingo FED TIGER II $22.7Mo Florida DOT $11.0Mo Miami-Dade $3.0M

o FECR $11.0M

Page 8: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

| 8

Tremendous Potential From A Single Container Ship Per Day.

Double- Stack Well-Cars In Unit Trains

120 Car Unit Trains Will Be Under 7500 Feet and Will Hold 480 TEUs.

One 12,000 TEU Mega Container Ship = 24 to 26 Intermodal Unit Trains.

1 Double-Stacked Well Car Holds 4 TEUs

| 8

Page 9: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

The Return Of Passenger Service

| 9

Page 10: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

The South Bay Extension

• Same Track Miles To Fort Pierce

• Over 350 Crossing Grades avoided

• Greater Speed Would Reduce Trip By one hour

• Reduce Congestion On Both Railroad and Highways

| 10

Page 11: Florida East Coast Raiway Past & Future

Thank You For Your Attention!

Images & Artwork Provided By:

• Florida East Coast Railway (slides 1, 4, 8, and logo)

• Florida East Coast Railway Society (Banner Photos) • Google Earth (Maps & Aerial Views) (Slides 7 & 9)

• John Robbins (Slide Format) (Artwork On Slides 2, 5, 6, and 10)

• Richard A. Shores Collection (Lower Photos Slide 3)

• Seth Bramson Collection (Photo Slide 3)

• South Florida East Coast Corridor Study (Slide 9)

| 11