Green Line B branch
The Green Line B branch is a light rail service operated by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) as one of four branches of the Green Line subway system in Greater Boston, running approximately 9 miles from Boston College station in the Brighton neighborhood to Government Center station in downtown Boston.[1] It primarily follows Commonwealth Avenue through the Allston and Brighton sections of Boston, serving residential areas, Boston University campuses, and connecting to the central subway tunnel shared with the C, D, and E branches for inbound service to key downtown hubs like Park Street and Copley.[2] The branch operates as a mix of surface-level tracks and underground subway, with trains running every 7–15 minutes during peak hours and accommodating over 30,000 daily riders as of 2023.[1] Opened as part of the historic Tremont Street Subway in 1897 for its downtown portion—with surface streetcar extensions along Commonwealth Avenue dating to the early 1900s—the B branch has evolved from horsecar and early electric trolley lines into a modern light rail corridor essential for west Boston commuters.[3] Unlike other Green Line branches that extend into suburbs like Brookline or Newton, the B branch remains entirely within Boston city limits, focusing on dense urban and university-adjacent neighborhoods.[2] Notable stations include Kenmore (a major transfer point to the Red Line), Boston University Central (adjacent to BU's main campus), Harvard Avenue (serving local shopping districts), and the 2021-consolidated Amory Street and Babcock Street stations near BU West.[4] In recent years, the MBTA has prioritized upgrades to address longstanding issues of accessibility and reliability on the B branch, including the 2021 station consolidation project that replaced four older stops (St. Paul Street, BU West, Babcock Street, and Pleasant Street) with two fully accessible platforms featuring 225-foot boarding areas, shelters, and improved pedestrian safety features at a cost of $29.3 million.[4] Further enhancements under the Green Line Transformation program aim to make all remaining above-ground stations compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act by adding elevators and level boarding, with design-build qualifications solicited in October 2025.[5] These improvements, part of a broader $9.8 billion capital investment plan approved in May 2025, have reduced delays and enhanced service frequency while integrating signal upgrades for better train protection.[6]Overview and route
General description
The Green Line B branch, also known as the Commonwealth Avenue branch or Boston College branch, is one of four branches comprising the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) Green Line light rail system serving the Greater Boston area.[2] It provides essential transit connectivity for residents, students, and visitors along its corridor, particularly supporting travel to and from Boston University and Boston College while integrating with the broader regional network.[1] The branch extends approximately 9 miles (14.5 km) from its inbound terminus at Government Center station—established as the endpoint for B branch service starting October 24, 2021—to its outbound terminus at Boston College station in the Brighton neighborhood of Boston.[7][8] From Government Center, inbound trains travel through the shared central subway tunnel under downtown Boston, emerging at Kenmore station before diverging onto dedicated surface tracks along Commonwealth Avenue.[2] This shared underground segment, part of the historic Tremont Street and Boylston Street subways, allows seamless integration with the C, D, and E branches until the branching point west of Kenmore.[2] As of November 2025, the B branch remains fully operational, benefiting from infrastructure upgrades including the 2021 consolidation of four stations into two fully accessible ones at Babcock Street and Amory Street, which improved service reliability and ADA compliance along the surface portion.[4]Detailed route alignment
The Green Line B branch operates over a 9.4-mile corridor from its western terminus at Boston College station in the Brighton neighborhood to Government Center station in downtown Boston. Inbound service begins at street level along the median of Commonwealth Avenue, traversing eastward through the Allston and Brighton neighborhoods of Boston. This surface segment passes key landmarks including the Boston University campus, with dedicated stops at Boston University East and Boston University Central, and continues to Packard's Corner at the junction of Commonwealth and Brighton Avenues.[7][9][10] The surface alignment utilizes a dedicated double-track reservation in the roadway median, extending approximately 3.7 miles from the eastern end at the Blandford Street portal to Boston College. At Blandford Street, the tracks descend via a short incline, transitioning from surface level to the underground Boylston Street subway and entering the four-track Kenmore station. Here, the B branch integrates with the C and D branches, sharing the tunnel trackage eastward through the central subway.[11] From Kenmore, the route proceeds underground along Boylston Street, serving Hynes Convention Center, Copley, Arlington, and Boylston stations before reaching the four-track Park Street under. The line then follows a brief extension segment to Government Center station. The outbound path reverses this alignment, with the surface reservation on Commonwealth Avenue supporting bidirectional operation in the median and the primary elevation change occurring at the Blandford Street incline. Track configuration throughout includes double tracks with overhead catenary electrification.[7][12][13]History
Initial construction
The initial construction of the Green Line B branch traces its origins to the late 19th-century development of streetcar infrastructure in Boston's western suburbs, spearheaded by the West End Street Railway Company. Formed in 1887 through the consolidation of numerous horse-drawn streetcar lines, the company aimed to modernize urban transit by integrating electric technology. By the mid-1890s, expansion efforts focused on extending service westward along key alignments that would form the core of the B branch. On May 18, 1896, the first electric streetcar service commenced from Governors Square (now the site near Kent Street) to Brighton Avenue, connecting with existing trackage at Union Square in Allston.[14] This segment utilized tracks laid along North Beacon Street and early portions of Commonwealth Avenue, facilitating access to Brighton's growing residential areas. Later that year, on August 15, 1896, an extension opened from Chestnut Hill Avenue along Commonwealth Avenue to Lake Street at the Newton town line, enabling through service to downtown Boston and marking a pivotal step in the line's connectivity.[14] These additions built on the foundational electric operations over approximately seven miles of route.[15] Further refinements to the infrastructure occurred in the early 20th century to accommodate increasing demand. On May 26, 1900, upgraded tracks were completed from Chestnut Hill Avenue to Brighton Avenue along Commonwealth Avenue, allowing seamless direct service from Lake Street to downtown and enhancing the line's capacity for electric trolleys.[15] This upgrade involved reinforcing the railbed and integrating it with the existing street layout, reflecting the West End Street Railway's commitment to reliable, electrified transit amid Boston's suburban expansion.[14]Early expansion and service growth
Following the foundational tracks laid in the late 19th century, the Green Line B branch underwent rapid service expansion in the early 1900s to accommodate growing suburban ridership along Commonwealth Avenue. On January 17, 1903, through service extended to Norumbega Park, an amusement park in Auburndale designed to boost trolley usage, connecting the line from downtown Boston via Lake Street and integrating with the Middlesex and Boston Street Railway's routes for seamless regional travel.[16] This extension not only promoted recreational outings but also solidified the branch's role in linking Newton-area communities to the city center.[17] A pivotal advancement came on October 3, 1914, with the opening of the Boylston Street subway, which provided underground routing from Boylston station westward to just east of Kenmore Square, alleviating surface traffic bottlenecks and enabling more efficient inbound service for the B branch streetcars. This subway segment, constructed by the Boston Elevated Railway, allowed trolleys to bypass congested Back Bay streets, improving reliability and speeds during peak hours.[18] By the 1920s, incremental track improvements, including reinforced sidings and signal upgrades along the surface portions, supported these operations and facilitated deeper integration with the expanding streetcar network, such as connections to the Newton Street Railway lines.[16] World War I intensified service demands on the Boston streetcar system, including the Green Line B branch, as wartime industrial mobilization drew more workers to factories along the route, prompting temporary capacity expansions like additional rush-hour runs and shared trackage with adjacent lines.[19] These adjustments helped maintain frequency despite material shortages, with the branch's role in transporting defense-related commuters highlighting its growing operational scale. The era's service growth culminated on October 23, 1932, when Kenmore station opened as part of a subway extension to Blandford Street (now Saint Mary's Street), creating a four-track underground hub that split service toward Boston College and further streamlined downtown access. This development marked the completion of key early-20th-century infrastructure, enhancing the branch's integration within the broader rapid transit framework.[17]Mid-20th century changes
During the 1930s and 1940s, the Green Line B branch, operated by the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy), underwent adjustments driven by economic hardship and competitive pressures from automobiles. The Great Depression exacerbated financial strains on the BERy, leading to widespread deferred maintenance across its streetcar network, including tracks and rolling stock along the Commonwealth Avenue alignment that defined the B branch. Rising operational costs, coupled with falling revenues from reduced ridership, forced the company to postpone upgrades and limit capital investments, resulting in deteriorating infrastructure that affected service reliability on surface lines like the B branch precursor.[20][19] A pivotal realignment occurred in 1932 with the extension of the Boylston Street subway under Kenmore Square, integrating the B, C, and D branch routes into the underground system for the downtown segment. This modification allowed streetcars to avoid surface congestion, enhancing speed and efficiency in response to surging automobile ownership, which had climbed from 233,000 vehicles in Massachusetts in 1920 to over 549,000 by 1925 and continued to erode transit patronage into the Depression era. The change represented an effort to modernize the line amid interwar contraction, though further track work remained limited by fiscal constraints.[21][19] The period also saw preliminary planning for abandonments on auxiliary infrastructure, such as the Braves Field loop along the shared Commonwealth Avenue trackage, which had served special event service since 1915 but faced obsolescence as baseball attendance waned postwar; formal abandonment occurred in 1962, but discussions of route simplification predated 1944 to streamline operations. Overall, these mid-century shifts reflected a defensive adaptation, prioritizing survival over expansion in an era of economic austerity and modal competition.[22]Postwar developments
Following the end of World War II, the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) focused on modernizing its fleet to improve efficiency and reliability on lines including the Green Line B branch. In May 1944, during the final stages of the war, the BERy introduced Presidents' Conference Committee (PCC) streetcars, specifically wartime austerity models designed for resource conservation, to the B branch route along Commonwealth Avenue to Boston College. These vehicles replaced older streetcars and featured streamlined designs with improved acceleration and passenger comfort, marking a key upgrade in vehicle technology that carried into the postwar era.[23] On August 29, 1947, the financially strained BERy was acquired by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and reorganized as the public Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA), which assumed control of all elevated, subway, and streetcar operations, including the Green Line branches. This transition aimed to stabilize the system through public funding and management, allowing for continued investment in infrastructure and rolling stock amid postwar recovery. The MTA promptly upgraded existing PCC cars with enhancements like improved braking systems to extend their service life on routes such as the B branch.[24] During the 1950s, the MTA implemented service rationalizations on the Green Line B branch to address operational efficiencies and declining inner-city demand, including adjustments to headways and minor route alignments to reduce redundancies while maintaining core service levels. These changes were influenced by broader postwar suburbanization trends, as increasing automobile ownership and population shifts to outlying areas reduced ridership on urban streetcar lines by up to 20-30% in some Boston corridors during the decade. In response, early preservation efforts by the MTA emphasized retaining streetcar operations through modernization rather than full conversion to buses, helping to sustain the B branch's role as a vital link to institutions like Boston College despite competitive pressures from highways and suburban development.[19][3]MBTA era and modernization
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) was established on August 3, 1964, consolidating previous transit operations and marking the beginning of a new era for Boston's rail system, including what would become the Green Line B branch. On August 26, 1965, the MBTA officially assigned colors to its rapid transit lines, designating the branches serving the western suburbs—including the Boston College line—as the Green Line, with the B branch specifically identified for the Commonwealth Avenue route to Boston College. This rebranding streamlined operations and signage, building on the postwar foundation of President’s Conference Committee (PCC) streetcars that formed the core of the MBTA's initial fleet upon its formation.[3][25][26] Prior to full integration, the B branch underwent a notable abandonment: the Braves Field loop, a short spur used for special events since 1915, was fully discontinued on January 15, 1962, following years of declining use after the Boston Braves baseball team relocated to Milwaukee in 1953. During the 1970s and 1980s, the branch faced operational challenges, including major track rehabilitations; in June 1980, the entire segment from Boston College to Kenmore was shut down for reconstruction, with shuttle buses (Route 58) substituting service until January 1981. Snow-related disruptions were particularly acute on the surface-running B branch, as evidenced by the 1978 blizzard, which stranded PCC cars and halted operations for days due to heavy accumulations on medians and crossings. This period also saw a conceptual shift in terminology, with the Green Line increasingly referred to as a light rail system starting in the late 1970s, aligning with federal categorizations under the Urban Mass Transportation Administration's Light Rail Era initiatives.[27][28][29][30] Ridership on the Green Line, including the B branch, recovered and grew in the post-1970s oil crises, exceeding 300,000 daily riders systemwide by the late 1970s as commuters shifted from automobiles amid gas shortages and rising fuel costs. The 1990s and 2000s brought minor extensions, such as the temporary routing adjustments for security around Hanscom Air Force Base in 2001 and stabilized service patterns with new light rail vehicles phased in during the late 1980s. Frequency improvements included testing three-car trains in the early 1990s. To boost efficiency, four low-ridership stations—Fordham Road, Summit Avenue, Mount Hood Road, and Greycliff Road—were closed on April 20, 2004, reducing stops and shortening travel times along the outer branch.[3][28]Recent accessibility improvements
In October 2021, the Green Line B branch service was extended northward to Government Center station as part of preparations for the full Green Line Extension, restoring connectivity that had been limited since the station's closure in 2004.[8] A major accessibility milestone occurred on November 15, 2021, with the opening of the new Babcock Street and Amory Street stations, which consolidated the four previous stops at Babcock Street, Saint Paul Street, Pleasant Street, and Buick Street (the latter temporarily closed earlier in 2021 as part of accelerated construction). These fully accessible stations feature level boarding platforms, elevators, and improved lighting, enhancing usability for riders with disabilities along the Boston University corridor.[31] From 2022 to 2024, the MBTA undertook extensive trackwork on the B branch to support accessibility upgrades and system reliability, including full-access closures with bus substitutions; for instance, a 12-day shutdown from June 20 to July 1, 2022, replaced rail service between Boston College and Kenmore while crews upgraded tracks between Packard's Corner and Allston Street. Additional partial closures in 2024 and 2025 facilitated the installation of the Green Line Train Protection System, a safety enhancement that includes communications-based train control to prevent collisions and improve signal enforcement across the branch. Accelerated track replacement work on the B branch, covering over 2,800 feet between Griggs Street and Packard's Corner, was completed by August 2023.[32][33][34] In May 2024, the MBTA received a $67 million federal grant from the Federal Transit Administration to fund accessibility improvements at 14 ground-level stations on the B and C branches, targeting full ADA compliance with raised platforms, tactile warning strips, and wayfinding enhancements in Allston, Brighton, and Brookline. The project includes issuing a design-build contract in late 2025 to expedite construction. Complementing this, in November 2024, the MBTA announced detailed plans to upgrade 10 remaining inaccessible stops on the B branch—such as Harvard Avenue, Griggs Street, and Allston Street—with construction slated to begin in 2026 and 2027, prioritizing mini-high platforms and accessible pathways. As of January 2025, the MBTA held public meetings to advance the design-build procurement for these upgrades.[35][36][5]Stations
Current stations
The Green Line B branch operates 23 active stations between Government Center in downtown Boston and Boston College in the Brighton neighborhood, serving primarily the Fenway–Kenmore, Allston, and Brighton areas along Commonwealth Avenue. The branch transitions from underground subway stations in the central city to surface light rail stops in the suburbs, with most surface stations featuring side platforms embedded in the median of Commonwealth Avenue. West of Kenmore station, the right-of-way is shared briefly with the D branch before diverging. As of November 2025, seven surface-level stations are fully accessible, including recent upgrades at Boston University East, Harvard Avenue, Babcock Street (opened 2021), and Amory Street (opened 2021); the remaining 9 surface stations lack full accessibility and are targeted for reconstruction between 2025 and 2026 under the MBTA's Green Line accessibility program. As of November 2025, construction on the remaining stations is planned to begin in 2025 and complete by 2026, funded in part by a $67 million federal grant awarded in 2024.[1][4][36][37][35][38] The underground stations are all accessible via elevators. The following table lists the current stations from the inbound (Government Center) to outbound (Boston College) direction, including locations, opening years, and accessibility status. Most surface stations date to the original 1896 opening of the Commonwealth Avenue streetcar line by the West End Street Railway, while underground stations stem from the Tremont Street Subway's phased openings between 1897 and 1941; Kenmore opened with the 1932 Boylston Street Subway extension, and the two newest stations resulted from 2021 consolidations of four prior stops to enhance accessibility.[18][31][39]| Station | Location | Opened | Accessibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Government Center | Downtown Boston | 1898 (as Scollay Square; renamed 1967; renovated 1975 and 2016) | Yes |
| Park Street | Downtown Boston | 1898 | Yes |
| Boylston | Back Bay, Boston | 1898 | Yes |
| Arlington | Back Bay, Boston | 1921 | Yes |
| Copley | Back Bay, Boston | 1914 | Yes |
| Hynes Convention Center | Fenway–Kenmore, Boston | 1914 (as Auditorium; renamed 1965, then 1990 and 2006) | Yes |
| Kenmore | Fenway–Kenmore, Boston | 1932 | Yes (transfer to Orange Line and bus routes) |
| Blandford Street | Fenway, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Boston University East | Fenway, Boston | 1896 | Yes |
| Boston University Central | Allston, Boston | 1896 | Yes |
| Amory Street | Allston, Boston | 2021 | Yes |
| Babcock Street | Allston, Boston | 2021 | Yes |
| Packard's Corner | Allston, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Harvard Avenue | Allston, Boston | 1896 | Yes |
| Griggs Street | Allston, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Allston Street | Allston, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Warren Street | Allston, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Washington Street | Brighton, Boston | 1896 | Yes |
| Sutherland Road | Brighton, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Chiswick Road | Brighton, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Chestnut Hill Avenue | Brighton, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| South Street | Brighton, Boston | 1896 | No (planned reconstruction 2025–2026) |
| Boston College | Brighton, Boston | 1896 | Yes |