Wednesday, January 15, 2025

No. 10 Most Read Story of 2024: Bringing back passenger rail service to Wilmington

In the spring, North Carolina Department of Transportation released the Southeastern North Carolina Passenger Rail Feasibility Study. It indicated that, since 2005, costs have risen significantly to re-establish passenger rail between Wilmington and Raleigh. (Courtesy photo)

WILMINGTON — Port City Daily publishes thousands of stories annually and during the last week of the year, the outlet counts down the top 10 most popular read, according to analytics.

Coming in number 10 in 2024: the possibility of bringing back passenger rail service to the greater Wilmington region.

The topic has been discussed for years and in the spring, North Carolina Department of Transportation released the Southeastern North Carolina Passenger Rail Feasibility Study. It indicated that, since 2005, costs have risen significantly to re-establish passenger rail between Wilmington and Raleigh.

Once slated to be between $65 and $185 million, today it would run upward of $810 million. Estimated Wilmington riders rose from 45,000 two decades ago to 80,000 or more as well. 

A Wilmington-to-Raleigh route would include stops in Clayton, Selma, Goldsboro and Wilmington. At least two more locations would be hashed out in a detailed service plan, decided upon further along in the process. 

A new station and tracks would need to be constructed in Wilmington, which the Wilmington Urban Area Metropolitan Planning Organization has been discussing in recent years. It would be built near the new multimodal transportation station and WMPO headquarters — the latter of which is under construction at 525 N. 4th St. in the Brooklyn Arts District. These costs are included in the study’s budget, though upfit for other stops on the eastern route are not.

Trains are expected to run 79 miles per hour and the study looked at potentially three round trips a day, with the goal to first put two in place and add in a third; frequencies will be adjusted as service becomes operational. It could be up and running in the next decade if funding is procured. 

As of April, NCDOT pursued federal funding and already submitted an application to the Federal Railroad Administration for the Raleigh-to-Wilmington and Raleigh-to-Fayetteville corridors to be included in the newly created Corridor Identification and Development Program (CID); it funds intercity passenger rail.

According to NCDOT, it’s chosen Stantec as the primary phase 1 consultant.

“We anticipate completing phase 1 for the Corridor Identification and Development program in late 2025,” Liz Macam, communications officer for the rail and integrated mobility divisions, said.

Here is the original story, published earlier this year:


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Shea Carver
Shea Carver
Shea Carver is the editor in chief at Port City Daily. A UNCW alumna, Shea worked in the print media business in Wilmington for 22 years before joining the PCD team in October 2020. She specializes in arts coverage — music, film, literature, theatre — the dining scene, and can often be tapped on where to go, what to do and who to see in Wilmington. When she isn’t hanging with her pup, Shadow Wolf, tending the garden or spinning vinyl, she’s attending concerts and live theater.

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