There‘re few issues more likely to get the juices flowing than debates about the cost of transport projects. How is it, public transport advocates ask, subways can be built in Spain for $40 million per kilometre, but in Australia and the US its hundreds of millions of dollars?
Or why have new rail projects been built in Perth for a fraction of what governments say they will cost in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne? The Perth-to-Mandurah rail line has more than 70 kilometres of rail line, 10 stations and a tunnel into the city centre, and was constructed for a claimed cost of around $1.7 billion. Yet in Melbourne, for example, a three-kilometre rail extension from Epping to South Morang is costing about $560 million.
Americans are just as concerned as we are about why they’re paying more for new transport infrastructure than other countries. Alon Levy, at Pedestrian Observations, has put together a table of comparative costs of selected subway projects in the US, Europe and Asia, adjusted for differences in purchasing power (see exhibit). Clearly caution is required in interpreting the table, but some of the differences are extraordinary.
New York costs are the shocker, but look also at the proposed Crossrail project in London. The 22 kilometres of tunnelling required for the project is estimated to cost $1000 million per kilometre, whereas the 5.8-kilometre Sants-to-La Sagrera tunnel under central Barcelona completed last year cost only $40 million per kilometre. (Differences in the length of projects only have a minor relationship with per kilometre cost, at least for this sample — and if New York were removed on the argument it’s an outlier, there’d be no relationship).
Alon Levy doesn’t address in any detail why there are such large variations, but he points out that although labour costs are generally lower in developing countries like China, so is productivity. Further, while the high Japanese costs are probably due to strong property rights, Italian costs are much lower than US and UK costs despite weaker institutions.
Some of the reasons the cost of projects differs are shown by an analysis undertaken a few years ago by Toronto transit advocate Steve Munro. He analysed a report by transit agency Metrolinx comparing the cost of tunnelling for Toronto’s new 6.4-kilometre Sheppard Subway with that for the new 40.5-kilometre MetroSur line in Madrid. Madrid is a popular benchmark because it has literally built hundreds of kilometres of new heavy/light rail lines over the past 40 years.
After adjusting for differences in how land acquisition is costed, he says the respective costs of Sheppard and MetroSur were $142.5 million per kilometre and $87.1 million per kilometre. Both lines opened at the same time.
The key differences Munro identifies are:
- No environmental assessment was conducted on MetroSur
- The standards for fire safety are more stringent on Sheppard
- Stations are 50% longer on Sheppard
- Non-tunnel construction was undertaken 5×12 on Sheppard, compared to 7×24 on MetroSur
- Sheppard was built with dual tunnels, MetroSur with a single tunnel. Munro says “the trains in Madrid are smaller and require a smaller combined tunnel than would be the case in Toronto. Single tunnels eliminate the need for cut-and-cover box structures at crossovers and effectively reduce the scope of excavation at stations where these crossovers are located”.
- The use of cut-and-cover tunnelling on Sheppard was confined to stations, but it was used for 30% of MetroSur
- It was more expensive to tunnel through the glacial rocks and streams of Toronto than the compacted sand of Madrid
- MetroSur provided greater economies of scale as it was one of several projects. “Construction activities simply moved from one project to another rather than being reconstituted for each expansion, and more of the design was done during construction.”
- Sheppard has two large interchange stations over its 6.4 kilometre, whereas MetroSur has five interchanges over its 40.5 kilometres
Physical factors such as geology explain a lot of the difference between Sheppard and MetroSur, but so too do standards. Community expectations on a range of variables — for example, environmental standards, engineering and operating standards, safety standards, the level of citizen input — appear to be key drivers of higher costs in Toronto. It seems there is a very strong commitment in Madrid “to get on and get it done”.
Read the rest of this post on The Urbanist.
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