Delivery Plan

In 2012 BART chose Bombardier Transit Corporation (now Alstom) to build BART's Fleet of the Future—a complex design, engineering, supply chain, and assembly process. In January 2018, the first ten train cars began service following safety and reliability testing, and regulatory approval. 

Fleet of the Future train

 

Design, Test and Manufacture

The process of designing and manufacturing new BART train cars is long and includes many phases. The first step was to design the new train cars from the ground up. BART is a unique rail system that has the lightest train car for its size in the United States. While this makes BART cars the most efficient, it also means that a typical off-the-shelf solution does not meet the needs of the Bay Area.

The next step of the process was the manufacture and test of the equipment for installation on the new trains. Lab tests occurred on all internal systems including the propulsion systems, brakes, motors, and heating and cooling systems to make sure they are capable of performing to the highest standards.

In 2017, BART tested 10 pilot cars on BART test tracks and throughout the BART system to ensure safety and reliability, and to secure approval from the California Public Utilities Commission to run passenger service. Much of the testing was outside of normal operating hours. During this thorough qualification and testing phase, BART and Bombardier verified and validated the train car performance prior to full-scale manufacturing.

Upon successful completion of initial testing, these pilot cars were put into revenue service. 

Update: BART resumes accepting new cars (2/10/22)

BART is once again accepting deliveries of new Fleet of the Future rail cars now that some major reliability issues have been sufficiently resolved by the manufacturer.

During the pause in deliveries, BART and the manufacturer have made necessary upgrades and modifications. These changes, along with several software improvements, have significantly improved the overall performance of the new cars.

While stringent contractual reliability requirements have not yet been fully met, the progress is at a stage where BART has resumed accepting new deliveries.

Update: Reliability work continues (6/10/21)

BART continues to work with the manufacturer of the Fleet of the Future to ensure the new rail cars meet the required standard of reliability. BART stopped accepting deliveries of new cars on January 8, 2021 due to poor reliability performance and car availability issues related to wheel flats.

One of the main contributors to poor reliability was the software in the on-board automatic train control system. The software was causing the new cars to routinely stop while in service, resulting in a five-to-ten-minute delay.

Engineers have revised the software and completed installation. The early results show an increase in reliability. To date, the cars have operated 42,000 hours without a recurrence of one of the most troublesome issues.

Additional software updates are underway. An update to one system installed in March has improved the performance of that system by 61%. Nonetheless, more software updates are required to improve reliability.

Car availability also remains a concern. The new cars have shown a tendency to develop flat spots on the wheels in rainy conditions. When this occurs, cars are removed from service to resurface the wheels, meaning fewer cars are available for passenger service.

The issues discussed above do not impact the safety of the cars currently accepted for service.

Update: BART will temporarily stop accepting new cars (12/29/20)

BART will temporarily stop accepting delivery of new Fleet of the Future (FOTF) rail cars beginning January 8, 2021 to allow the manufacturer, Bombardier Transportation, the time to take steps to improve the cars’ reliability and availability, and to alleviate rail car storage constraints at BART’s maintenance yards.

One of the issues to be resolved is related to software in the on-board automatic train control system. The new cars routinely stop while in service and will not move until after the Train Operator reboots the system, resulting in a five-to-ten-minute delay.

In addition, when trains are stopping under wet or rainy conditions, the cars’ wheels can develop flat spots.  When this occurs, the cars need to be removed from service so that the wheels can be resurfaced.

While neither issue impacts the safety of existing FOTF cars currently in service, they can impact service reliability and car availability.

BART is expected to have 290 FOTF cars by January 8th and, combined with 618 legacy cars, BART will be required to retire legacy cars to create room for additional FOTF cars. Given the pause in delivery of new cars, which is expected to last a minimum of twelve weeks, BART will decommission legacy cars at a slower rate.

BART is committed to supporting Bombardier Transportation as they work to address issues that impact the reliability and availability of the FOTF, and to implement pragmatic solutions that will provide the highest levels of performance for the new cars.

Update: Fleet of the Future cars to be assembled in the Bay Area (06/14/19)

On June 14, 2019 Bombardier Transportation announced it is opening a rail car assembly site in Pittsburg, California to assemble BART’s Fleet of the Future rail cars.  This work, which is currently taking place in upstate New York, will be transferred to the Bay Area over the coming months.

The new facility is expected to employ local workers, contribute tax dollars to the local economy and, thanks to its proximity to BART’s Hayward Test Track, greatly reduce the vehicle emissions needed to transport the cars to BART property.

Why Bombardier?

After a year-long evaluation process in which two separate and independent teams evaluated more than 500 aspects of the three final bids, the independent teams selected Bombardier based on its technical capabilities and low cost. Bombardier's bid came in 12% lower than the next least expensive bid, saving BART $184 million—equivalent to the cost of 104 train cars.

Buy America

The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) requires that domestic components account for at least 60% of the total cost of all components used to build new transit vehicles and that final assembly take place in the USA.

In 2011 California Governor Jerry Brown signed a BART-sponsored bill that authorizes California public agencies to establish bid preferences for train car proposals that exceed minimum federal requirements for domestic content. BART is proud to have been the first transit agency in the nation to give "extra credit" to bids that exceed the federal 60% domestic content requirement. As a result, the new cars will meet a 66% Buy America standard.

Companies in the United States are supplying many of the materials and parts used in the train cars, including the propulsion system, the brakes, the raw aluminum used for the body, and much of the electrical wiring.

Final assembly of the new train cars is taking place in New York State, but will be transferred to the Bay Area over the coming months. (Federal contracting provisions prohibit BART from placing any requirements on where in the U.S. assembly takes place or parts are manufactured.)

In conjunction with BART's new train cars, hundreds of new American assembly jobs have been created. Here locally, Bay Area jobs support the design, commissioning, warranty and other activities associated with the project.

Project Timeline

Fleet of the Future Delivery Timeline

 

  • BART's 2009 Request for Proposal was a formal request for qualified companies to submit a comprehensive bid for the new train cars. The RFP provided detailed technical and commercial requirements.
  • Proposals from competing companies were submitted to BART for review in 2010. Over the course of the year BART undertook an evaluation and clarification process with each of the bidders that culminated in the BART issued Request for Best and Final Offers (BAFO) in 2011.
  • In early 2012 BART received and evaluated all BAFO proposals. Later that year the BART Board of Directors voted unanimously to choose Bombardier Transit Corporation as the car builder for BART's Fleet of the Future.
  • After the car builder selection, a detailed design process began, incorporating customer feedback.
  • In Summer 2013, during the design process, BART brought a full scale, half-car wooden model and prototype seats to the Bay Area for customers to try out and provide feedback. The feedback was used to refine the design.
  • In Spring 2014, over 17,000 customers tried out a final full-scale, half-car model of the new train car at events around the Bay Area. The feedback was used to make final design modifications.
  • In 2017 ten pilot cars were comprehensively tested on the BART system.
  • In January 2018, the first 10-car train began revenue service. 
  • As of May 2019, BART has on 10-car train available on each transbay BART line, plus an 8-car train on the Richmond/Warm Springs route.
  • Over the next several years, production will ramp up to a rate of 16 new cars per month. Current forecast indicates the delivery of new train cars completed in 2024, bringing BART's new fleet to a total of 775 train cars. (Some older cars will continue to remain in service.)
  • BART's goal is to ultimately obtain enough funding to increase the fleet to 1,200 new train cars to meet growing demand and relieve crowding.
  • On Nov 15, 2018, the BART Board of Directors unanimously authorized the negotiation for sole source procurement of additional train cars from Bombardier beyond the original contract of 775 cars, with options allowing up to a total of 1,200 new cars.
  • On January 8, 2021, BART temporarily stopped accepting delivery of new Fleet of the Future (FOTF) rail cars to allow the manufacturer, the time to take steps to improve the cars’ reliability and availability, and to alleviate rail car storage constraints at BART’s maintenance yards.
  • In February 2022, BART resumed accepting deliveries of new Fleet of the Future rail cars following some major reliability issue sufficiently resolved by the manufacturer. During the pause in deliveries, BART and the manufacturer have made necessary upgrades and modifications. These changes, along with several software improvements, have significantly improved the overall performance of the new cars.

Project Funding

In 2012 The BART Board of Directors awarded a contract to Bombardier Transit Corporation for the design and construction of BART’s Fleet of the Future train cars. In May 2012 the Board gave the go ahead for 410 new cars, and in November 2013 they voted to approve a contract for an additional 365 state-of-the-art cars.

Cost of project to replace BART’s legacy fleet of 669 cars with 775 new Fleet of the Future cars:
$2.5 Billion

Multiple funding sources include:

  • FTA
  • RM2
  • BART
  • Bay Area bridge tolls
  • LCTOP cap & trade
  • State Prop 1A High Speed Rail 
  • VTA

On November 15, 2018 the BART Board approved a sole source procurement with Bombardier of up to 425 railcars for an amount not to exceed $1.167 Billion to increase the overall size of the District’s next generation fleet of cars to 1,200. On September 20, 2020, The District signed a notice to award for a base contract of 100 (of the 425) vehicles to Bombardier Transportation Inc. for $258,535,000.

  •   306—Core Capacity
  •   60—VTA Phase 2
  •   59—Future BART capacity needs

Funding for this procurement includes:

Allocated

  • FY 2015 Capital Allocations 
  • FY2018 FTA Capital Investment Grant
  • FY2018 State of California Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program (TIRCP)

Committed

  • MTC
  • Regional Measure 3
  • FTA Capital Investment Grants
  • State of California Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program (TIRCP)

Planned

  • Local Sources
  • BART Capital Allocations