Kitchener-Waterloo

Metrolinx buys 53-km track section, touts Kitchener GO upgrades

Metrolinx has purchased a 53-km section of CN rail line from Kitchener to Georgetown, as well as land in Kitchener for a future layover facility.
An updated map from Metrolinx shows the portion of the rail line between Kitchener and Georgetown now owned by the provincial transit authority, to be used to increase GO Transit Service. (Metrolinx)

Provincial transportation agency Metrolinx has purchased a 53-kilometre section of CN rail track from Kitchener to Georgetown, as well as land in Kitchener for a future layover facility. 

The purchase is the next step towards building two-way, all-day GO train service between Kitchener and Toronto. 

The section in question runs from Georgetown to Kitchener and is used by GO trains on the Kitchener line. CN Rail said in a release it sold the track for $76 million.

MPP Daiene Vernile said the purchase allows the Metrolinx to make upgrades to the existing track and control operations.

"Along the track now, we are having to move aside when you have cargo moving along," she said at a Wednesday announcement at the Kitchener train station.

"Now that Metrolinx has acquired ... the track between here and Georgetown, it is going to be the passenger trains that take priority."

A section of the Kitchener line between Bramalea and Georgetown is still owned by CN, however.

Metrolinx couldn't say when additional track purchases, including the stretch between Georgetown and Bramalea would be made. The agency has committed to doubling current service frequency between Toronto and Kitchener by 2016.

It has also said it will bring all-day two-way GO service to the corridor, although there is still no firm date for when that might be implemented.