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Brightline connects you to Florida’s most exciting destinations. Enjoy comfortable, sustainable train service between Miami and Orlando — with stops in Aventura , Fort Lauderdale , Boca Raton , and West Palm Beach .
Brightline’s Orlando expansion is the newest transportation milestone for the company that has bold plans to transform high-speed rail in the U.S. on the West Coast, through Brightline West. Brightline West will be the nation’s first true high-speed rail network with fully electric trains operating at top speeds of 200 mph. Slated to break ...
With speeds up to 200 mph, Brightline West promises to drop riders in Rancho Cucamonga in suburban LA in just over 2 hours, with the Metrolink taking them the rest of the way. Source: Brightline. The bright lights of Las Vegas meet the Brightline, which bills itself as the country's first "true" high-speed rail line.
Schedule Update: Brightline to Conduct 110 MPH High Speed Testing in Brevard County Starting August 1 ; Brightline Ramps up Train Testing at Higher Speeds in Multiple Locations in Preparation for Opening to Orlando ; Brightline Brings Highly Skilled Jobs to Central Florida, Teams with Valencia College for Technical Program and Job Placement
The rail service enables passengers to travel from downtown Miami to downtown Fort Lauderdale in just 30 minutes, Miami to West Palm Beach in 60 minutes, and Miami to Orlando in approximately three hours. The project generated more than 10,000 jobs and $6.4bn in economic impact.
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A privately owned high-speed passenger train service launched Friday between Florida’s two biggest tourist hubs. The Brightline train is a $5 billion bet by owner Fortress Investment Group that eventually 8 million people annually will take the 3.5-hour, 235-mile (378-kilometer) trip between Miami and Orlando — about ...
Marta Lavandier—AP. The first big test of whether privately owned high-speed passenger train service can prosper in the United States will launch Friday when Florida’s Brightline begins running...
Brightline’s steady progress toward completing a 337-mile system—connecting Florida’s three largest population centers with hourly trains—is an exciting development that bodes well for the future of fast, frequent trains across America.
The first big test of whether privately owned high-speed passenger train service can prosper in the United States will launch Friday, Sept. 22, when Florida’s Brightline begins running trains between Miami and Orlando, reaching speeds of 125 mph (200 kph).
Brightline opens $6 billion line to Orlando, expands U.S. rail market. The only private operator of intercity passenger trains introduced higher-speed service in Florida, setting its sights...