Up until now, GO Transit’s Bombardier Transportation BiLevel cab cars have been identical in appearance to their companion trailer coaches, giving the appearance that the train is travelling “backwards” when operating cab car-forward, by some observer accounts. That is beginning to change.
In 2014, Metrolinx, the Ontario, Canada provincial agency that operates GO Transit, and Bombardier announced a new, more aerodynamic cab car design that includes a larger operator’s cab end and CEM (crash energy management) structural elements. Metrolinx ordered 67 units; the first of these entered service on Oct. 14, 2015. They’re being built at Bombardier’s Thunder Bay, Ontario, plant.
The new design is a radical departure from its flat-faced predecessor. Bombardier’s BiLevel cars, in service at many North American transit agencies, haven’t changed their basic appearance since they were originally designed by GO Transit and Hawker Siddeley Canada in the mid-1970s as a more efficient replacement for GO’s original single-level coaches and cab cars. Later coaches were manufactured by Urban Transportation Development Corporation/Can-Car and finally Bombardier, who now owns the designs. There are more than 700 BiLevels in service today; almost all have been built at Thunder Bay and Bombardier’s plant in Plattsburgh, N.Y.