Brightline West
A construction project located in Las Vegas.
A Bit About Brightline West
For decades, “true high-speed rail in America” has been a phrase that ended in disappointment. Brightline West is the project trying to end it. The privately led system will run 218 miles between Las Vegas and Rancho Cucamonga in suburban Los Angeles, with trains designed for 200 mph and an alignment that sits, for most of its length, in the median of Interstate 15. Major construction ramped up in 2026, and Brightline is targeting passenger service before the end of the decade.
Project Scope
The route connects four stations: a flagship terminal in Las Vegas, then Victor Valley, Hesperia, and a western terminus at Rancho Cucamonga, where riders transfer to Metrolink for the run into downtown LA. Siemens Mobility is building the trainsets, fully electric, with no diesel anywhere in the system. Running the line down the I-15 median is the move that makes the economics work: the right-of-way already exists and is publicly held, which sidesteps the land-assembly fights that have stalled other U.S. rail ambitions for years.
The capital stack is roughly $12 billion, blending private financing with a $3 billion federal grant from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. HNTB leads the design, with Atlas Technical Consultants handling geotechnical work along the corridor. Crews spent the lead-up to construction on borings, utility potholing, and survey work across the full alignment before heavier civil work began in the median.
Why It Matters
The Las Vegas-to-Southern California corridor is one of the most heavily driven leisure routes in the country, and on a bad weekend the I-15 turns into a parking lot. A two-hour electric train ride against a four-hour-plus drive is a genuine alternative, not a novelty. If the ridership shows up, Brightline West becomes the proof case that high-speed rail can be financed and built in the U.S. without a generation-long public fight.
The risk is in the funding and the schedule, not the engineering. Brightline has spent much of 2026 working to close the financing it needs, and a project this size carries real exposure to cost and timeline slippage. But the median strategy and the existing demand give it a cleaner shot than anything that’s come before it. If it opens on anything close to plan, every other U.S. corridor will be measured against it.
Project Team & Details
| Developer | Brightline Holdings |
|---|---|
| Owner / Client | Brightline West |
| Consultants | HNTB (Lead Design) Atlas Technical Consultants (Geotechnical) |
| Major Subcontractors | Siemens Mobility (Trainsets) |
| Status | Under Construction |
| Delivery Method | Design-Build |
| Funding Source | Public-Private Partnership (P3) |
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More images from Brightline West
Project Team & Details
| Developer | Brightline Holdings |
|---|---|
| Owner / Client | Brightline West |
| Consultants | HNTB (Lead Design) Atlas Technical Consultants (Geotechnical) |
| Major Subcontractors | Siemens Mobility (Trainsets) |
| Status | Under Construction |
| Delivery Method | Design-Build |
| Funding Source | Public-Private Partnership (P3) |

