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Wi-Fi coming to many underground Metro stations

WASHINGTON — Metro’s general manager announced plans Tuesday to expand Wi-Fi access to a majority of underground rail stations by the end of next year.

Paul Wiedefeld is pushing forward with his plan to install public Wi-Fi access at all underground stations.

Six stations were part of a pilot program to test the Wi-Fi access: Union Station; Gallery Place; Judiciary Square; Metro Center; Archives; and L’Enfant Plaza.

Now the plan is to expand the service to 60 percent of all underground stations, however Wi-Fi will not be available in the tunnels, Metro spokesman Richard Jordan said.

Work will begin in the summer of 2017 and every station will be online by 2018.

Metro hopes for temporary Dupont, Farragut North cooling fix this summer

WASHINGTON — Metro General Manager Paul Wiedefeld stood Monday next to the Metro chiller pumps sitting idle for a third straight year about 40 feet below Connecticut Avenue Northwest and said he hopes — but cannot promise — that a temporary fix for the cooling system for Dupont Circle and Farragut North will be in place at some point this summer. Pipes connecting the chiller vault to a cooling tower about 500 feet south on Connecticut Avenue and 13 stories up have been leaking since at least 2015. Metro believes those 500 feet of pipes are the only issue that has kept the stations from being cooled by the shared chiller plant since then.
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