Citadis Spirit
| Citadis Spirit | |
|---|---|
A Citadis Spirit running on the Line 1 in Ottawa | |
| In service |
|
| Manufacturer | Alstom |
| Built at | |
| Family name | Citadis |
| Entered service |
|
| Number under construction | 95 |
| Number built | 38 |
| Capacity | 190–370 depending on configuration |
| Specifications | |
| Car length | 30 to 59 m (98 to 194 ft) depending on configuration |
| Width | 2,650 mm (8 ft 8+3⁄8 in) |
| Height | 3,600 mm (11 ft 9+3⁄4 in) |
| Doors | 4–9 per side depending on configuration |
| Articulated sections | 3–5 depending on configuration |
| Wheel diameter | 640–570 mm (25–22 in) (new–worn) |
| Wheelbase | 1.9 m (6 ft 3 in) |
| Maximum speed | 105 km/h (65 mph) |
| Traction motors | Alstom 4LMA 1648 130 kW (170 hp) |
| Electric systems | Overhead line, 750 V DC/1,500 V DC |
| Current collection | Pantograph |
| Bogies | Alstom Iponam |
| Minimum turning radius | 25 metres (82 ft) |
| Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
The Citadis Spirit is a low-floor articulated light rail vehicle originally developed by Alstom for Ottawa's O-Train. It is marketed as part of its Citadis family, which includes other models of light rail vehicles, and is based on the Citadis Dualis, and, like the Dualis, with pivoting bogies.
The Citadis Spirit is designed for both city-centre and suburban operation. It is designed with suspended articulations, similar to most North American low-floor LRVs. The vehicle can be used for both street-running allowing boarding from street or curb, and high-speed travel up to 105 km/h (65 mph).
The first order for the Citadis Spirit came from the City of Ottawa government for use on the new Confederation Line opened in September 2019. The second order came from the Government of Ontario's Metrolinx transit agency for Line 6 of the Toronto subway, which opened in 2025.