Johnny Au
Superstar
...and has local bus service as well with Route 109 RaneePretty much a local road, although wider than many other local roads.
...and has local bus service as well with Route 109 RaneePretty much a local road, although wider than many other local roads.
Actually the allen is faster. My wife and I use it daily. At least it's better than dufferin.
I don't drive there very often; a few times I did, northbound Allen was pretty fast and not congested. Definitely faster than Dufferin or Bathurst.
Southbound, the fastest option is probably taking Allen to Lawrence, then exiting at Lawrence and bypassing the Eglinton & Allen intersection (that one is always filled, even off-peak and was so even before the LRT construction started).
Yes, but it would take much longer to use those parallel roads if the Allen was closed, since all the current traffic on the Allen would be forced to those streets??During rush hour, Allen Road is no faster than parallel roads, such as Avenue Road or Bathurst Street. In fact, its often slower than the latter two roads.
Yes, but it would take much longer to use those parallel roads if the Allen was closed, since all the current traffic on the Allen would be forced to those streets??
Also, who uses the same road everyday in the age of Waze.
and difficult to cross Marlee on foot or by car at intersections because there are no stops signs or stop lights till you get to Glencarin or maybe Glen ParkPretty much a local road, although wider than many other local roads.
and difficult to cross Marlee on foot or by car at intersections because there are no stops signs or stop lights till you get to Glencarin or maybe Glen ParkPretty much a local road, although wider than many other local roads.
I'm curious, where have we seen that in Toronto in the past?I suspect it would be slower, but it's hard to say with induced demand being a factor. As we've seen in the past, freeway removals often cause the demand to evaporate, with nominal impact on travel times.
I'm not convinced that Allen Road has had a significant benefit to commutes, beyond making it possible to fit more cars on the road (and its questionable if thats truly a benefit).
I'm curious, where have we seen that in Toronto in the past?
Indeed. Toronto is a relic in many respects:I was talking about other cities. Toronto has only had one past freeway removal (Gardiner east of DVP), but few people used it in the first place so it’s a poor example.
Indeed. Toronto is a relic in many respects:
Six Freeway Removals That Changed Their Cities Forever - Gizmodo
Highway Removal – Streetsblog New York City
Removing Freeways - Restoring Cities - Preservation Institute
From the latter link above:
New York, NY
West Side Highway
New York’s West Side Highway was the first elevated highway to be built, with construction beginning in the 1920s. And it was the first elevated highway to collapse, decaying so badly that it had to be closed permanently in the 1970s.
When the West Side Highway was closed in 1973, 53 percent of the traffic that had used this highway disappeared, dramatic proof that building freeways generates traffic and that removing freeways reduces traffic. Yet there was tremendous pressure to replace this highway with a bigger and better freeway named Westway.
The plan was defeated after a David versus Goliath struggle that lasted for more than a decade, with a group of west-side residents, community boards, and environmentalists fighting the entire New York political establishment, including New York city’s mayor and New York state’s governor and two senators.
Now, there is a park, pedestrian promenade, and bicycle path along the Hudson River on Manhattan’s west side - public places that are real amenities for Manhattan on land that used to be blighted by an elevated freeway.
[...]
Prequel to Toronto? Portends what could/should happen here? Not at this rate...
Actually the allen is faster. My wife and I use it daily. At least it's better than dufferin.
The MPP for Etobicoke Centre posted a statement on October 10, 2017 stating he's asking Metrolinx and the City to "tunnel" the LRT.
I can't recall if there is a specific thread for the Crosstown West extension so apologies if this should be somewhere else.
The MPP for Etobicoke Centre posted a statement on October 10, 2017 stating he's asking Metrolinx and the City to "tunnel" the LRT.




