TheTigerMaster
Superstar
I take your point about the v/c ratio charts. One issue may be that these appear have been normalised to the new vehicular capacity of each intersection, which may be lower than today. The study theorises that after LRT arrives, some proportion of existing traffic will gravitate to other routes. A different reduction is applied to different intersections. (This is described in Item 3 of each of Section 1, Appendixes III-VIII) I don't know if all traffic studies apply that premise. Taking them at face value, those v/c ratios are helpful to analyse the different scenarios or options within an intersection, but I'm not sure that they are apples to apples across the intersections. Or that they describe what will happen if traffic doesn't decline as projected.
A quote from the EA:
It should be noted that the assumptions used to generate these findings are conservative, since there were no adjustments made to the future traffic volumes based on an anticipated change in transportation modal split (shift from travelling by car to travelling on the Eglinton CLRT).
Page 27: http://thecrosstown.ca/sites/defaul...l-design-options-sections-2.1-through-2-6.pdf
So the EA isn't taking into account any drivers that will switch to transit. This is a smart move, as we've frequently seen that new transit infrastructure very often does not result in higher transit modal share.Page 27: http://thecrosstown.ca/sites/defaul...l-design-options-sections-2.1-through-2-6.pdf




