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How about power to your beautiful heaters. Theyre not magically going to be in place.

Wires have been invented btw. And magical particles called 'electrons' run through them. And each station is hooked up to them. Unbelievable I know.

You still need to give them a design concept to work around and bid for the job.

Joking aside, each of these kinds of stations is never designed from scratch. Unless you pull in a Zaha Hadid-type architects to create the design concepts. even then, they could just pull the basic components from existing designs. Even then, the initial design concepts will never include things like wiring.


Please tell me what model they are using for the ect right now. I am interested to see the web page on it
Of course the Crosstown team didn't order their things from Alibaba... So I won't be able to pull a specific listing from there. (Also note that the page I shared were for bus stops.)
You fail to see my point (that these stations are not complex nor bespoke, therefore the outdoor station designs could have been easily improved for a marginal cost) and I have no idea how to deliver the message...
 
Yes I know that Doug has put the Eglinton West LRT extension underground for those ridiculous reasons. The post I was responding to seemed to claim that the Crosstown that is currently under construction was put underground by him.
Ohh ok. There was always an underground section on the crosstown because of how narrow some parts of Eglinton is. What Rob Ford wanted was the WHOLE thing or at least 70% of it underground. That faced a lot of backlash because of how expensive and senseless that would be when if you've been on Eglinton, you would know how wide the roads can get on certain parts and it would only make sense to put some of the LRT line above ground.
 
Yes I know that Doug has put the Eglinton West LRT extension underground for those ridiculous reasons. The post I was responding to seemed to claim that the Crosstown that is currently under construction was put underground by him.
No really that ridiculous now that we know TO wants to turn Eg West into a streetcar. I don't necessary agree it should be fully underground but some grade separation is needed which the city wants to avoid.
 
No really that ridiculous now that we know TO wants to turn Eg West into a streetcar. I don't necessary agree it should be fully underground but some grade separation is needed which the city wants to avoid.

I hate to say it too. But it really did 'prove him right all along.'

I wish the other councilors pushed for an elevated guideway for the eastern section. We could have had a Skytrain/REM-like system even using the Flexities.
 
I
I hate to say it too. But it really did 'prove him right all along.'

I wish the other councilors pushed for an elevated guideway for the eastern section. We could have had a Skytrain/REM-like system even using the Flexities.
I think the most realistic place to test elevated is Sheppard which would also facilitate a conversion of the subway.
 
I
I hate to say it too. But it really did 'prove him right all along.'

I wish the other councilors pushed for an elevated guideway for the eastern section. We could have had a Skytrain/REM-like system even using the Flexities.
I think the most realistic place to test elevated is Sheppard which would also facilitate a conversion of the subway.
 
No really that ridiculous now that we know TO wants to turn Eg West into a streetcar. I don't necessary agree it should be fully underground but some grade separation is needed which the city wants to avoid.

I'm not sure how it was going to be made into a streetcar, the estimated speed was close enough to the parallel section of Line 2. A few grade separations would be good though, such as Jane and Kipling, as well as a more direct route to the airport.
 
I'm not sure how it was going to be made into a streetcar, the estimated speed was close enough to the parallel section of Line 2. A few grade separations would be good though, such as Jane and Kipling, as well as a more direct route to the airport.
The city was planning on making each intersection an at-grade crossing. That along with the combination of the stupidity in their refusal to activate signal/transit priority would have significantly reduced speeds. It wouldn't have been as slow as a streetcar due to the stop-spacing, but it would've be damn near close (ie: more comparable to speeds on The Queensway ROW).
 
Around the airport, the LRT has to be either below grade, underground, or at the very least, below the flight path of any airplane coming in to land or taking off.

1085

From link.
 
I think the most realistic place to test elevated is Sheppard which would also facilitate a conversion of the subway.
Are LRVs generally heavier than HRVs? If so, it wouldn't be much of a conversion, but rather a vehicle change, from current HRVs to smaller ones. Maybe it can run on TTC gauge as well, so it can co-share yards with the other lines.
 
Around the airport, the LRT has to be either below grade, underground, or at the very least, below the flight path of any airplane coming in to land or taking off.

1085

From link.

That's fair. The currently planned alignment does have it elevate over the 401, but then moves back to the ground level at Convair Drive. (probably hitting a traffic signal here.
The flight path seems to be 450m north of Convair-Renforth intersection. So dipping before that is justified. They probably can probably still elevate until past the intersection. But I'm not sure if the slope will be too steep.

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^It’s only the *earth* mining that’s complete. The politicians‘ Photo Op mining has barely started.

- Paul
 

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