torontowest91
Active Member
Theres no way the city can survive of 3 years of this lane reduction.. traffic is insane...
Pretty much every east-west route is screwed, even steels is down to 1 lane for a few km's due to construction. My commute on the 401 doubled due to the lane closures :/Theres no way the city can survive of 3 years of this lane reduction.. traffic is insane...
Again, the “Toronto is different” argument.Stop acting like everything is a silver bullet. We need investment in all modes
I remember. Maybe it's time to revive this plan.The original plan was to end the Gardiner near Dufferin, run into the Front Street Extension just north of the Lakeshore tracks, and let it flow into downtown. In the east, the traffic would all go onto Richmond/Adelaide, and the Don Roadway.
Lakeshore would be a lot more functional then.
Toronto is fundamentally different tbh. If you're going east to west you have 2 options and both have severe capacity reductions right now. The "least subsidized" argument is BS since nobody seems to care about the capital budget! Are you seriously going to tell me the TTC gets less investment than YRT?Again, the “Toronto is different” argument.
And quite honestly, the city has spent so much more on cars than just about anything other than the police. Bikes, pedestrians and public transit end up last on the list. Hell, we have one of the least publicly subsidized public transit systems in North America. We expect the TTC and GO to pay 100% for themselves through fares, but scream until we’re blue in the face if we do much as suggest car drivers pay their fare share.
With heavier and bigger cars (electrics and SUVs), the maintenance costs and traffic levels go up, even if the number of drivers doesn’t change a single person. The selfish status quo of “cars dominate” needs to die. Appeasing drivers takes money away from programs that more desperately need it like public transit, housing and the homelessness. All so Joe X can drive every day from Burlington with little personal cost because home prices are better there. That’s a massive slap in the face there.
Remove the Gardiner and I guarantee there’ll be much more interest in (and money to put into) public transit and other modes.
And don’t give me the “but how will goods and services get into the city?”-trope. I have a number of truck drivers in my family and they’d all love to not have to deal with the current levels of cars that end up in the core. And frankly, commuter vehicles aren’t bringing anything but their drivers into the city.
Toronto is fundamentally different tbh. If you're going east to west you have 2 options and both have severe capacity reductions right now. The "least subsidized" argument is BS since nobody seems to care about the capital budget! Are you seriously going to tell me the TTC gets less investment than YRT?
We have some of the most expensive projects in the world going on, we've just gotten Onefare which will lead to tens of millions more in subsidies but lets not count that because it's inconvenient to the narrative.
Yes, because commercial transport trucks are the real problem here. Shake your head, man. A Kia EV9 weighs nearly 6000lbs. Ford F-150 lightning? almost 7000 lbs. the new electric Humvee, nearly 10000lbs. If the weight of the average car goes up by 25-40% AND they’re getting bigger in general, that is going to take a tangible toll on infrastructure.With heavier and bigger cars (electrics and SUVs), again false narrative. The biggest issue is trucks! Ontario has some of the highest weight limits in the continent.
And I will point out that the Gardiner was built to the standards of the mid 1950s, when the weight of the average standard sized sedan was about 3700lbs.The difference between a corolla and a model s is tenths of a percent vs one of those cement trucks dropping concrete all over the road.
We can't even remove crackheads and other people causing issues from the TTC, why do you think you'll get buy in before you at least make people feel safe? Half of Torontonians don't feel safe on the ttc according to a new poll.
It’s still a choice.It's funny people will scream all day one should use the GO or TTC to get to events but doesn't seem to comment on the crush load of passengers, drunk hooligans' etc when I reply. Consider why people ACTUALLY chose to drive and then work from there.
Since when did gaslighting someone for pointing out a real flaw in public transit become cool? It's pure statistics that less people feel safe than they used to. It's not useful to be ignorant to one side if you point out flaws to the other. It's like a pro-car person just ignoring anything bad you say about highways.Ahh, one of those “I’m all for public transit if it doesn’t cost me in taxes, create tolls, or take money from absolutely anything car-related”-people, huh?
This has always been my mentality towards transit. The goal should be to make transit enticing to drivers. Convenient, fast, safe, clean, etc.Consider why people ACTUALLY chose to drive and then work from there.
Just so you know, pavement engineers don't even count regular cars/SUVs/trucks when calculating pavement design thicknesses. It is ALL related to how many heavy trucks (tractor trailers/18 wheelers) are expected.Yes, because commercial transport trucks are the real problem here. Shake your head, man. A Kia EV9 weighs nearly 6000lbs. Ford F-150 lightning? almost 7000 lbs. the new electric Humvee, nearly 10000lbs. If the weight of the average car goes up by 25-40% AND they’re getting bigger in general, that is going to take a tangible toll on infrastructure.
When was the last time the commercial GVWR was changed?
And I will point out that the Gardiner was built to the standards of the mid 1950s, when the weight of the average standard sized sedan was about 3700lbs.
Curb weight of a (subcompact) Corolla? About 2950lbs. A model S by the way, ranges between 4500lbs-4700lbs
And those trucks and 18 wheels weight have not only increase weight wise, but the length of them. 40' was standard when the Gardiner open with 53' the norm today. There is a lot less of them since industries have moved out of the waterfront area, but what is there truck wise now is more than than what was there 50 years ago.Just so you know, pavement engineers don't even count regular cars/SUVs/trucks when calculating pavement design thicknesses. It is ALL related to how many heavy trucks (tractor trailers/18 wheelers) are expected.
We took the Go to and from Hamilton to stay with some friends for the eclipse. On the return trip there was also a Jays game and a Leafs game, so the trains were packed. It was fine.Induced demand also states removing lanes will lead traffic to go down but that didn't happen because it's not a magical rule. Toronto has the busiest stretch of highway in the world people are not driving if they have a reasonable alternative. have you EVER taken the go during an event? it's miserable! I don't take it because aside from all the drunk people coming out of a jays game or BMO field. The crowding is insane even when extra trains are brought in. The go lots in Toronto on lakeshore west have only a handful of spots as well. I've driven to long branch and mimico only to come across a full lot 4 hours before the game stated.
would you like me to link some photos of how full the train was during the eclipse? Also, I love equates standing shoulder to shoulder with strangers versus sitting in an air-conditioned car with your own music….We took the Go to and from Hamilton to stay with some friends for the eclipse. On the return trip there was also a Jays game and a Leafs game, so the trains were packed. It was fine.
My in-laws thought taking the Go was beneath them, so they drove. They sat on the Gardiner for two hours.
It's all about "time" for me. I'll sacrifice some comfort if the train gets back to Toronto quicker. And I say that as a frequent driver. In fact the only reason I drive so much is because in a lot of cases it's usually quicker than taking transit. Particularly when travelling between suburbs. Which is unfortunate.would you like me to link some photos of how full the train was during the eclipse? Also, I love equates standing shoulder to shoulder with strangers versus sitting in an air-conditioned car with your own music….




