The Gardiner serves mostly the downtown and it has a rail corridor running right next to it; even harder to justify spending the billions.
At least for the 401, it can be billed as serving the needs of (southern) Ontario (commercial) traffic.
Those escalators (shown next to the elevators) take you to an underground passage, which leads you to the parking garage. A nice way to avoid the often chaotic surface crossings.
Japan has a lot of private railway operators. Building up their stations as retail/commercial paradise means more income through rents and sales (some of them own department stores).
5-10 km/h is for roads in urban settings. It's been max +20km/h on rural/highways for a long time.
Interesting though, you see people regularly doing 5-10 mph over the limit on US interstates.
I am curious as to how many of the current 401 users should really be 407's, and vice versa. I think 407 being tolled has skewed the distribution and may have caused unnecessary traffic on roads leading north from the 401.
This isn't part of the station building. From looks of the plans, doesn't seem like it will be connected to the main building either - it only has stairs leading up to platforms.
For comparison, look at Union's Teamways.
Not that I disagree with you, but isn't the rationale for 40km/h (or any lowering of speed limits) remains the same for any vehicles on the same road? It's not like the LRT ROW will be separated by jaywalk-deterring barriers.
Based on observations/news/guesses:
Pusateri's - bankruptcy
Gap - that part of the mall will be demolished
O&B - to be replaced by a Japanese restaurant
New Balance - now at Fairview
Restoration Hardware - has their gallery at Yorkdale
Chapters - retail trend; the rumoured new location at...
Currently a solid green arrow indicates priority - left turn signal as an example.
What is required in your situation would be a flashing yellow right arrow (although not in MTO's handbook) - proceed with caution when clear.
My response was stemmed from a post commenting on the lack of groceries options at Union station in the late evening hours.
However, if you look at stores at the renovated station: LCBO, Sephora, Decathlon; a convenience store/mini grocer (that closes late) doesn't look out of place.
Not the best example I suppose, but I am sure I have seen convenience kiosks on platforms. I don't think they'd have any family size items either.
Now that I think about it, do they even sell large size drinks at station convenience stores...