accord1999
Active Member
During the peak AM rush, there's no change in the Eastern direction, you'll still have the same number of trains coming in as we do now. The difference will be that you'll also have ~22 full trains coming from the Western direction, maximizing the passenger capacity of 7th Ave from both direction instead of just from the east.That is the worst of all possible options short of not building it at all. Sorry if that's somehow offensive.... but holy good god that would be just terrible. Three lines using 7 Avenue.
It's not a matter of smarts, it's a matter of money.I'd actually probably rather them just not building it for decades until they can smarten the f*ck up and build it correctly.
And the problem is such a line would cost $9B+, enough to cripple the City. Pragmatic decisions with LRT have worked well for the City in the past; grandiose plans have led to white elephants in the US.We need to stop building as a city of 750 000 and start acting like the city of 2 million that we will be by the late 2020s/early 2030s.
With the current staging, we have the line that goes in the opposite direction of the primary mass of ridership in the NC (the area that supposedly needed rail in the middle-term), and a crippled river crossing and will cost $40M/year in new operating costs. I feel that this is not the best use of the $5B of funding that the City has.
Last edited: