TheTigerMaster
Superstar
Construction pricing has been increasing rapidly. I've seen quotations from the same suppliers for the same items rise 15 - 30% since 2012.
Any thoughts on the reasons for the increase?
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Construction pricing has been increasing rapidly. I've seen quotations from the same suppliers for the same items rise 15 - 30% since 2012.
You know that the City of Toronto doesn't own the hydro corridor, right?
Construction pricing has been increasing rapidly. I've seen quotations from the same suppliers for the same items rise 15 - 30% since 2012.
A lot of the increase apparently has to do with updated building code and safety regulations.
That made sense when commodity prices were high and there was an oil boom in Alberta sucking away construction workers. I would think prices would be lower now.
Actually I would propose that Toronto transit planning be based on demand and density, not suburban identity politics. Of course that'll never happen because, as RoFo taught us, folks deserve subways (except of course where ridership would actually justify the astronomical cost).
If that's the case, anybody should be seriously be worried about the DRL. This is not to slam the DRL. This is to point out that either costs on this line are inflated or we're doing something so wrong that it might be jeopardizing a good deal of transit building in this city. I hope to see a revised lower estimate on the SSE. It'll bolster confidence for building the DRL down the line.
Labour cost increase at 3% yearly if not more.Any thoughts on the reasons for the increase?
If this isn't a problem for the SSE, I don't see why it would be a problem for the RL. Both will be moving forward at about the same time.
There must be solutions to this problem though...
Most Western European cities are building transit at a much lower cost, sometimes through labour and construction companies sourced from China. If the domestic marketplace is pricing itself out of the running, then we shouldn't have a problem sourcing labour elsewhere. Free market rules, right? Or not.
There must be solutions to this problem though...
Most Western European cities are building transit at a much lower cost, sometimes through labour and construction companies sourced from China. If the domestic marketplace is pricing itself out of the running, then we shouldn't have a problem sourcing labour elsewhere. Free market rules, right? Or not.
I can't wait to ride the full DRL on my deathbed! I wonder if they'd allow my gurney on the train?Or look at continuous phased construction. For example, we'd consider slow annual expansion of the DRL, maybe 1-2 stations a year....
Because if a ~7km line with one stop is $2.6 billion, then we're probably woefully underestimating the cost of DRL phase one. Let alone the whole DRL (West and East).
Or look at continuous phased construction. For example, we'd consider slow annual expansion of the DRL, maybe 1-2 stations a year....
There must be solutions to this problem though...
Most Western European cities are building transit at a much lower cost, sometimes through labour and construction companies sourced from China. If the domestic marketplace is pricing itself out of the running, then we shouldn't have a problem sourcing labour elsewhere. Free market rules, right? Or not.