RyanM12
New Member
30 minutes. 5 minute walk to St Clair West, 20 minutes to St Andrew, 5 minute walk to TD Tower.
|
|
|
I commute to Mississauga from East Etobicoke, and it's about 15 minutes if I leave by 7:30, but can get up to 45 minutes if I leave anytime after that. I can see how it could take 30 minutes if your friend left early enough. Also, if he/she set it for next week on Google, the time may not reflect actual rush-hour times as school will be out, and traffic isn't as bad.My best friend begins his commute from St. Clair and Dufferin to Streetsville (401/Creditview area) next week. Google Maps has 30-50 minutes during peak rush hour. 30 minutes seems awfully short, even with a reverse commute. Anyone have experience doing a similar commute?
With the combination of start of summer holiday season and the reopening of the lane on the Gardiner my commute this week (with the exception of one day when an accident bottled things up) has been ~15 minutes shorter than it was before the construction on the Gardiner ended.....gut feel is about half of that saving is due to the construction ending and half is the start of summer.With school out and the summer season upon us, are those who brave city traffic noticing shorter commute times? Personally, it seems to be a little bit better but the bottleneck locations are still bottlenecks and the more fluid sections of road are just a little more fluid than before. Overall, it's slightly better but not enough to warrant a celebration or anything!
Summer doldrums mean less traffic, shorter travel times
But extensive roadway construction cuts back on time savings.
https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/20...less-traffic-volume-shorter-travel-times.html
That reminded me of my summer jobs at Ontario Place in the early 1990s. I had to get from Warden and Kingston Road to work and back. And almost always it was much faster to simply ride my bicycle rather than take the trio of bus, subway and streetcar on the TTC, especially since one then had to walk to Ontario Place. Transit stinks in TO.Back when I used to work at the Loblaw's at Yonge and Glen Echo It could take anywhere from 1.5 to 2 Hours to commute from Scarborough. It would all depend if I could catch the 97C at Lawrence. Since that bus only runs once every half hour it decided whether I got to work on time or late. Luckily I worked overnight and my manager was really laid back. The 97C usually pulled in around 9:45pm and would leave around 10:00 and I would arrive at work around 10 minutes later. The Eglinton Crosstown would have been a god send while I worked there (It could easily shave at least 20-30 minutes off my commute).
For me the big problem was the fact there is only 1 major east-west line in Toronto (although going North-South isn't exactly fun either). Basically my commute ended with me on the SRT, BD and YUS both to and from work (unless I worked Saturday Night/Sunday Morning since then I would have to take the bus home). Having the EC would have made my life much simpler.That reminded me of my summer jobs at Ontario Place in the early 1990s. I had to get from Warden and Kingston Road to work and back. And almost always it was much faster to simply ride my bicycle rather than take the trio of bus, subway and streetcar on the TTC, especially since one then had to walk to Ontario Place. Transit stinks in TO.