superelevation
Active Member
Was waiting for your video! That was quick!
I should not that the link you have is weird. It goes through Facebook first.
Also the title is missing the "de" in the name.
Link worked fine for me!
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Was waiting for your video! That was quick!
I should not that the link you have is weird. It goes through Facebook first.
Also the title is missing the "de" in the name.
REM de l'EstIt took me to Facebook first.
it was supposed to be a highway but the plans never unfoldedWas at Notre Dame street this afternoon (Brrr...what a cold day!!) to drop off something and got to see the wide green belt that the REM de l'est is to be built on.
Curious to know - How did this area come to have such a wide green belt? The road is narrow for one that carries truck traffic entering in/getting out of the port of Montréal. I do get that the other side (Hochelaga) is pretty residential and green belt is a buffer. It is still too wide. Surprising that the green belt didn't used for road widening.
I understand the argument that you are putting forward about frequency, but the GO RER AKA GO Expansion is really not on the same level as the REM.
QC funds transit much better and always has.Leave REM vs RER debate aside for a minute. The biggest reason for this debate is that Montreal is already doing that while Toronto is "planning" to do that. Being a much larger city, Toronto should have been far ahead instead of playing a catch up.
Leave REM vs RER debate aside for a minute. The biggest reason for this debate is that Montreal is already doing that while Toronto is "planning" to do that. Being a much larger city, Toronto should have been far ahead instead of playing a catch up.
Don't know enough about Montreal to comment fully but first thoughts are:
1. Cool.
2. Seems weird to run a branch to the north-east rather than extending the metro up that way. Its basically serving as a metro extension, without actually being one and results in kind of a weird duplication of service and transfer point. Can the metro not run above ground?
3. Yikes @ 40m platforms
4. Yikes @ elevated through the downtown (Though, I've been to other cities like Bangkok where that isn't really all that bad, but its also not particularily pleasant)
5. Yikes @ the poor downtown connections to the existing metro (see point 4)
6. Ten billion seems a tad expensive for what they're getting, especially considering the short train lengths.
Anyways, its cool to see Montreal moving so quickly on these projects. There does seem to be some weird decision making going on (probably largely for $ reasons), but at a certain point you just have to accept that the perfect is the enemy of the good.
Agreed. It's truly impressive how fast the REM is expanding compared our glacial-paced projects here. Admittedly, it has made me jealous of Montreal and their bright future for transit for good reason.Yes, this pretty much sums up the situation. During today's REM de l'Est press conference, they made another announcement about an announcement (set for Q1 2021) during which they will apparently be unveiling the Laval extension of the REM. That extension's current stage is essentially where I would place most of the GTA's major transit projects. Sort of, kind of happening, maybe and only if the next municipal/provincial governments of the day don't cancel it because they didn't like that it was called an LRT, even though it was fully funded (Brampton and Scarborough, I'm looking at you).
Case in point: we were supposed to have electrification by 2017, but even if it were really going to happen, it was then delayed by the incoming PC government and is now based on a financial close that's of course, scheduled for after the 2022 provincial election.
And circling back to your point, yes, the GTA has a 65% larger population and is far wealthier than Metropolitan Montreal by any metric, and yet it cannot seem to unify, procure or luck out with a benevolent provincial government to manage building any new transit projects that aren't, well, dog#%^&. But it's okay, because one day in the mid 2020s, we'll be riding to Humber College on the new Finch West LRT, just as soon as the one person in that car makes his left turn ahead of us. Never mind the 5-6 more rapid transit lines that Toronto deserves, because Finch West is the project that we've all been waiting for.
Don't know enough about Montreal to comment fully but first thoughts are:
1. Cool.
2. Seems weird to run a branch to the north-east rather than extending the metro up that way. Its basically serving as a metro extension, without actually being one and results in kind of a weird duplication of service and transfer point. Can the metro not run above ground?
3. Yikes @ 40m platforms
4. Yikes @ elevated through the downtown (Though, I've been to other cities like Bangkok where that isn't really all that bad, but its also not particularily pleasant)
5. Yikes @ the poor downtown connections to the existing metro (see point 4)
6. Ten billion seems a tad expensive for what they're getting, especially considering the short train lengths.
Anyways, its cool to see Montreal moving so quickly on these projects. There does seem to be some weird decision making going on (probably largely for $ reasons), but at a certain point you just have to accept that the perfect is the enemy of the good.
The connection from Central to the terminus should be pretty simple. Hopefully the final station is underground, but I"m sure they could have some long escalators from elevated as well, if they are willing to sacrifice road lanes.There is an exit directly from central station on Rene-Levesque, I don't get why they always over engineer their message.
No idea how they're planning to get by with 40m trains, unless the frequency approaches that of the Canada Line.