NoahB
Active Member
I got more than I asked for. haha
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third of Ottawa's population lives in the south end. Not Riverside south, but, south along the bank street corridor, Hunt Club, South Keys, Greenboro, Hunt Club Park, Blossom Park within the greenbelt,
I'm guessing Ottawan lives in South Keys, Riverside South or Barrhaven. So he'd be perfectly okay with a plan that got him LRT and left everyone from Orleans, Kanata and Stittsville riding the bus.
O'Brien's decision was undoubtedly controversial. There was a populist element to it. But in the end we got a system that was larger, fully grade separated and serves a higher proportion of existing transit users. I'm not going to shed too many tears for developers and speculators who lost out on their bets in Barrhaven and Riverside South.
I see the old LRT proposal as something akin to building the Scarborough RT. A set up for multi-decade long chaos and political fight. $100M is a small price to pay for avoiding that. Even if it made some folks unhappy.
I'm guessing Ottawan lives in South Keys, Riverside South or Barrhaven. So he'd be perfectly okay with a plan that got him LRT and left everyone from Orleans, Kanata and Stittsville riding the bus.
Everyone in Kanata and Stittsville still do ride the bus, now with a transfer.
Have you ever lived in Ottawa?
So which southern developer friendly 'hood do you live in that has you pining for the old plan? Barrhaven, Riverside South or South Keys?
I live in Toronto. But when in Ottawa, was in Westboro then Centretown. Just believe in good planning.
I tend to think of transit plans that actually favour existing transit users as good planning.
Exactly. The original LRT plan banked on creating TOD by developing corn fields. Nothing wrong with that per se, but I don't like the idea of prioritizing new riders from yet-to-be-developed areas when existing riders were packed to the gills on buses that were running on surface lanes through downtown that were beyond capacity. To add to that, that plan would have made those lanes worse by throwing LRT trains into the mix.
Where the original Transitway plan failed was that it placed the lowest capacity part of the entire system in the section that would see the highest ridership (downtown). As a result, the capacity of the entire Transitway network was hamstrung by the capacity of the lanes on Albert & Slater. Where the 'new' LRT plan succeeded was that it recognized that in order to properly build a network that would serve Ottawa for the next 50+ years, it needed to put in place a high capacity solution through downtown that the entire rest of the network could be built off of, and that wouldn't hamstring capacity. The price tag for this section would be high, so the reach would be limited, but once that infrastructure was in place the network would be set capacity-wise for decades to come.
Yes, the downtown choke point was the failure of the transitway network. But the north-south line would have alleviated in the short term by taking much of the route 97 buses off of it.
This would have bought time to build the east-west tunnel and lrt conversion essentially in the exact same timeline as did transpire. We lost not only money but a lot of time in planning with the cancellation.
Does no one remember how much ink was wasted after the cancellation on the ridiculous possibility of building a bus tunnel?
The reason the old plan placed the route on the surface was to save funding for a tunnel to be used for the inevitable east-west LRT line. It properly foresaw that once the east-west portion was was done, the south part of the City (the lower income portion with less political capital) would never be able to achieve a single seat ride downtown.
But the north-south line would have alleviated in the short term by taking much of the route 97 buses off of it. This would have bought time to build the east-west tunnel and lrt conversion essentially in the exact same timeline as did transpire.
Personally, I wish the City had spent the extra money and electrified the Trillium Line so it could be interlined with the Confederation Line.