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http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/thread...l-to-toronto-island.25923/reply?quote=1149981A cable car would be a great option that's cheaper than a tunnel. Mont Tremblant got theirs for only $7 million years ago. I'd guesstimate closer to $20M today, based on the Don Valley Gondola proposal.
No offence, but it always amazes me how Canadians find a way to doubt the feasibility of just about anything because of the weather. Cable cars and gondolas are primarily used to access mountains and ski resorts year round. Massive temperature swings are what they're designed for. Lake Louise for example has seen everything from 34 degrees to -53. It has a gondola to near the summit.I would be more concerned that it would work reliably in the massive temperature range in Toronto over the course of a year.
Two workers have been taken to hospital — one with life-threatening injuries — after a cable snapped on the Burlington Lift Bridge.
Halton Police said the incident happened at 1:30 p.m. at Beach Boulevard and Eastport Drive.
Police spokesman Barry Malciw said three contractors were near the top of the bridge on scaffolding, installing an electrical wire. Malciw said it wasn't clear whether the wire snapped and struck them or whether they fell as a result of the wire snapping.
One of the workers sustained no injuries, one had minor injuries and the third was knocked unconscious.
The two injured were both transported to hospital -- the one with minor injuries to Burlington's Joseph Brant, and the other to Hamilton General.
Halton Police constable Vince Mulholland was a first responder when the incident occurred. He described the scene as an "industrial accident."
The Ministry of Labour has been called to investigate.
The bridge is operated by Public Works and Government Services Canada.
Eastport Drive was closed in both directions for a few hours but has now been reopened.
The Burlington Lift Bridge, built in the 1960s, sits at the Lake Ontario entrance to Hamilton Harbour and lifts to allow both Great Lakes freighters and pleasure craft passage in and out of the harbour. The bridge lifts vertically up to 33 metres.
Of course, and to add to W.K. Lis's post above, every type of technology has breakdowns. Nothing is 100% infallible. But still, gondolas are designed to handle some of the most extreme weather around. They're built to access rugged, often high alpine terrain with winds and temperature swings well beyond what we get in Toronto. Gondola breakdowns make the news because they're so rare.@MisterF cable cars aren't infallible either http://www.standard.co.uk/news/tran...ondons-new-cable-car-breaks-down-7976314.html
(Also an Eastern Gap bridge would likely have to be openable, which adds to initial and ongoing costs)