blacksquirrels
Active Member
I am fairly confident that even if we demolished the Gardiner, what would be left would not look anything like these two streets.
haha. yeah that's a pretty safe bet. although it's hard to imagine it looking worse.
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I am fairly confident that even if we demolished the Gardiner, what would be left would not look anything like these two streets.
How are you going to do that when the Gardiner support will not allow you to that nor the current on ramps for it??honestly i'd be supportive of cutting Lakeshore to 4 lanes between Cherry and Yonge if the Gardiner is maintained. It's way over capacity as it is and doing that would result in a much easier access to the waterfront for pedestrians.
How are you going to do that when the Gardiner support will not allow you to that nor the current on ramps for it??
Remove all ramps between Bathurst and the Don River
You have the Spadina on Ramp, the soon to be remove Bay on Ramp, the Jarvis off ramp that will be remove once the Yonge ramp open and the close Jarvis on ramp.Actually, why not? At least between Yonge and the Don River.
Thinking of a configuration where most of Lakeshore East traffic is directed through Gardiner, while the surface level has a small road similar to QQ East, and that small road is not directly connected to Lakeshore W or E.
Maybe, too late for that.
I wouldn't be opposed to a sunken freeway east of Jarvis. Something like A15 in Montreal and the 401 ext. in Windsor. It could be only two lanes in each direction below grade straddled by another 2-3 one way Lakeshore lanes on each side. Parts of it can decked either initially or later on if it is cost prohibitive. All cross streets would not be impeded and could cross directly over the sunken freeway. Once it reaches the Don, it can rise back up to the surface and cross it with Lakeshore, kinda like how Lakeshore crosses the Humber. There would be very little to no enterance or exit ramps.
A smaller scale version of this:
View attachment 458989
Edit: I think this is more pedestrian friendly than a boulevard.
This on Infrastructure Agenda gives some 'interesting' facts and background. https://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2023/ie/comm/communicationfile-166270.pdf
One thing being that the Jarvis to Cherry section is 'completed". Though the top surface was certainly completed and was a huge cost, for reasons I cannot understand, they did NOT repair the bents in that section and some of them need concrete 'rehabilitation". Not as expensive as the road surface but hardly $0.
View attachment 461245
Those are future spending values.
Since it is complete, there is no future spending.
@DSC knows that.
What he's asserting is that the project is not in fact complete, as there is outstanding work to do on the bents (supporting concrete columns) should this section remain (not be demolished); that that work has not been accounted for, which skews the relative costs of the hybrid option vs the boulevard one. Whether or not that shift is material; or enough to change any votes, its fair to say that the figures as presented could be read as misleading.
Yes, the TTC are masters at putting forward a project without noting that IF it is approved there will be lots of other projects that will become essential! That is the kind of thing Councillors and Board members OUGHT to be looking for, but seldom seem to do so.True. Misinterpreted their comment.
So those columns imply: That spending is not currently funded, and that work will not be completed by 2032.
Either that, or Toronto Works has learned from TTC style accounting where necessary but "out-of-budget" items are hidden until it's either an emergency or a favourable political event occurs like a federal spending package looking for projects.