Yup - that one's bad, hence my note about continuing to Dunbloor and going north on it to get to Dundas. That's not the only bad move here though; there's a very quick merge from northbound Kipling onto eastbound Dundas which must have caused some fender benders over the years.When I worked in the area, I had the easiest route through the interchange: westbound on Dundas through the interchange to stay on Dundas towards Highway 427. I liked that there was no traffic signal until Aukland. However, there was one feature that I hated on Dundas eastbound through the interchange: the ramp from Kipling onto Dundas eastbound. I was driving the speed limit on Dundas at the interchange (60 km/h), when a driver who didn't yield drove slowly into my lane from the ramp. I braked hard and swerved into the other lane to avoid a collision. It was the worst-case scenario short of a collision.
After that incident, I drove more cautiously through the interchange knowing the higher risk of collisions and tried to use the right lane whenever driving by the ramp. But I saw the same thing happen to other drivers. A ramp requiring drivers to merge into the left lane on a curving road with a 60 km/h speed limit is hardly a good design. It's easy for drivers to miss approaching vehicles because of the curve. I look forward to seeing the new grid of streets and development to improve safety, and to create a sense of community and place in the area.
It is a pretty cool set of ramps in a fairly small space. It worked better way-back-when, when traffic was lighter. What it has done over the years, however, (and I know you're not arguing this), is stymie the development of a sub-centre for Etobicoke that Metro Plan called for decades ago. The railway cutting diagonally across Bloor between Islington and Kipling has always complicated that too. It will probably take a decade for a downtown to develop here, but I'm keen to see what we end up with. Here's hoping that the architecture of the new Etobicoke Civic Centre will be something handsome enough to inspire following buildings in the area to be more like it, and less like the Pemberton Port Royal junk to the immediate east.The more I look at it, the more I have to admire the work of genius that this interchange is. At least in those days.
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