Listen Eglinton, I love you, but you kind of suck.
Outside of the small area around Yonge Eglinton and Oakwood/Eglinton, the street is totally void of street life. You'd think that with so many shops and density around, the street would be bustling with pedestrians, much like St Clair or Bloor Street, but for whatever reason Eglinton has always struggled to attract pedestrian traffic. Notice how pedestrian traffic drops precipitously once you travel one block west of Yonge. It desperately needs a St Clair style revitalization to inject some life into the area. The fact that this street, with all its destinations and all its density, struggles to attract pedestrians, tells me that there is something very wrong with its design.
There's no reason for the central section of Eglinton to have five lanes of traffic. I say this as someone that drives down Eglinton daily. Knock it down to four lanes (two through traffic + two parking), or even three lanes in areas, and widen the sidewalks. I don't care if it takes me longer to get to work. I'd also make the individual lanes narrower as well, to slow down traffic a bit. People (myself included) drive way faster on Eglinton than on St Clair or Bloor, which I suspect is part of the reason why it has such a tough time attracting pedestrian traffic. I swear typical driving speeds on the central section of Eglinton, outside of rush hour, are around 60 km/h, and you'll see drivers going as fast as 80 km/h. Drivers aren't going to slow down unless the street design forces them. Crossing Eglinton as a pedestrian, even before the crosstown, has always felt like a risky move. The road is designed as a suburban thoroughfare, even though it exists in an urban core.
The streetscape as it exists is barren and doesn't invite pedestrians to linger. If I'm walking on Eglinton, it's because I have a specific destination in mind; if I'm walking on Bloor or St Clair, it's probably because I'm going on an evening stroll. Street trees would definitely make the street feel more inviting for pedestrians. The lack of tree shadowing also makes Eglinton really annoying to walk along during the summer, with the sun blaring on pedestrians with absolutely no refuge. I'll typically walk on the southside of Eglinton on hot days to avoid the sun. The trees should be fairly large as well, to account for the relatively wide width of the street.
Also, nighttime lighting needs to be worked on. Large sections of the sidewalk get pretty damn dark at night. It doesn't exactly evoke a sense of safety.
The Crosstown is a once in a generation opportunity to redesign one of Toronto's major thoroughfares from the ground up. Eglinton can be a model of how all urban streets in Toronto should be built. Lets not drop the ball on this one