I understand this.. but it's really frustrating that it takes THIS long just to build a project like this. On top of this, our costs seem to balloon everytime transit is built here in the city and makes me wonder if we could possibly outsource our construction companies or something because it's getting out of hand.
The reasons why this project is taking so long are pretty clear and were all design features that were baked in at the beginning.
a) It’s deep
b) There are a couple of serious engineering challenges thanks to having to underpin Line 1 crossings without interrupting Line 1 service
c) The fire, accessibility, telecom, power supply, and control specs exceed what was ever required before - this is not your Dad’s 1966 model subway
d) It’s a “system” build (as opposed to incrementally adding new station on the end of an existing line to match a previously proven design standard)
One can certainly ask why we threw in all the bells and whistles, but once we did that, it wasn’t going to be cheap or easy. And most of those bells and whistles are good things that we would demand in any new line. Standards have legitimately risen since previous projects.
In the end, the execution has been pretty effective and (as big projects go) pretty close to cost projection. Compared to TYSSE - no fatalities, no major subcontractor defaults, no lengthy work stoppages due to bad design (the York Library fiasco).
The benchmark for comparison ought to be - what would the long term cost of building this system be, versus having built the previous design (the one Harris cancelled) and then iteratively brought it to the same standard. It might have been built cheaper and faster as a 1990s standard subway, but we would already be retrofitting things (ATC, cellular, fire, accessibility upgrades) as is being done across the rest of the subway system. I’m not sure that is any cheaper in the long term and has its own disruption cost.
I continue to question the general wisdom of TBM as opposed to cut and cover. That may be moot for the Ontario line which has to go underneath the downtown, but perhaps doesn’t need to be tunnelled end to end. When we get going on the Ontario Line construction, Crosstown is going to seem like the good old days.
- Paul