salsa
Senior Member
Names are the favorite thing for UT transit nerds to debate
Same is true of Metrolinx board members, if you recall the Crosstown station naming debacle.
Names are the favorite thing for UT transit nerds to debate
Is there a better suggested name you can come up with?
There have been no funding commitments from any levels of government, so at this point we can't discuss how funding will affect scheduling, because we don't know when those funds will materialize. So something else must be pushing the DRL to a 2025 start.
After the TPAP is completed in six months (assuming the information on reliefline.ca is correct) the project should be able to enter design phase. I don't understand how it will take seven years of design for the project to be able to enter construction, especially when the latter phases of design and the beginning of construction can happen concurrently.
Eglinton **cough** Yonge **cough** StationQueen and Pape follow in Eglinton West's footsteps to have a name applicable for both Lines.
They would rename Pape Station as "Danforth Station".Same is true of Metrolinx board members, if you recall the Crosstown station naming debacle.
It should be unoffically Queen - as Carlaw will have two stations. I expect the offical station list possibly be:
Greektown
Gerrard
Leslieville
East Harbour or Riverside
Sumach
Moss Park
City Hall
Osgoode
.. Queen and Pape follow in Eglinton West's footsteps to have a name applicable for both Lines.
Density isn't everything obviously, but it does contribute to mass transit ridership. I tried to get an idea of the density of comparable central areas of Toronto and Montreal using federal ridings (census tracts would have taken way too long). For Toronto I ended up with, roughly, everything from the lake to the 401 and Victoria Park to the Humber.The Island of Montreal is like the megacity of Toronto, almost the same area, and large swathes of it are suburban. The "City" of Montreal is a big mix, though, you have boroughs like Pierrefonds-Roxborough which are entirely suburban compared to separate cities on the island like Westmount, which is the second densest municipality in Canada.
Island of Montreal:
area 499.2 km2
population: 1,942,044
density: 3 890
Municipality of Toronto:
area: 630.21 km2
population: 2,731,571
density: 4 334
But aggregating over large areas is a very bad predictor of transit ridership, the important thing is how dense populations (and especially jobs!) are to rapid transit lines. Vancouver has been very smart about planning density near stations. Montreal has the big advantage that it doesn't have a giant "yellow belt" of zoned single family housing that Toronto does.
So fuckin’ obvious. But we spent the equivalent of a RL Station debating and farting around at Metrolinx.Eglinton **cough** Yonge **cough** Station
They would rename Pape Station as "Danforth Station".
You folks spend a little too much time worrying about the names IMHO. Call them Ed, Tom, Helena and Bob for all I care. Just get them built and running properly.
In terms of place-making, names are important. They linger around.Station names can be helpful for wayfinding, especially in a city that promotes tourism.
And the Crosstown naming a station "Eglinton" is simply idiotic, and shows how screwed up Metrolinx can be.
So I think that station names are a quite reasonable thing to worry about.
That was the TTC not Metrolinx they wanted it to be like Bloor- Younge on lines 1 and 2 and Sheppard - Younge Line 4. If you want an actual bad name for a station you can look to Pioneer Village satin, it was supposed to be Stells West until a local councillor got it remained Black creek Piner Village station, but it would have been too long to put into the artwork for the sati0n.Meanwhile, it's a ten-minute walk from the place it's named for and you can't even see it from either location.And the Crosstown naming a station "Eglinton" is simply idiotic, and shows how screwed up Metrolinx can be.