TheTigerMaster
Superstar
If the stations on our ECLRT look this nice I will be very, very happy.
Confused here: If the opposite (original by the looks of it) platform is closed, where do you board the University trains?
Once the new GO western concourse opens (later this year?) - between the existing VIA concourse and York Street, the entire existing GO concourse is going to close for 2-3 years, and be completely rebuilt, including deepening it, so there won't be any stairs at all between the TTC station the GO station. And there'll be a glass roof on the moat. There's a separate thread about that project - http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/showth...-Building-Revitalization-(City-of-TO-U-C-NORR)
And a whole City website about the project: http://www1.toronto.ca/wps/portal/contentonly?vgnextoid=f50e962c8c3f0410VgnVCM10000071d60f89RCRD
The end result is the stairs from the TTC to GO will end up looking like this:
Looking southwest from new TTC exit near Bay towards GO entrance and York
Good question! Somewhat tortuous I'd think. I'd hope that you'd come out of the subway station into the moat, and turn right, (under the bridge for the main VIA entrance from the street), where you'd find a new set of doors from the western moat into the new GO York concourse. I'd also think you'd still be able to come out of the subway station, turn left, and walk in the moat around to the Bay concourse.So, what will be the footpath from disembarking the GO train to get to the PATH in the interim 2-3 years? How circuitous will that be?
A minor quibble with the signage, but I think using the term "Lines" when referring to "Yonge" and "University-Spadina" is slightly problematic as we are already supposed to use the word "Line" for #1. So it's #1 Line, Yonge Line and just doesn't sound right. They would have been better to refer to the two sides of #1 Line as "branches" I think. It's also a more international standard. So you'd have two branches of the #1 Line... the "Yonge Branch" and the "University-Spadina" (or potentially rename it the "St. George") branch.
There's no branching on the Toronto subway. Branch makes sense in somewhere like the RER in Paris, where a single line through downtown has multiple branches in the suburbs.That's a very good point. "Yonge Branch" would be a much better way to describe it. That term would become useful when GO REX gets implemented as well (ex: Line A, Lakeshore West Branch).
A minor quibble with the signage, but I think using the term "Lines" when referring to "Yonge" and "University-Spadina" is slightly problematic as we are already supposed to use the word "Line" for #1. So it's #1 Line, Yonge Line and just doesn't sound right. They would have been better to refer to the two sides of #1 Line as "branches" I think. It's also a more international standard. So you'd have two branches of the #1 Line... the "Yonge Branch" and the "University-Spadina" (or potentially rename it the "St. George") branch.
Will eventually become this:
Bingo!
If you look in that rendering, you'll see that the existing doors from the moat into the GO concourse are now on the second floor, and become entrances from that suspended walkway into the GO.
One of your links is broken BTW ... and http://flic.kr/p/ovThoX seems to work better than https://flic.kr/p/ovThoX