Electrify
Senior Member
I find it hard to believe it took 15 min by car to get downtown and 1 hr by transit. Define downtown and the start and end points. I can get to Bloor and Bathurst street on Sat morning in 20 min (before 10 am)from couple blocks south of Lawrence and Keele St. But it takes 15 min by Lawrence bus to Lawrence west subway, roughly 10 min to St George and then subway to Bathurst which is few min. Its 5 min walk to lawrence for a total of about 35 min But again for both options this is early Sat morning. Later in the morning, traffic on Lawrence, more people getting on the bus and it has taken 30 min to get to Lawrence West subway. But it would be the same case by car. Later in the morning by car and specially by afternoon, there is traffic and it takes way more than 20 min. And this is no matter where you go downtown. There is less traffic than on the weekday but there is traffic.
For clarification, I was paraphrasing a comment from another website. I've dug it up for this discussion:
Mike said:Are you sure the difference is 6 minutes?
Under the original LRT plan, a trip from Kennedy to Yonge was pegged at over a half hour and closer to 40 minutes.
While the whole trip from Scar Town Centre to Black Creek is pegged at 45 minutes for a fully underground option?
I think what the government has to do is actually post stats on each mode in an easy to read table. As it is, the planners and leaders of all these projects have been very quiet about ridership, travel time, etc.
And the general number of riders the old TC project would carry on all lines did nothing. In fact I found the system wide numbers they used showed that the TC plan actually attracted very few people to transit.
I want to know what the daily ridership is now on a specific corridor, and what that ridership will be on opening day with LRT, subway/elevated rail, BRT, etc.
Translink did this. It showed that LRT to UBC would be so slow that a Skytrain extension would carry something like double the ridership the LRT was proposed to carry.
At the end of the day I don't care what the technology is. I care about if we are shifting people to transit, building mode share, thinking of future development, and providing service that is attractive to the residents and visitors to the area.
Given that I live in the area these lines will serve, and having talked to people in the area. The most important aspect for us is travel time.
We already have frequent transit service, etc. What we don't have is a fast ride to anywhere.
We are 20 minutes from downtown by car. But 1 hour or longer by transit.
We are 10 minutes from Yonge Street by car. But 45-60 minutes from Yonge street by transit.
The people who don't use transit in these corridors don't use it because there is not frequent service, etc. They don't use it because it is slow.
My father did not drive downtown to work for 30 years because there was not a bus every 5 minutes. He drove, because it took him 20 miuntes vs 1.5 hours by transit.
http://www.humantransit.org/2012/01/toronto-earth-to-mayor-subways-are-expensive.html
EDIT: I want to add that I think this guy makes a good point about a modal shift to transit. Sure, currently most of the transit travel along Sheppard, Finch, and Eglinton is local in nature, but what about other transportation modes? A quick look at this map (http://www3.thestar.com/static/googlemaps/starmaps_090610.html?xml=091021_commuting_transit.xml) seems to show a 60/30/10 split between driving, transit, and other. Along areas serviced by subways, the split is about 45/45/10, give or take. After these LRT lines are complete, are these areas going to be closer to where they are now, or closer to the areas served by subways?
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