T3G
Senior Member
It is also susceptible to the elements, much like a grade-integrated line would.Still get broken trains, disturbed people at the track level etc from time to time.
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It is also susceptible to the elements, much like a grade-integrated line would.Still get broken trains, disturbed people at the track level etc from time to time.
Finch has not been built quickly it has been six years and it will open earliest next year, for a grand total of 7 years (if we are lucky). I think the insane inefficiency of Canadian construction has made everyone forget things actually can be done well for cheap. The initial stretch of Line 1 from Union to Eglinton was built in five years to give a sense of the rot that has seeped into our public works. Spain and Korea build wholly tunnelled for less money and the same/less time than we build over hyped streetcars. And we can learn from them but the political will for that is not there.Full grade separation doesn't guarantee accident-free operation though. Still get broken trains, disturbed people at the track level etc from time to time.
Certainly not against having a few fast, grade-separated trunk lines across the city. But in case of Finch West, it may be the right choise to build something that's better than bus and can be build quickly first, i.e. Finch LRT. Not a trunk line, but a substantially improved local line.
And then in 20-30 years, extend the Sheppard subway west, with the route somewhere south of Finch: on Sheppard, Wilson, Hwy 401, or a combination of those. That will serve as the trunk line, running reasonably close to both the Rexdale and the Central Etobicoke.
Six? The contract with Mosaic was only signed 5 years ago - in 2018. And unlike a TTC subway is a design-build. So there's going to have to be a longer period than just constructing.Finch has not been built quickly it has been six years and it will open earliest next year, for a grand total of 7 years (if we are lucky).
The initial stretch of Line 1 from Union to Eglinton was built in five years to give a sense of the rot that has seeped into our public works.
I've not been to Spain, but in Korea I recall Line 9 construction sites many years before the line opened. Reading up on it, after many years of delays, construction of Phase 1 started in April 2002, but the line didn't open until July 2009. Over 7 years.Spain and Korea build wholly tunnelled for less money and the same/less time than we build over hyped streetcars.
And didn't begin in earnest until quarter 2 of 2019 for the maintenance facility.Six? The contract with Mosaic was only signed 5 years ago - in 2018. And unlike a TTC subway is a design-build. So there's going to have to be a longer period than just constructing.
Yeah, obviously not comparable in so many ways. As an aside - I was really surprised in Seoul, that I didn't see a blade of grass in the city the entire time I was there, except in the Olympic Park; it was indeed green though. It's unfortunate how there's even so few trees in most of the urban area there.Seoul isn't analogous to Toronto for obvious reasons and dwelling on foreign countries isn't particularly productive, but Line 9 was a 27km line and the original Yonge line was 10km long (same as the Finch streetcar, incredibly). The grass is greener in Seoul, and it's "not a good look" to argue against that.
Perhaps people would take anti LRT arguments more seriously if they used actual facts.the public discovers that they're multi-billion dollar pseudo-buses
Thank goodness for the mountains which offer some reprieve from concrete and glass. Otherwise, though, not much at all (City Hall, I guess, but the massive intersections nearby aren't ideal).Yeah, obviously not comparable in so many ways. As an aside - I was really surprised in Seoul, that I didn't see a blade of grass in the city the entire time I was there, except in the Olympic Park; it was indeed green though. It's unfortunate how there's even so few trees in most of the urban area there.
Can't wait til they're open for business and people can finally stop arguing theoretically and see how bus-like (or not) they are in practice! To be clear I don't disagree that streetcars are an upgrade on buses, but given financial constraints and their pricetags, not a large enough upgrade. I will be pleasantly surprised and admit my error if they end up being well-received and used.Perhaps people would take anti LRT arguments more seriously if they used actual facts.
No matter how many people parrot this tired trope, it still won't be true. A single LRT car offers higher capacity than a bus, more options for increasing capacity (coupling multiple LRT cars together, theoretically limited only by platform length and the capacity of the substations), a superior quality ride - and their own lanes. Which is not an inherent feature of LRT, but those who call Eglinton and Finch pseudo buses conveniently leave out the fact that neither the Eglinton nor the Finch buses have dedicated lanes, so even despite the areas in which you people perceive the LRT to be lacking, you are still introducing an important feature which didn't exist before.
Next.
shhh dont say that the whole thread might realize a political slogan from 15 years ago isnt actually a good way to build a coherent transit systemSeoul isn't analogous to Toronto for obvious reasons and dwelling on foreign countries isn't particularly productive, but Line 9 was a 27km line and the original Yonge line was 10km long (same as the Finch streetcar, incredibly). The grass is greener in Seoul, and it's "not a good look" to argue against that.
No real reason to believe that it is possible for Canada to reach Korean levels of cost/speed, but that probably implies scarce resources should be directed toward projects that actually substantially impact travel times and formation of a rapid transit network (i.e. not obscenely expensive marginal improvements on buses). Eager to see if Transit City dead-enders will finally give up the ghost when Finch and Eglinton (east of Laird) are opened and the public discovers that they're multi-billion dollar pseudo-buses. Hopefully will stop EELRT before it's too late.
the whole point is that dedicated lanes is something we can accomplish with a can of red paint and you can get lrt like results without spending billionsPerhaps people would take anti LRT arguments more seriously if they used actual facts.
No matter how many people parrot this tired trope, it still won't be true. A single LRT car offers higher capacity than a bus, more options for increasing capacity (coupling multiple LRT cars together, theoretically limited only by platform length and the capacity of the substations), a superior quality ride - and their own lanes. Which is not an inherent feature of LRT, but those who call Eglinton and Finch pseudo buses conveniently leave out the fact that neither the Eglinton nor the Finch buses have dedicated lanes, so even despite the areas in which you people perceive the LRT to be lacking, you are still introducing an important feature which didn't exist before.
Next.
"Subways subways subways" was from 15 years ago?shhh dont say that the whole thread might realize a political slogan from 15 years ago isnt actually a good way to build a coherent transit system
Binary Brainrot"Subways subways subways" was from 15 years ago?
Great. Now couple the buses together, and let me know how well that works out.t
the whole point is that dedicated lanes is something we can accomplish with a can of red paint and you can get lrt like results without spending billions
Why wouldn't they be? This is not brand new tech that no one has tried out before, they have been running in very similar configurations to ours in Europe for decades. If they don't run well, it will be because of our North American conventions of prioritizing safety to a fault, over utility and usefulness.if they end up being well-received and used.