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Decided to take a field trip to famous 501 queen stop "Parkside Dr at The Queensway North Side"

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Plans were for a "Queen Street Subway" using the PCC streetcars of the time. When they started to build the Gardiner Expressway in the 1950's, they made provision for rapid transit reserved tracks on the south side of High Park. Things changed to the Bloor-Danforth Subway instead. The "rapid" part on The Queensway right-of-way deteriorated down to a crawl by TTC/City regulations for "safety".
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Decided to take a field trip to famous 501 queen stop "Parkside Dr at The Queensway North Side" ...
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I took a quick look inside the stairway a few weeks back, and it appeared as though some work had been done on the floor of one side of the stairway landing, to prevent it from being semi-permanently under an inch or more of dirty water after any rain or melting snow. And obviously the walls have also been painted, so at least some things have been done to improve it and make it slightly less of a hellhole.
 
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TTC partners with TMU researchers to drive transit innovation

March 23, 2026

The TTC and Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU) are launching five new research projects to explore promising concepts that could improve TTC operations, infrastructure, and customer experience. The projects are part of a new phase in the Transit Innovation Yard, a joint initiative with the TTC, TMU and the DMZ that aims to accelerate Canadian transit innovation.

Through the Transit Innovation Yard, the TTC is opening its system to select start-ups and academics to trial new technologies and ideas – providing the TTC the opportunity to examine emerging solutions and pursue those with clear potential. The partnership is a part of the TTC’s broader push to build a more innovative, future-ready transit system.

“Toronto is home to world-class universities,” said Mayor Olivia Chow, “Through the Transit Innovation Yard partnership, we’re harnessing the incredible talent in our city to build cutting-edge, made-in-Canada solutions to transit issues here and around the world.”

“I look forward to seeing these projects get underway,” said TTC Chair Jamaal Myers. “We’re always searching for creative new ideas to provide better safety and service for our customers. I’m hopeful that this research will produce valuable, practical insight.”

“As we work to modernize and transform our system, partnerships like this are essential,” said TTC CEO Mandeep S. Lali. “By connecting our operations expertise with the research excellence of TMU, we are exploring practical new solutions to real-world challenges – at no cost to the TTC.”

“TMU is proud to bring solutions-focused, innovative research expertise to the TTC,” said Mohamed Lachemi, President and Vice-Chancellor at Toronto Metropolitan University. “Our entire community will benefit from this collaboration, which will address critical challenges for the transit system that so many at our university and in our city rely on.”

The five selected research projects are:

• An automated rail inspection system – Led by Dr. Farrokh Janabi-Sharifi, this project will demonstrate a compact sensing system installed beneath a TTC rail vehicle to capture high-resolution imagery of rails and nearby track infrastructure during normal movement. The system will analyze the data to identify potential defects such as cracks, missing fasteners, or debris, helping TTC teams better monitor track conditions and plan maintenance.

• A cross-device digital wayfinding solution - Led by Dr. Ali Mazalek, this project will create a proof-of-concept for in-station wayfinding kiosks. Users will be able to connect their phones to the kiosks and access route information – as well as share that information with other contacts.

• A sustainability-focused digital twin of a TTC yard - Led by Dr. Jenn McArthur, this project will develop a digital twin of a TTC yard that visualizes energy use across major systems, such as heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC). The initial prototype will demonstrate how energy flows through the facility, highlight possible waste and allow TTC teams to test potential energy-reduction opportunities.

• A study of the TTC Underground Sounds Subway Musician Program - Led by Dr. Charlie Wall-Andrews, this project will study how live music influences the customer experience, rider mood, and perceived safety. The project will also look into the feasibility of musicians having an expanded safety function within select TTC stations.

• An AI engine for dynamic route optimization - Led by Dr. Sharareh Taghipour, this project will develop a prototype AI engine that can dynamically optimize routes, factoring traffic conditions, service disruptions and passenger demand, with the aim of improving service reliability and operational efficiency.

Projects are expected to progress over the next 9-15 months, culminating in recommendations and next steps for the TTC’s consideration.
 
Decided to take a field trip to famous 501 queen stop "Parkside Dr at The Queensway North Side"

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^ Ancient things in the ceiling.
^ Broken security mirror.
^ No elevators.
^ No CCTV in use.

This stop should be closed. The Glendale/St. Joe's stop and Claude pathway is close enough. It's amazing they left this stop intact when the stairs at South Kingsway were demolished.

Will it really take another Mariam Peters to either close this stop permanently, or to upgrade it properly?

Edit: Grand Concourse in the Bronx has a lot of permanently closed off underpass-Subway connections that were originally built as streetcar transfers.

Closed for good reason.
 
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It is not that the TTC "won't" say what the plan is, it is that they have not yet done so. It will be released shortly, it may well be poorly thought out but let's at least TRY to be optimistic.
The FIFA transportation plan is scheduled to go before Toronto city council's FIFA subcommittee on March 30th. The "Mobility Plan" is not yet public, but there's a note on the agenda that it will be submitted to the committee sometime before the meeting.
 
^ Ancient things in the ceiling.

^ Broken security mirror.

^ No elevators.

^ No CCTV in use.

This stop should be closed. The Glendale/St. Joe's stop and Claude pathway is close enough. It's amazing they left this stop intact when the stairs at South Kingsway were demolished.

Will it really take another Mariam Peters to either close this stop permanently, or to upgrade it properly?

Edit: Grand Concourse in the Bronx has a lot of permanently closed off underpass-Subway connections that were originally built as streetcar transfers.

Closed for good reason.

Good observations. But not sure I agree with the conclusion, exactly.

But first, let me add my own observation, obvious deficiencies aside, the stairs and corridor have relatively new granite tiles. So an investment in repair was made not that long ago; though clearly not to everything, and some stuff has likely become problematic since.

***

I totally concur with your concern, but closing off access to Parkside/Keele for passengers on the 501 does mean a pretty out-of-the-way diversion. From the east, it adds ~250m, in all likihood, from the west it adds ~400M, and together makes for a 650M stop spacing which would miss the most major road out of the three.

The low-cost, if sub-optimal investment here is obvious:

1) Basic repair and add improved lighting and CCTV. One step further would to improve natural light/exterior visibility. Not easily done the way this has been built, and would definitely add costs, but there should be able to be light tunnels, and probably a window, over the entrance on Parkside, with high ceilings at least giving people a good view to, and maybe up that first set of stairs. Side Windows, while feasible would involve lots of construction to create light-access and then a hallway you don't need, and more space to maintain, which is obviously not the most practical choice.

The higher cost, longer term investment would actually be to remove a big chunk of the berm on which this section of Queensway sits, then have an at-grade intersection with Parkside.

This would be my preferred solution, and much cheaper to maintain in the long term. However, it would obviously be quite expensive, would produce a moderately aggressive grade of ~5% or so, going up/down hill just east of Parkside, and would probably need to affect the closure of Claude Avenue at Queensway.

That option will probably not happen, and if it does, its two or more decades from now.

As a fall back, could make Glendale the presumtive stop for accessing Parkside. But the existing connection (only on the northside, doesn't feel particularly safe to many either,with a high berm on one side, a narrow walkway and fenced off private property on the other. Though it is lit, at least.

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If we went with this option, I would want to see the trail widened, I'd like to see newer, better pedestrian lighting, a clearer gateway with wayfinding at the entrances/exits, and it would have to be cleared of snow in winter.
 

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