smallspy
Senior Member
The at-grade section of the line is being re-configured as a bus roadway.With the tracks out, could this not be retrofitted to be useful as a busway, similar to the O-Bahn in Adelaide Australia. The O-Bahn is an elevated guided busway handling over 30,000 commuters daily. And although numbers are not directly comparable, the line handles 30,000 plus commuters per day. And its a pretty neat ride. Efficient, frequent, pretty comfortable.
Or streetcars for that matter?
I understand that line 3 is designated to be a linear park. With due respect, as parks are important, are we overlooking a better alternative. Or does the non-political driven engineering say otherwise?
I just seems as if there is no imagination to solving these transit issues, but then again, this thought may be completely unfair to the TTC and any forward thinkers they have. I forget at times in my 'fantasy' world, that this is a Doug Ford nation, and if the project is not focused on a single operator vehicle, or a tunneled subway, he has zero interest, unless the political winds say yes (so a tunnel in Brampton y'say!)
My apologies if this was previously discussed ad nauseum.
The tunnel north of Ellesmere and the elevated section are too narrow to safely use as a busway without the use of silly gimmicks such as those used on the O-bahn.
And then there's the fact that the ridership of the line will be considerably lower than the 40,000people/per day that it used to carry as the SRT as there will be a paralleling subway line that will link the two endpoints in a far faster manner.
Dan