Here is an idea I have regarding creating a
tourist line for the TTC's vintage streetcars, kind of similar to San Francisco's Market Street railway, but not. It would be the
TTC Brickworks Line, and would run from a new TTC Museum located around Distillery Loop, on a single track beside the GO Richmond Hill Line to a new loop at the Brickworks.
In my mind, this concept addresses a few issues. First, it provides access to the Brickworks in a unique and creative manner. Second, it provides a safe operating environment for the heritage fleet, meaning somewhere to run that is separated from cars. The TTC currently has 1 Peter Witt (
a second exists and could be re-acquired), two PCCs, and will hopefully hang on to 2 CLRVs and 2 ALRVs once they are retired. Three, this helps establish a TTC Museum, which could house the cars that will run on the heritage line (only two or three would operate at a time), and
there are a handful of TTC relics in storage in Ottawa that could help fill a future TTC Museum. Fourth, I remember Steve Munro saying that there could be issues for the heritage fleet in the medium-term once poles are phased out and pans are used on the entire TTC fleet, and the TTC stops maintaining pole-specific infrastructure.
Stops could include Distillery Loop, Queen, Dundas, Gerrard, and Brickworks (via steps down form the road to a small platform trackside at the roads the line runs under, using a PRESTO faregate to pay). My rationale for a single track (with maybe one or two targeted passing tracks) is to reduce construction costs, to deal with space restrictions, and because a tourist line would not operate at high frequencies anyways (maybe every 15 or 20 mins). In terms of space, there seems to be enough for an additional TTC gauge streetcar track, or where there is not, one of the two GO Richmond Hill tracks could be repurposed. GO doesn't seem to have two-way aspirations for this line anytime soon. If there was a desire to keep service in the winter, or to appease accessibility requirements, a single Flexity could operate on the line.
Yes, the urgency of this isn't even close to the Waterfont LRT or Relief Line, but I think that a TTC Museum + heritage route would be a great tourist attraction for Toronto, and would attract GTHA residents to the area during the summer months. In my view, laying TTC gauge rail on a mostly existing RoW (4.5 km) shouldn't cost an exorbitant amount, and the establishment of a TTC museum could be something that could have a decent business case. There are some details that I haven't fleshed out, like how to connect it to the existing network at Distillery Loop (most likely to be rebuilt for the Waterfront LRT), but I'd love to hear everyone's thoughts and constructive criticism on this!