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He did. And though I have said it before, cheaper is often far less than the best we can do.David Miller had a 'cheaper is better' attitude but he was not some suburban anti-transit politician. You are quite funny
While it would be expensive, I keep coming back to wondering if an extended Bay transit line that goes at least as far north as City Hall, and possibly all the way to Bloor, would actually be better than a line that stops at Front and feeds Union/Line 1. Do we really want to add all those waterfront people to the existing congestion in those parts?
Rather than *enlarge* the LRT loop at Union, why not spend the same money tunnelling northwards? There is room for a portal north of Albert St, and Bay could handle the surface LRT ROW. That would get the LRT ridership where they are going without adding them to the flow at Union, and it would provide a relief line for people coming from Union and currently transferring to Line 1.
Yeah, I know, there is lots of underground stuff in the way - but.....
- Paul
That would be expensive. Consider the tunnel coming back up to the surface in front of the ACC and continuing north from there. Bay street would then be a pedestrian/transit mall. More useful, accessible and btw cheaper. I would hope more people start thinking along these lines and hope the city doesn't screw up King street trial returning the car to its priority status.
What underground "stuff" is in the way? Are their major sewer lines? What is the depth of the PATH - would the LRT go above or under, would the PATH be relocated deeper? Would it go above or below the DRL?While it would be expensive, I keep coming back to wondering if an extended Bay transit line that goes at least as far north as City Hall, and possibly all the way to Bloor, would actually be better than a line that stops at Front and feeds Union/Line 1. Do we really want to add all those waterfront people to the existing congestion in those parts?
Rather than *enlarge* the LRT loop at Union, why not spend the same money tunnelling northwards? There is room for a portal north of Albert St, and Bay could handle the surface LRT ROW. That would get the LRT ridership where they are going without adding them to the flow at Union, and it would provide a relief line for people coming from Union and currently transferring to Line 1.
Yeah, I know, there is lots of underground stuff in the way - but.....
- Paul
It's incredible how politicians have transformed over the past 50 years. From having the foresight to anticipate demand and build projects to handle increasing demand, to cheapening out wherever possible where demand is needed the most and building white elephants where there is zero demand.The underground tunnel exists because the pedestrian volume at the surface (think ferry docks) is huge and moving vehicles through the intersection is not practical.
It's incredible how politicians have transformed over the past 50 years. From having the foresight to anticipate demand and build projects to handle increasing demand, to cheapening out wherever possible where demand is needed the most and building white elephants where there is zero demand.
I'd wager we're going to see a moving walkway since city council is just waiting to display their sheer stupidity.
It's incredible how politicians have transformed over the past 50 years. From having the foresight to anticipate demand and build projects to handle increasing demand, to cheapening out wherever possible where demand is needed the most and building white elephants where there is zero demand.
What underground "stuff" is in the way? Are their major sewer lines? What is the depth of the PATH - would the LRT go above or under, would the PATH be relocated deeper? Would it go above or below the DRL?
Yeah, we all may be overthinking this. How bad would it be, really, to just fill in the tunnel and put the LRT line on the surface with a standard at grade Y junction at QQ? With transit priority signalling, dedicated LRT row, and Bay as a transit/pedestrian mall? That woukd be cheapest, and with the funds freed up we could push LRT further north on Bay. We may be trying too hard to find optimised solutions that preserve too much latitude for the automobile.
Perhaps the experience with the King mall, good or bad, will give us the courage to make transit work in the downtown, autos be damned.
- Paul
Blame Harris and his "Common Sense" Revolution, which is much more baloney than common sense. Amalgamation is because of him.Blame amalgamation.