They'd have to cut/cover.
I'd prefer a connection to the Valley Line tram at grade though. Makes more sense for the main street vision. I'm not a fan of heavy vehicle traffic on Whyte at all. If transit exists in that corridor, you remove the need for more than 1 lane in either direction. A circulator from MacEwan to Bonnie Doon would be the way.
Whyte Ave could be the keystone of a crosstown route from WEM to Bonnie Doon. When I hear trams for Whyte I immediately think of the snail pace of the 501 Queen streetcar in Toronto. I do think there are useful places for streetcars, but running in traffic, stopping at lights, just makes it a more expensive bus. With how congested the area can be and the density, underground makes sense. If we could do it down Jasper Ave, I don't see why we can't down Whyte, aside from political will. Both avenues fit the criteria for it, though.
You need to be realistic. They city has budget limits. Look at the LRT master plan; most of that won’t happen by 2040. Who knows when the Metro line phase 2 and 3 will get funding. Or phase 2 capital line. Sometimes we need to have realistic expectations.
A lot of that depends on the status quo remaining. By the end of this decade, we should have
- Valley Line from Lewis Farms to MWTC
- Capital Line to Ellerslie
- Metro Line to Blatchford, with extension to Castle Downs potentially under construction
- 3 BRT lines
That's already a lot. For the 2030s, you could easily see...
- Metro Line to Village Tree
- Capital Line to Gorman/Manning or Horse Hills if development is out there as well as south to 41st Ave
- More BRT lines, potentially down 23rd Ave, Ellerslie Rd, and/or 137th Ave
- beginnings of a RER-type system utilizing the Gateway CPR corridor and the Grand Trunk corridor
- looking beyond the existing plans, such as upgrading Whyte to LRT, building a bridge across Hawrelak to a now 87 Ave LRT that connects to Bonnie Doon via UofA/Whyte
I don't think, regardless of if it does or does not make sense, LRT is happening down Whyte Ave for a while, unless something drastically changes. The City has been clear that building out the Metro Line while expanding the Capital Line are the priorities after the Valley Line's built. But doing all of the above in 17 years is quite impressive if you compare it to the last 17 years. At some point, as these radial lines to the suburbs get built up, it's probable that Edmonton will start trying to beef up the inner city rapid transit (something arguably it should already be doing, but alas) and I could easily see a Whyte-87 Ave LRT being our Broadway extension. The 2040s aren't that far away in the grand scheme of things. I don't see how that's unrealistic.