Foolworm
Active Member
Would like to see 103 Avenue converted into a narrowed bus-only corridor like Graham Avenue in Winnipeg.
May as well just make 102 Avenue transit only then, like what Calgary did with their 7 Ave downtown.
Would like to see 103 Avenue converted into a narrowed bus-only corridor like Graham Avenue in Winnipeg.
The discourse around low/high floor, trams good /bad is so utterly confusing trying to follow along with transit-oriented content. On one hand it's spouted as the savior of European cities, quick and cheap to roll out. On the other is the blight of NA transport projects and we are fools to implement it. It's impossible to follow, but seeing anything built, getting used, getting good feedback is fantastic in my books. If by some miracle we become a more transit friendly city there are just so many more cards we can play to help beef up the network and presumably much more support to build out more expensive options. As much as people poop on the current design, just take a step back and look at the fact that this is Alberta and we actually funded and are building rail, with plans for more to come, that still blows my mind.
I can try to explain my viewpoint as a transit-oriented enthusiast!
I think you're right in saying that any new forms of rapid transit investment, whether that's on rails or wheels, in cities which had little to none beforehand is great and should be appreciated. Most of the contention comes in when really looking at what was built, how good of a job it does serving its city/community, and if there was another mode that could've done it better. In general there've been niches around the world, including in older North American cities, which certain modes tend to serve best, for example:
Metros, subways, skytrains, etc. have lots of capacity, lots of throughput, and are amazing at serving dense areas of cities and moving people throughout and between dense nodes quickly. They are also very expensive and don't do well on accessibility.
Trams, Streetcars, LRT, etc. are (generally) way more accessible than metros, are convenient for local cross-neighborhood trips, and make streets important with their permanence. They're versatile and can be used from metro-style services to mixed-traffic bus-like services, but don't perform very well at either extreme.
BRT is more cost-effective to implement than LRT yet has a highly similar service style/level of accessibility. It's also more expensive to maintain over time and doesn't have as much of a "TOD effect" as an LRT or metro.
As for people's complaints about the Valley Line? It was designed in a way which kinda tried to serve the niche of a tram and a cross-city metro at the same time, falling somewhat short at being great at either (I don't think it does a bad job but still). Its configuration as a cross-town type of line, which will carry a ton of passengers in the future, is odd since won't be very fast or as reliable for those kinds of trips. Some may argue that, instead of investing in this infrastructure well into the suburbs, the city should've made a better LRT network/grid along multiple strong inner-city corridors, such as 124th street and Whyte Avenue. There's many arguments people like me can make about what they would've wanted instead, like in my case a regular high-floor and more direct route in and out of the city. That and an inner-city streetcar network to complement it.
With that said, I love the new line! Even with what I said above there's things I really like about it, such as the amazing accessibility and how easy it feels to use. Do i think this is what the city should've done,? No. But its rapid transit nonetheless which is great.
For a crosstown route like this, you should be building for speed, efficiency, and capacity. None of this was part of the equation, aside from maybe capacity, for the Valley Line. This isn't necessarily a high floor vs low floor thing, as low floor trains can still have speed and efficiency, it all comes down to how it's designed. But the City was deadset on a sleek, "urban" tram, even in the middle of industrial areas south of Argyll and low-density loopy Mill Woods. The "urban" style works to about Avonmore and then it starts feeling silly.
- The stopping at lights. Yeah, it's maybe 10 seconds, but still. I can see this worsening as the city grows and becomes even more congested. People on this forum before the line opened optimistically parroted the City's word that they would "just time it right"... this already isn't the case
- The slow speeds... outside of rush hour congestion, cars are faster on streets like 66th. Why? Oh right because of the weak ROW, large number of crossings, and plentiful stops.
I don't really care if they use crossing gates or not. It'll slow down vehicle traffic if they do, but that doesn't really bother me at all.And despite these points, some people in here so fervently defend not using crossing gates even south of Davies. *facepalm*
Probably one of the more common journeys will be Mill Woods to Downtown. Similar distance as Century Park to Downtown. Mill Woods to Downtown takes 30 mins by LRT, which is faster than the bus, but Century Park to Downtown takes about 20 minutes. Considering the population growth causing more congestion, the greater vulnerability for vehicle accidents, I can easily see this becoming longer on the Valley Line in a way I don't see for the Capital Line.I don't mind the slower speeds in the long term as most travelers will not be using it to travel from Mill Woods to Lewis Estates. They will make shorter trips.
Not to be that guy, but it's more like 23 vs 27 minutes. It's actually less than I thought, and the valley line leg might be slightly longer too.Probably one of the more common journeys will be Mill Woods to Downtown. Similar distance as Century Park to Downtown. Mill Woods to Downtown takes 30 mins by LRT, which is faster than the bus, but Century Park to Downtown takes about 20 minutes. Considering the population growth causing more congestion, the greater vulnerability for vehicle accidents, I can easily see this becoming longer on the Valley Line in a way I don't see for the Capital Line.