Habibfazil
Active Member
It's gonna be a great line for some passengersPLUS it is the true missing link for Edmonton given that WEM is out there.
It's gonna be a great line for some passengersPLUS it is the true missing link for Edmonton given that WEM is out there.
Hmm, I'd be impressed if the busses ran on schedule and in a timely fashion.The classic “stick to one thing” is such a strawman tbh. That’s not intelligent. Imagine telling apple to just do iPhones and not macs, iOS, App Store, AirPods, Apple Music, etc.
Translink is the best example of a modern transit agency imo. They’re city builders. Not just bus operators. They’re thinking holistically about Development, housing, biking, retail, land use, etc.
Great organizations use integrated solutions. Transit can’t be good without great land use policy, especially with our current state of affairs in Edmonton. TOD is key to ridership growth here because many of our suburbs are permanently stuck being inefficient for transit and will likely never see transit use peak 10-15%. But our LRT lines, if well planned for TOD, could see 100k plus residents living above stations in the next few decades. That’s a huge win and takes more than “stick to one thing” thinking…
PLUS it is the true missing link for Edmonton given that WEM is out there.
I don’t think he was saying that.As opposed to the Broadway line in Vancouver, the airport connection in Montreal, and getting a bunch of inner Toronto areas finally hooked up to rail transit? Like, VLW is very important don't get me wrong, but to say it's more important than other projects going on across Canada is a bit much IMO.
You're right - I think I misread.I don’t think he was saying that.
Yeah, Ian didn't say that at all. He was talking Edmonton-specific I'm pretty sure.As opposed to the Broadway line in Vancouver, the airport connection in Montreal, and getting a bunch of inner Toronto areas finally hooked up to rail transit? Like, VLW is very important don't get me wrong, but to say it's more important than other projects going on across Canada is a bit much IMO.
It does, but before we pat ourselves on the back too much, it seems to me there are at least two other important factors. First, our LRT expansion happened/was planned before some others and costs have gone up since then.Judging by the cost per kilometre of track for other LRT projects around the country Valley Line West is pretty good value for money.
Probably because half of Marigold’s workforce and project team have a convenient 5-6 years of previous local LRT construction experience… lolMan, Marigold seems to be making such a better job than TransEd, at least up to this point, that it makes me wonder how much earlier we would've had the VLSE running if they had been in charge of construction of the whole line.
I was driving down the alignment of the line west of 142 st the other day and man, especially the elevated section is taking shape SO QUICKLY! I will not be shocked if we start seeing the elevated stations taking shape by springtime.