Toronto Union Pearson Express | ?m | ?s | Metrolinx | MMM Group Limited

Posy by CEO Michael Lindsay that includes a view of what the UP crew saw. Definitely not a place they would expect a car.


View attachment 707264
Toronto drivers never fail to surprise, and they have a thing against rails....
 
Weekend rail closures are terrible. More people use transit than ever for everything but commuting--shopping, going out, and seeing family and friends. Subway and regional trains should continue to run during maintenance work, unless they're replacing the tracks. And even then, I bet it's still technically feasible to keep the trains running by coordinating each segment of track with a reduced schedule.
Agreed, has a big impact on ppls perception of the service as well. After the recent slew of Line 2 partial closures over numerous weekends in a month, I subconsciously stopped assuming it was a mode of transit I would use when getting around the city on Saturday and Sundays, even if I technically knew the closures were limited in scope. Guess if you can form a habit in x amount of days, you can break one in even less.

Maybe something for the TTC to consider when they stare at their declining ridership with mouths agape.
 
Agreed, has a big impact on ppls perception of the service as well. After the recent slew of Line 2 partial closures over numerous weekends in a month, I subconsciously stopped assuming it was a mode of transit I would use when getting around the city on Saturday and Sundays, even if I technically knew the closures were limited in scope. Guess if you can form a habit in x amount of days, you can break one in even less.

Maybe something for the TTC to consider when they stare at their declining ridership with mouths agape.
No one has thus far proposed a better time that they think heavy maintenance and construction should take place.
 
No one has thus far proposed a better time that they think heavy maintenance and construction should take place.
I believe we pay a great deal of people a great deal of money to investigate such matters and learn from best practices across the world. That is not my job nor expertise, I’m simply sharing my (and likely many others) shifts in behaviour.

Also, such temporary removals of service would feel a lot more tolerable if they were achieving things in a reasonable time.

About two years ago I rode Line 1 north of Bloor and was shocked by how slow it operated.

Last weekend (for the first time in over 6 months) I rode Line 1 north of Bloor, assuming such slow zones had been long corrected. After 20 minutes travelling four stations, I stood corrected, and not likely to use that stretch of Line 1 unless having to.
 
I am sure that those experts would be able to quantify just how many Sunday mornings it would take to get the same amount of work done - and how much more that would cost.

I'm trusting (perhaps too blindly, but let's pick our battles) that the weekend closures do get work done more efficiently, especially since the startup and shutdown routines only have to be done once, material can be moved and staged for longer periods, and things only have to be put back together for service once instead of repeatedly.

Try travelling anywhere in Britain on Sunday mornings. One or two closures a year for a weekend or closures every Sunday morning is the choice.

- Paul
 
I am sure that those experts would be able to quantify just how many Sunday mornings it would take to get the same amount of work done - and how much more that would cost.

I'm trusting (perhaps too blindly, but let's pick our battles) that the weekend closures do get work done more efficiently, especially since the startup and shutdown routines only have to be done once, material can be moved and staged for longer periods, and things only have to be put back together for service once instead of repeatedly.

Try travelling anywhere in Britain on Sunday mornings. One or two closures a year for a weekend or closures every Sunday morning is the choice.

- Paul
There are no doubt tradeoffs, but I'd hesitate to look to Britain for anything infrastructure related except to see how to *not* do things.
 
I proposed keeping the service going during the construction itself. You could probably keep the construction going even on weekdays like with highways.
Depending on what is being done, that is not possible.

A lot of the work of late has been rail replacements, or replacing switches. In both of those cases, there is no way to continue train service alongside the construction.

Dan
 
Depending on what is being done, that is not possible.

A lot of the work of late has been rail replacements, or replacing switches. In both of those cases, there is no way to continue train service alongside the construction.

Dan

It's not always possible, but it's possible to do it a lot more often than at present. For instance, you can switch trains onto a second track to get around the affected section of track that's being replaced. The second track may be existing or a temporary replacement track. Granted, you'll typically need to reduce service to do so, but riders can get by with a well-communicated schedule.

It's better than not having the service at all and the customers' journeys taking twice or three times as long because of shuttle buses (at which point many people give up on the service because the original travel time was barely acceptable).
 
It's not always possible, but it's possible to do it a lot more often than at present. For instance, you can switch trains onto a second track to get around the affected section of track that's being replaced. The second track may be existing or a temporary replacement track. Granted, you'll typically need to reduce service to do so, but riders can get by with a well-communicated schedule.

It's better than not having the service at all and the customers' journeys taking twice or three times as long because of shuttle buses (at which point many people give up on the service because the original travel time was barely acceptable).
No, you can't.

The way the subway is laid out, in many places cutting off power to one track cuts off power to both. Both tracks thus become impassible. Most of the BD is set up that way, as the cut-and-cover tunnels are too close together to allow for any sort of meaningful safe separation from each track for anyone at track level.

Then there's the issue of wrong-way running on the subway, and the fact that virtually none of the BD allows for it.

Many things that can be done on the full sized railways just can't be done on the subway.

Dan
 

Back
Top