reaperexpress
Senior Member
I actually got into an argument with the project team over this way back in the day. Originally the plan had the whole thing in the median east of Laird, but later it was adjusted to put Don Mills underground. So far so good. Now there was a perfect opportunity to eliminate the potential for red lights at Leslie like you said.My biggest complaint about the Crosstown (and there are plenty) but my biggest complaint is that the LRT ROW comes out of a portal from underground and into the MIDDLE OF THE STREET and forces a signal at the Leslie intersection which is a THREE WAY INTERSECTION. Then, the train never crosses an intersection again until it goes underground again at Don Valley station.
In my books, there is no greater example of blind thinking of Toronto, that since streetcars are in the middle of the road, the LRT ROW HAS TO BE this way too.
Because, any person with an IQ over 40 could easily, EASILY see, that by having the LRT portal emerge south of Eglinton Ave would have completely avoided an intersection at Leslie, since the road is a three way! I bet bacteria would have figured this out.
It drives me insane that this signalized intersection with the LRT exists.
But they refused to move the alignment to the south side of the street between Laird and Don Mills because they didn't want to go through the trouble of amending the EA for that whole segment rather than just Don Mills.
tl;dr: They forced trains to stop at red lights for eternity because they didn't want to do extra paperwork.
You can thank the Leaside Residents Association for it not being underground here.
That is not the issue here. The issue is that it is in the centre of the road rather than the south side. If it were on the south side, the only at-grade crossing between Mount Dennis and Don Mills would be one standalone pedestrian crossing at Leslie, since the main intersection is T to the north. So there would be massively more capacity and zero delay all the way to Don Mills (where there's a big bus terminal and lots of transfers) rather than the current design that kneecaps capacity east of Laird, potentially turning trains back one stop before the major hub at Don Mills.




