ADRM
Senior Member
Very simply, the success such as it be of the test such as it be, will be whether the good citizens of the city are not in open war with each other over sharing the inadequate street geography for all the modern uses. And whether there is sufficient consensus in the masses for the politicians to push this along. And whether we all got where we are going on time or whether some people (commuters) never found a new routine which leads to permanent unrest.
The designers of Toronto 100 years back did not leave a lot of space for all the stuff that seems to be a part of modern life. Pedestrians, mail boxes, paper boxes, transit shelters, hydrants, garbage and recycling bins, bike storage, and trees and planters on the sidewalks. (Aside, Man those new bike share stations take up a lot of space!) Add parking, bike lanes, bus and streetcar ROW and the whole thing is very tight.
The "war" here is over space. The city could do a great deal to mitigate the war by putting a significant part of the infrastructure underground. Oh wait, those are called subways. (Another thread...discussion...)
And whether it's cars or the honkin' bike storage picture from Holland that we keep seeing, parking space is a real need. I suppose we could task Green P with ensuring adequate bike storage in some quarters where every vertical post and them some is already occupied.
In the end, my own view is that bad governance and shocking lack of vision from city hall, home of the fourth largest municipal government on the continent created this. Had the proper underground heavy rail subway infrastructure been built over the past thirty years, the need to reclaim space on arterial roads would not be the competition it us now.
Some threads here debate how we can afford subways. Personally I can't see how we can't. There is not enough space left on the surface to accomplish the transit and "public realm improvements" which are high on Toronto's want list.
Next battleground. Yonge. But it's really intimately connected to the Relief Line. Ok. Brick it up. I like pretty walkways and cafes as much as the next bloke. I enjoy them. Some are great places to bike and poke around. But having removed that as a transit option, what remains? Problem solved. There is a fabulous subways already built right underneath. Great. Oh wait. The thing is bursting at the seams. If the Relief Line and other improvements were in place, then the commuters and travellers displaced by cycling infrastructure, would have options. It is not displacing them that creates the "war", but rather displacing them to inadequate (or frankly zero) alternatives that match their health and lifestyle. Those are in short supply today.
There are numerous Green P lots along the stretch of Bloor included in the pilot. Most of them are routinely under capacity. Inadequate space for parking along Bloor is a myth.