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DVP...Bus-only lane pitched

So it's just between Lawrence & York Mills. .. and that alone would cost $12 million?

The $12 million from the above articles was the estimate in 2007(?) for 401 to Bloor. I scanned the report and it doesn't seem to say how much the Lawrence to York Mills segment will cost.
 
why not run it allthe way down to front and up to steeles? Whats the point of 5 minutes of traffic relief when you can have gridlock on other parts of the DVP as well...again showing a lack of foresight...

This is meant to be a cheap solution.. having a continuous lane from Front to Steeles would require either rebuilding many of the bridges or giving an entire lane of traffic to the buses. Many of the bridges aren't wide enough to have buses go on the shoulders.
 
Reminds me of this article http://www.thestar.com/news/ideas/article/429061

Imagine you're among the nearly 450,000 drivers idling on Highway 401 through the Toronto area on a typical weekday, bumper-to-bumper traffic burning a $1.27-a-litre hole in your pocket and the ozone.

Now, fast forward just over a decade, when gridlock and gas prices are expected to make 2008 look like the good old days, and you glance from your car to see a high-speed, electric train stop in the middle of the 401. Hundreds of waiting passengers file aboard, open their papers and laptops and speed off.

Before you've passed the next exit, they're halfway to work.

No one disputes that something must be done to ease the traffic congestion choking Highway 401 across the top of Toronto.

It's bad for the environment and the economy, to say nothing of the physical and mental toll on drivers.

But now a group of sustainability advocates is pushing a radical solution to get the 401 moving again.

The idea – eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction to put subway-style rail down the middle of the highway – may be counter-intuitive.

It's certainly ambitious – 51 kilometres and 28 new stations from Pickering through Pearson International Airport to Mississauga. It's time-consuming – 12 years to complete. And, it's costly – $5.9 billion.

But, the Sustainable Urban Development Association, or SUDA, believes we can no longer afford to ignore the need for a car alternative to east-west travel across the GTA.

"The need for sustainable transportation is expanding dramatically," said John Stillich, general manager of SUDA, a charitable organization devoted to environmentally sensitive city building. "Climate shifts are happening faster than people previously thought, energy prices are hitting the fan.

"It's gotta happen."

There's no shortage of critics lining up to say it cannot happen. They argue it's too costly, the 401 is already too congested to reduce lanes and that getting people in and out of stations in the middle of a highway will prove difficult to impossible.

And, despite ever-worsening gridlock, critics are not even convinced there's enough demand for public transit there.

Stillich, a former senior financial analyst with the province, first floated the idea of a 401RT more than a decade ago. While applauding the $11.5 billion Queen's Park pledged last year for public transit projects across the GTA and Hamilton by 2020, he said they won't keep up with growth in road travel.

An essential component of cutting congestion and pollution across the GTA is an east-west transit line across its middle – Highway 401.

The SUDA concept would see trains stop at stations typically located on bridges and underpasses, which are wide enough for buses to drop off passengers without the need for expensive bus terminals. From one end in Pickering to the other in Mississauga would take about 75 minutes, with travel to Yonge St. from 35 to 40 minutes either way.

"If we don't do it now, we're going to have greater hardship for everybody in the GTA," Stillich said, forecasting 150 million riders a year on a line that would cost $304 million to operate. "Things will get worse."

Stillich is hoping Metrolinx, the body developing a comprehensive transportation plan for the region, will include the 401RT as part of its draft due out this summer.

Though there's an obvious sticker shock that comes with a $5.9 billion tab, when broken down over its 12-year construction period and with the expected federal and provincial support that comes with major infrastructure projects, the average annual cost per income taxpayer in Toronto, Peel and Durham comes in at $60, Stillich said. With the price for gas and other driving expenses climbing, he's sure people will see trading in their wheels for rails as a bargain.

"It's only high cost in terms of the dollar amounts that people have to spend to put the thing together," he said. "But if you look at the resultant impact on households of that initial investment, it's cheaper than business as usual by a long shot."

To back up its argument, SUDA used part of a $76,000 Ontario Trillium Foundation grant to survey households across the GTA. It found more than two-thirds of respondents willing to pay more to improve public transit.

That's in line with an Ipsos Reid survey of 1,000 residents of the GTA and Hamilton done last fall for Metrolinx. It found two-thirds believe increasing public transit is the best way to improve the traffic situation, compared with one-third calling for more roads.

Metrolinx also has its eye on public transit across the 401. But it envisions an express bus corridor using high-occupancy vehicle lanes.

Stillich, who is looking for a "political champion" to push the 401RT concept, admits SUDA's pitch needs more thorough analysis through a feasibility study.

But a huge hurdle with a 401RT is access, said Toronto transit activist Steve Munro. With trains running down the middle of the highway it would be next to impossible to get passengers into stations without large – and expensive – bus interchanges, parking lots or tunnels.

Also, the sprawl-oriented development across the 905 region "is not suited to transit," unlike the concentrated areas of Toronto serviced by the subway. Add to that the fact that few people have a final destination on the 401 and a rail line proves "superficially seductive" but impractical, Munro said.

"The idea that somehow we are going to solve regional transportation problems by putting an express line on the 401 sounds nice in theory, but how the hell do you get people to it?" said Munro.

SUDA's concept includes a massive network of buses, much like those that will feed Toronto's seven planned Transit City light rail lines.

But unlike Transit City, which is supposed to extend light rail into the recesses of suburban Toronto, the 401RT concept doesn't have the same city-building potential, argues TTC chair Adam Giambrone.

He espouses the power of light rail to transform neighbourhoods by contributing to higher densities of housing and jobs, building pedestrian traffic that makes for lively neighbourhoods.

"Those cars were fed to that (highway) corridor," he said. "They came in on streets. The goal here is to make transit accessible by pedestrian measures so you can walk. If you have (transit) in a corridor like the 401 series highways or a hydro corridor, that becomes very difficult."

It can be done. It is done. The TTC buses people to subways and expects to feed the Transit City lines with buses as well. It's just not the preferred option, said Giambrone.

"You would miss all the walk-on traffic and all the streetscape possibilities," he said.

You could do it but it would be a bad substitute for the kind of more localized higher order transit corridors he believes will succeed under Metrolinx.

From an environmental perspective, it already may be too late to change direction for something as radical as a 401RT, says Pollution Probe's climate change program director.

Anything that gets people out of their cars is good, but given the time constraints, building on the existing transit network might be more practical, according to senior scientist Quentin Chiotti. "We basically have 10 to 15 years for the globe to turn around their whole emissions of greenhouse gases. If this doesn't happen we're in serious trouble. Twelve years (to build the RT) may be beginning to fall into that window, but just how much will that give us, given the investment?" he said. "Are there other ways of spending that $6 billion that's going to give us more bang for the buck?"

In the Toronto region, freight has priority when it comes to the rails, said Chiotti.

"Can't we do something about who has priority over the rail system? We have a system that is supposed to get people moving through the GTA but the system has a lot of barriers to operating as efficiently as possible," he said.

"Instead of saying we should give transit a high priority, I think we need to look at the whole rail system and improve that so we have more dedicated lines for people movement and freight."

What's needed more than anything, Stillich said, is public understanding of all costs involved in the 401RT project. While people may wince at a $5.9 billion pricetag and losing a lane of highway traffic each way, he said they're not aware of the true toll on the environment and economy of taking "inadequate and incremental steps" rather than embracing his "dramatic change" now.

"If things get so bad that everything is jammed every day, there'll be more and more screaming that, no, we can't do this construction and lose another lane because nothing will move," Stillich said. "Something has to be done now to avoid the worst-case scenario.

"And, if you don't do this, or this kind of thing, then nothing is going to move on the 401 anyway."
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Which leads me to wonder, especially for the PRO SUBWAY camp... Would you be accepting of this as rapid transit but in the middle of a highway? Or would you prefer LRT? I think its not a bad idea. Im sick of highways and the car fetishes they create. If there were no more cars on earth. Life would NOT cease to exsist.
 
Like Steve Munro and Adam Giambrone correctly point out, transit lines in highway medians have expensive stations and practically no walk in demand. However, they have two big advantages: speed and cost. Since there are no direct trip generators or local demand, stops can be as far apart as you want. Since the corridor is already grade separated no tunneling is required and you get a grade-separated subway for the cost of an LRT.

Giambrone complains that demand must be fed to the lines for them to be successful. Like it or not, that's how many suburban transit trips are. They go from a feeder bus to the subway and to another feeder bus at the other end.

Instead of Subway or LRT, I think it would make more sense to do something more like the GO ALRT along the 401, linking the Georgetown line (at Etobicoke North) to the Lakeshore East line (at Pickering), running trains from the airport to Oshawa. GO transit needs an east-west line and this would be a cheap way to do it in a fast and grade-separated manner.

The 6 billion number sounds awfully high, and it works out to about $110 million per km. Maybe that's because they have so many stops. The average spacing is 1.8km. It needs to be much more than that if you want to get the benefits of being in an expressway median. If the cost can significantly reduced, it might be a viable expansion, but at that price, there are many other things that would be a better use of the money.

Though the rail link would be great, bus lanes cost only a tiny fraction of a rail line, yet provide most of the benefits. I think we should be building those instead.
 
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These are the requirements for buses using the lanes:

Maybe they're thinking of safety but I would be pretty annoyed if I was on a bus and it could only go 40 km/h because car traffic was going 20.

Even if it's only going at 40, getting to the front of the bottleneck faster will be a huge improvement.
 
On the 401 the best solution is probably to run the existing GO bus services that run there more frequently (there are GO buses that go from York Mills/Yorkdale/Sheppard and Yonge to Scarborough Centre, Durham Region, Pearson Airport, Brampton, Square One, Oakville, Meadowvale and Milton). However, only the ones to the east run frequently; the ones to the west run infrequently, some of them only during rush hour. This way, the buses can actually serve destinations with significant walk-in traffic and connections to other transit routes. In the long term it might make sense to build bus lanes in the median of the 401.
 
This plan is such a missed opportunity, but what can you expect when this city is full of crybabies with the media fueling the tantrums.

First, buses will only get about 1.5km of the 15km long highway. The other 13.5km will still be bumper to bumper. Also, they can only use this when the traffic flow falls below 60km/h - and can only go 20km/h above the flow?!? While I'm sure the whiners in this city would cry 'safety,' in Mississauga buses are allowed to use the shoulder lanes at all times.

Finally, GO recently cut much of its services in Toronto proper. Imagine if you could catch a GO bus from Scarborough Town Center or Oriole GO direct to downtown, with stops at Eglinton and Bloor to allow transit connections to the subway and the Eglinton bus/LRT.
 
How about eliminating the median and having the system of electronic X's and check marks that alternate what direction the traffic moves in depending on rush hour.
 

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