kettal
Banned
^ I think you mean Wellington (?)
no
^ I think you mean Wellington (?)
I want DRL along Adelaide Street, with improved underground walkway connections to Union Station, St. Andrew Station, and King Station.
My main point against a Queen alignment is that Queen street needs a fairly local level of service. This point is pretty much undebatable. A local level of service means close stop spacing, which is completely at odds with the main goal of the DRL, which is to provide a QUICK alternative route that alleviates the pressure on Bloor-Yonge and St. George. Duplicating an existing service and replacing it with something with further stop spacing will damage the neighbourhood. The better option is to intersect, not overlap. Using the rail corridor in the west allows the DRL to intercept the College, Dundas, Queen, and King streetcars.
The neighbourhoods these streetcars serve are relatively stable, with the exception of Liberty Village, which is rapidly growing. Stable neighbourhoods don't need a drastic change, they need the same local level of service. These neighbourhoods have little opportunity for densification, which means they're likely going to stay stable, as any new buildings built won't significantly change the population in the area. It is not the pressure of local service that is overloading these lines, it is the pressure of commuters from outside of these neighbourhoods who are coming close to overloading the lines for lack of a better transit option.
The thing is, there should be a subway line every kilometre or so in downtown Toronto, just like there is in comparable cities all over the world. There should be a subway line going through Union and a line going along Queen. Hell, even a line along College might be feasible.These DRL alignment arguments still strike me as a bit crazy. Maybe it's because I'm able bodied and young or whatever, but there's like a kilometre distance between Front & Queen. I'd think a line anywhere in there would serve the exact same ridership base, more or less. And so they should just put it wherever it's cheapest and less disruptive to build through downtown. Which is probably Wellington/Front.
I applaud her for at least being brave enough to put the idea on the table to actually commit to imposing tolls. Is there any other candidate who have the cojones to do that?
Why can we not have a 'Downtown Congestion Tax" like London England has? with minumum 75% of the revinue going to Transit. (TTC in this case)
Westbound DRL trains would turn onto onto my 'Downtown Loop', which was the U-end of the YUS line, thus getting to Union without a more southerly alignment.I don't agree with that statement, but if you really wanted you could have the DRL hit King, Union and St. Andrew. But in my mind the DRL going through Union is a must. How can a new subway line so close to Union, not go through Union?
From the Union Station Master Plan:And the argument that 'Union subway station is at capacity, therefore the DRL should avoid it' is complete bogus. Union subway station is not at capacity, the PLATFORM at Union subway station is at capacity. Platform size has very little to do with the theoretical capacity of the actual station, as Bloor-Yonge has taught us. With the extra platform currently being added, people will have plenty of room to board nearly empty trains at Union....
Ontario Fire Code requires increasing stairwell and exit door capacity to allow for 'orderly exit' from the building within the fire-rating period. Without GO splitting their terminal destination up, there will be a continually growing demand at Union Subway Station. The second platform at Union is meant to relieve the current pressure and growth to 2025, not handle extra transfers from the DRL onto Yonge–University–Spadina line. Move the connection north a station or two and it provides greater network access/connectivity.The TTC’s Union Station peak period is between 7:00-9:00 am. Currently, 38,000 pedestrians enter the TTC in its peak hour, many arriving from GO trains. Peak usage is expected to grow to 85,000 in the long-term.
TfL 6th Annual Report (2008) stated gross revenue at £268m and net revenue at £137m. By law, the net revenues from the scheme must be spent on measures to further the Mayor’s Transport Strategy.hmm, ok cool, thanks for correcting me, i was going by old TFL reports.
Who will ride it?
Where is this fabled walk-in traffic demand going to come from?
Why are we so afraid to touch the Queen service?
So the best forms of transit must only be reserved for the wealthy who could afford to buy into newly constructed seaside condo villages while the masses are subjecting to pointless transfers and backtracking?
How bout a DRL alignment that serves the CBD via Wellington but on the outskirts transitions up to the older stable neighbourhoods of the downtown core which are no less important than the Waterfront? Btw, the subway that I'm talking about would serve every major new housing community: Riverside, West Don Lands, East Bayfront, Cityplace, King West Village, Liberty Village and the Art-Design Disrict. We can serve all those places plus Parkdale and Riverdale en route.
TfL 6th Annual Report (2008) stated gross revenue at £268m and net revenue at £137m. By law, the net revenues from the scheme must be spent on measures to further the Mayor’s Transport Strategy.
If you prefer, 407 numbers from 2000, showed $139.6m over 9 months gross revenue. Income from operations before depreciation and amortization for the nine-month period was $95.4 million. So $186m in gross revenue for a year with $59m in costs.A road toll on the Gardiner and DVP only would be much easier and cheaper to collect, because cameras are only required at on and off-ramps (similar to the 407). In contrast the London congestion charge requires hundreds of cameras at every entry and exit point in a large area; that explains why 50% of revenue is spent on administration costs. Another option is a parking tax (e.g. charge $X per year to the owner of every downtown parking space, which would be passed on in the form of higher prices for parking).
Move the connection north a station or two and it provides less network access/connectivity.
Why do you think getting to Union is so Critical. Other then ACC and the streetcar link to the ex I cant see why Union would be a destination. In fact most people who go through union (Go users) transfer onto the subway and go north. I dont see why going through union is so important... However on the other hand I can clearly see how the queen streetcar is a mess. Instead of using the streetcar PEOPLE WALK up to 40 minutes to get downtown because the streetcar is too full. God help anyone whose clausterphobic on the queen car.Fixed that for you. Missing Union means people getting on the DRL will have to transfer to get to Union.