unimaginative2
Senior Member
I completely agree with all those points, CC.
Building an LRT line the Scarborough RT corridor is a waste. I'd rather see it saved for future commuter/regional rail service and in the meantime the Bloor-Danforth subway should be extended instead.
You know that there is commuter rail in that corridor right now, right?
Oh really???? OMG, wow, I never knew that. You shock me with your knowledge. What an idiot I am.
Building an LRT line the Scarborough RT corridor is a waste. I'd rather see it saved for future commuter/regional rail service and in the meantime the Bloor-Danforth subway should be extended instead.
^CC,
When you're arguing with a streetcar evangelist, you cannot win with a capacity argument. Steve Munro has told me on his website that the King and Queen cars are below capacity, for example.
I hate to let the facts get in the way of a good argument, but why does anyone think LRT along the SRT corridor would be crowded?
Metrolinx 2031 numbers for the SRT corridor show peak point ridership at 6400 per hour, that is less than half the capacity of a grade separated LRT line, leaving plenty of room for unanticipated growth.
The only reason why the SRT is crowded today is because of a lack of vehicles,(not because it does not use everyones favorite transit vehicle, the subway). Both ICTS and LRT technology are more than capable of handling present and future demand.
I know the next pro subway argument is the dreaded transfer at Kennedy. Well in case no one has been paying attention, that entire facility is going to be redesigned regardless of what happens to the SRT.
With a subway extension most riders would still have to transfer at STC. Replacing the SRT with a LRT network means riders would transfer at Kennedy, either way their is still a transfer. And the LRT scenario would allow riders on the SRT corridor to have a continuos ride to the eglinton LRT line.
I am not some kind of LRT worshiper, I just happen to use facts and logic when forming my opinions. In this case I believe the subway option is not the best one, since it would cost about half a billion more and is not needed, that's money that could be put to good use elsewhere
And there you have it: God's revealed truth. Silly to try to inject facts into the argument.
You mean facts like the meaningless 2031 ridership figures that Metrolinx simulated somehow and didn't even bother to provide any technical context for? Even if everything was done scientifically and presented properly, it would still only serve as a rough guide, not holy writ.