hw621
Senior Member
multiple delays and cancellation on Stouffville line today. Reliability is in question...
Hmmm... I'm sitting here at my office near Port Credit Stn thinking it might be best to take the train home and leave the car in the garage until Monday.multiple delays and cancellation on Stouffville line today. Reliability is in question...
There is no convenient transfer at Malton for them.....but even if there were, it would not change the point I was making........there is a growing number of people riding the kitchener trains taking up more room per person because their luggage situation does not fit well within a GO train.
Kitchener Pearson Express!
Which was a poor decision by council back in the 90’s. If I was planning a station, I’d build it near the west Highway 35 overpass over the right of way. Any new rail through the urban centre will require expropriation.
I don’t think trains will be able to go downtown again but I think a line that runs along the south side of the urban built up area that takes advantages of the existing overpasses along Highway 35 (like the east side) should be protected. But that won’t happen for at least 20 years. There are more important projects (like RER) along the corridor to focus on.
I lived in Lindsay for a year and biked many of the old rights of way.
There isn't a convenient transfer at Malton, but maybe the answer is that there should be. Going from Malton to Pearson via Weston is an incredibly roundabout route.
Brampton Transit's route 115 Airport Express operates Bramalea Terminal - (just outside) Bramalea Station - (just outside) Malton Station - Pearson Terminal 1. Although it would probably add 5 minutes to the trip time, maybe the bus should actually go into the bus terminal at Bramalea or Malton, with a timed connection from eastbound trains, so people stop taking the ridiculous route via Weston. People with luggage will definitely be dissuaded by the current transfers which both include a decent walk in pedestrian-hostile areas.
Between the two stations, my preference would be for Bramalea, given that it has important bus connections such as GO Route 30 from Kitchener and Route 48 from Guelph/Meadowvale. It would also siphon off the riders at the busiest station, rather than after.
I have long advocated the connection of Malton to the airport...but no one in my post/discussion this morning was going from Malton to Pearson via Weston. I simply noted that more and more on the Kitchener trains we see people with luggage getting off at Weston to go to Pearson.....most of those people are getting on at Brampton or points west.
I have used the 115 a couple of times....not likely to do it again....it is an extremely sub-par airport transit experience that is likely best reserved for daily travellers (ie workers at the airport) who's frequeny of use and budget require finding the lowest cost way to get to the airport.
the 115 is already a tediously slow way of getting to/from the airport....having it divert off of Bramalea Road into the GO station would only make it worse.
Agreed that it should be at Bramalea, because people from Kitchener, Guelph, Acton, Georgetown, etc that take the express train can actually make the connection.There isn't a convenient transfer at Malton, but maybe the answer is that there should be. Going from Malton to Pearson via Weston is an incredibly roundabout route.
Brampton Transit's route 115 Airport Express operates Bramalea Terminal - (just outside) Bramalea Station - (just outside) Malton Station - Pearson Terminal 1. Although it would probably add 5 minutes to the trip time, maybe the bus should actually go into the bus terminal at Bramalea or Malton, with a timed connection from eastbound trains, so people stop taking the ridiculous route via Weston. People with luggage will definitely be dissuaded by the current transfers which both include a decent walk in pedestrian-hostile areas.
Between the two stations, my preference would be for Bramalea, given that it has important bus connections such as GO Route 30 from Kitchener and Route 48 from Guelph/Meadowvale. It would also siphon off the riders at the busiest station, rather than after.
With news like this, I can tell GO is preparing for an eventual extension to Uxbridge. But how will the west side platform connect with the parking? They’ll have to build an above ground walkway over the layover and the tracks to connect. I don’t see the parking area being relocated.
I one day hope to see GO trains running to Lindsay. I know this isn’t even on the books, but for such a strong railway city history, I hope to see trains once again coming into Lindsay.
Lindsay has to be pretty far off the radar for rail investment. It has fewer than 20,000 people, which makes it a dime a dozen in terms of towns that lack rail service in the Windsor-Quebec Corridor. Larger urban centres like Peterborough, Sherbrooke and Trois-Rivieres have to be higher priorities. That being said, if commuter service is ever brought back to Lindsay, another option is to use the former GB&S line that goes south from Lindsay to Dranoel. If Via's HFR proposal ever gets built, that would mean less than 30 km of new track to serve Lindsay, which is less than you'd have to build from Uxbridge. Plus that line could continue all the way downtown, potentially terminating at the King and Lindsay Streets area. Mind you, that would mean building tracks on what is now a riverfront trail, so a more likely scenario would be a station on the edge of town around Logie Street. While it would be a longer distance from Toronto to Lindsay than the Uxbridge route, potentially faster speeds along a rebuilt Via HFR line means it might be just as fast.Which was a poor decision by council back in the 90’s. If I was planning a station, I’d build it near the west Highway 35 overpass over the right of way. Any new rail through the urban centre will require expropriation.
I don’t think trains will be able to go downtown again but I think a line that runs along the south side of the urban built up area that takes advantages of the existing overpasses along Highway 35 (like the east side) should be protected. But that won’t happen for at least 20 years. There are more important projects (like RER) along the corridor to focus on.
I lived in Lindsay for a year and biked many of the old rights of way.
it very much is in the growth plan coverage area. Most of south-central ontario is. The coverage area is from Waterloo to Brighton and Fort Erie to Penetanguishene.
Oriole was popular too for people getting off. The nearby hospital I think was a popular destination.They went on at Richmond Hill (might be Gormley) and got off at Langstaff.