Woodbridge_Heights
Senior Member
And here we thought the ford government was pro business...
What does this have anything to do with being pro business? The contractor and the government have a dispute over... something... and we don't really know what that is. The only thing I heard is that the contractor messed up properly making water drainage, and apparently the road is so flat that literal puddles could be made during rain, which if that's true is a huge problem and the government has every right to seek litigation.And here we thought the ford government was pro business...
What does this have anything to do with being pro business? The contractor and the government have a dispute over... something... and we don't really know what that is. The only thing I heard is that the contractor messed up properly making water drainage, and apparently the road is so flat that literal puddles could be made during rain, which if that's true is a huge problem and the government has every right to seek litigation.
All of those other than Syracuse are fairly useless stub highways that have no real utility already. Even Syracuse has a half decent alternative a 6-7 km to the east, which is fine considering the size of the city. It's not ideal for travelers looking to go from I-90 EB to I-81 SB.. but otherwise redirecting onto I-481 is not a problem at all.
Rochester was an extremely low use loop around the downtown that literally went nowhere. It made a ton of sense to demolish.
Detroit is planning to demolish a small stub of I-375 at it's southern end, which already ends in an arterial road along the waterfront. Similarly, it's underutilized for it's current 6 lane freeway cross section. Also makes a lot of sense.
Long Beach is another stub freeway that is duplicated by I-710 1.5km to the east, and it's demolition is being accommodated by replacing the Gerald Desmond Bridge, allowing higher capacities to flow onto I-710 once the 103 highway is demolished.
Houston is also planning to demolish part of I-45 around it's downtown, although only after completely reconstructing the other half of the loop as a 22 lane express-collector system to replace the lost capacity.
Montreal demolished A-10 as it similarly ended in downtown Montreal, and they moved the end back a few kilometres. No major loss to the key freeway network.
Freeway demolitions are not happening in the numbers you make them out to be. The ones that are share more similarities to the part of the Gardiner that was demolished in the early 2000's or the Allen Expressway than the Gardiner or 401.
Big surprise that a town of 200,000 people with a declining population didn't need it's own freeway loop downtown.
The list is actually 14 that are officially under study, with the remaining 19 being only "proposed" by various lobbying groups.@Admiral Beez posted an article from today's New York Times suggesting the phenomenon is much larger than you seem to think.
Can Removing Highways Fix America’s Cities?
Highways radically reshaped cities, destroying dense downtown neighborhoods. Now, some cities are starting to take them down.www.nytimes.com
From said article:
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Toronto already effectively removed its less useful highways by not building them 60 years ago. As a result, today we only have the bare minimum.
The only reason those articles are published is because they can highlight "racism" that happened 70 years ago.
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All of the above, from: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/05/27/climate/us-cities-highway-removal.html?action=click&module=Top Stories&pgtype=Homepage
Kindly, lets stop this misrepresentation that highway removal is about 1, 2, or 3 small cities............
I think most of what you say makes sense, but Gardiner east of Jarvis is low utility and a waste of money? You mean the section whose primary purpose is to connect to the DVP, a highway that feeds off into North York as well as the 401 and 404, serving a large chunk of North York, Northern Scarborough, and Eastern York Region? Also the highway is used by 401 East and 404 GO busses, and if the intercity busses move to Union, they will most likely use it as well.The Allen is a completely useless highway; worse than that, its a complete negative.
It takes you from from the 401 to place on Eglinton where there is no 'there'.
It causes traffic jams; its unslightly and divides communities and the Beltline.
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The Gardiner east of Jarvis is low utility and we are wasting gobs of money keeping at least the Jarvis to Cherry part standing for another few decades.
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While the 400-series highways are useful, as is the Gardiner from downtown west; both serve as material barriers to communities accessing other areas.
I wouldn't suggest wholesale removal for those, though I would like to see narrowing, and new crossing points, and aesthetic and noise mitigation measures.
Though if could ditch the western Gardiner (downtown to Humber) that would still be a wonderful thing.
Nobody bats an eye when we spend half a billion dollars to serve under 14,000 daily trips on the train, but god help us if we spend any money to serve the hundreds of thousands of people who use the expressways.
I think most of what you say makes sense, but Gardiner east of Jarvis is low utility and a waste of money? You mean the section whose primary purpose is to connect to the DVP, a highway that feeds off into North York as well as the 401 and 404, serving a large chunk of North York, Northern Scarborough, and Eastern York Region? Also the highway is used by 401 East and 404 GO busses, and if the intercity busses move to Union, they will most likely use it as well.
Gardiner East is extremely useful and important, no less than any other section of the Gardiner. "Low Utility" is the last thing I'd describe it.