Sunnyside
Active Member
Since I’m not familiar enough with riding boundaries… could an extension beyond McCowan be a political play? It’d be easy to infer right now that the continuous study area/line is not meant to be continuous (
Something I wanted to bring up earlier is that I interpret the study section east of McCowan in one of two ways:
First, this ends up being part of the Eglinton East LRT as planned, and it just needs to show up on the map because it’s relevant to “Sheppard Rapid Transit”. It certainly won’t get built at the same time in this scenario.
Second, this is actually going to all be one long line all the way past Malvern. Now conceivably that could be mixed-grade LRT, but Sheppard will almost certainly be a metro. So, that’s only possible if we go elevated in the east- believable since the costs of at-grade vs elevated are closing on one another. Now does this make sense? Maybe not, but given the premises, we’d only need to find the governments reason. Is there a particular political incentive to bring heavy rail that far east? Open question to everyone.
realign the western bit to the 427 and you have what’s actually planned as heavy rail minus Pearson-Downsview. And imho, that short link will get proposed at some point, although the prerequisite lines will have to built first. Id run it via the Kitchener rail corridor and Wilson, so basically what you’ve shown, but with a different approach to Sheppard West via a new Wilson GO. The Triangle transfer will create better coverage for the site and reduce capacity issues down the road.this is the direction i'd like to see take shape if they are going to expand Line 4 at all.
a true orbital line would be even better.
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this is veering towards complete fantasy, but an orbital line like this would have connections to every TTC & GO line (excluding Lakesore East) and that would be immensely beneficial to the entire system in my opinion.
Something I wanted to bring up earlier is that I interpret the study section east of McCowan in one of two ways:
First, this ends up being part of the Eglinton East LRT as planned, and it just needs to show up on the map because it’s relevant to “Sheppard Rapid Transit”. It certainly won’t get built at the same time in this scenario.
Second, this is actually going to all be one long line all the way past Malvern. Now conceivably that could be mixed-grade LRT, but Sheppard will almost certainly be a metro. So, that’s only possible if we go elevated in the east- believable since the costs of at-grade vs elevated are closing on one another. Now does this make sense? Maybe not, but given the premises, we’d only need to find the governments reason. Is there a particular political incentive to bring heavy rail that far east? Open question to everyone.