I agree with you but unfortunately thats not how people vote... Public transit goes at a snails pace... But if there was an olympic motivator it would move much faster...
I'm afraid that even with the motivation of an Olympics we won't build the transit that we need. We will probably build a line here or there, but most of the facilities will probably be located on existing [overcrowded] lines, and the line that gets built will probably end up serving the games for two weeks more than the city and its citizens forever (something like an LRT to the stadium site, rather than, say, the DRL or a regional rail network to serve the GTA).
It seems that the only reason most of us want the Olympics is because of the possibility of transit improvements. I think that's a very huge risk to take, given that if we land the Olympics, we're saddled with debt for a generation and no government will want to invest in our transit system afterwards for the forseeable future.
what we need the most, a DRL, I am sure we will get... everything else is secondary in my opinion and just helps the system.
I agree with you but unfortunately thats not how people vote... Public transit goes at a snails pace... But if there was an olympic motivator it would move much faster...
An Oly booster who uses 'sixrings' as his/her nom de plume, and lives in Ste. Catherine's, just tried to use the transit card to further the obsession?
hahahahaha....
My name is sixrings because michael jordan has sixrings..It was my password forever. I dont know that person you are speaking about but I can assure you that is not me. I live near Bathurst and Eglinton if you must know and was formerly at university and king. All I am saying is that the Olympics forces three levels of governemtn to work together and within a time constraight. As a result things get done. It might cost alot but at least it happens. As a Torontonian I dont mind paying in to get some money out of the feds especially. Thanks.
As a Torontonian I dont mind paying in to get some money out of the feds especially.
They might try, but they'd have to overcome the precedent of having a part-temporary stadium as part of Toronto's most recent bid, and they'd have to convince the feds and the province to spend hundreds of millions more on just a stadium for a tenant that doesn't (and may never) exist.And, yes, I don't think there's any chance Godfrey, Ford et al don't try to get a stadium built that'll allow them to take another kick at the NFL can. There's way too much money to be made by our current OLG chair and the football-loving Ford is the perfect patsy.
Toronto should use a venue plan similar to london 2012. It can be done on the low end and does not have to be extravagant.
The link with the table I posted with the example of Barcelona seems to be broken, so you might have missed it, I uploaded it again here:
Oh, I did read a few articles, and since they seemed strangely incomplete or decidedly misleading, I went and searched for papers instead. Here you can find a few:
http://www.tourismnortheast.co.uk/downloads/olympic_impact_on_tourism_study.pdf
http://www.gamesmonitor.org.uk/files/When-the-Games-Come-to-Town-M-Smith-2008.pdf
http://books.google.ca/books?id=GQz...1&ots=FEg_9_8h3u&dq=olympics&output=html_text
You'll see there's a pattern: tourism grows steadily for about 4 years previous to the Olympics, followed by a big spike the year of the event, then comes a dip in hotel occupancy the next year or two (fueled by the oversupply of hotel rooms left after the olympics, even if in some cases tourist numbers are steady, there are just too many rooms), and then a steady growth for about a decade. The articles that state tourism is negatively impacted by an Olympiad mainly concentrate on the two year slump after the games (the "peak and through" effect), and ignore the previous years of growth and the big rise that comes after a few years in most cases. They also seem to focus on hotel occupancy without explaining the natural oversupply after an event of this magnitude, or they talk about growth expressed in percentages instead of the actual number of tourists (it's more eye-catching to read "there was a 3% dip the next year!!!" than "total numbers went back to previous levels for a year or two before they started to rise again")
And please don't simplify my arguments. First: I said I think the Olympics CAN be a catalyst for tourism if done right. Of course, it's not always the case, but when it works, like with Barcelona, it works big time (and no, Barcelona is not the only Olympic Games that hasn't had a negative economic impact for the host city, it's just the brightest success. In fact, every Olympiad since 1984 has been profitable). Second: I never even said tourism was the main selling point for me, but the regeneration of former derelict areas, the homes that are built (both affordable and at market rates) and the transit infrastructure that's left as a legacy. And I think a city like Toronto can stand to gain a lot more than a city that already has that, like London.
London 2012 is already the most expensive Olympics ever.
Wait, what? Fortress had nothing to do with the Olympics! It's been around since the 70s if not earlier and closed around 2005. I've skied there, it was a back to basics place that was more of a local ski hill than a true resort. It's kind of out of the way too. Unfortunately it couldn't survive the competition from larger, more developed resorts like Sunshine, Nakiska, Lake Louise, etc. Incidentally, I've heard that they're having another go at it, fully opening again in a two years. Apparently it got some new infrastructure as part of the deal when they shot Inception there. Yet another reason to be a Chris Nolan fan!For the record -- I was born and raised in Calgary and LOVED the 1988 Olys, and the fact the Saddledome allowed the Flames to come to town. But for every Nakiska development there's a dead Fortress Mountain.