Midtown Urbanist
Superstar
I just simply tell drivers that a single LRT means dozens of buses are off the road.Well, the kind of separations we are talking about for Eglinton have the potential to preserve all the auto lanes that exist today. Drivers will complain during construction, yes. But the selling point of all that extra expense is preserving auto flow. Unlike say King, Eglinton is not the place to be talking "fair share of the roadway". It's such an important road and funnel/portal/chokepoint from the 401-427 network to the west end of the city. We need it to be as auto-friendly as possible, as well as LRT-friendly. This has to be win-win, not win-lose.
Buses are the major source of congestion on many corridors, especially on Eglinton. The manner to which they bunch up in rows of 4-7 vehicles (on Eglinton it is sometimes more), take up an entire lane, and then take up the adjacent travel lane as they attempt to overtake one another at bus stops, all contributes to the congestion on the corridor.
Obviously, if not for those buses there would be a gajillion more cars on the road. But that notwithstanding, the single greatest thing the LRT will do for traffic on Eglinton is removing the buses from the road.




