drum118
Superstar
I went down to the Mississauga Hurontario LRT open house yesterday and have a few things to discuss from what I saw.
The connections at Cooksville and Port Credit GO don't seem like "connections" at all. Reminds me of the Bloor GO Station connection with Dundas West subway station.
For Port Credit, the train simply pulls up at the parking lot, forcing passengers to walk a long ways to the trains. I think a better connection could be made right under the bridge or perhaps the LRT aligning westward along side the corridor as proposed for Brampton GO station at the northern terminus.
Also at Cooksville GO, having passengers disembark and cross the street is a hassle. How about extending the LRT platform south toward the rail bridge and having a pair of escalators leading up the bridge and meet a new westward extension of the GO platforms?
In addition, I see no tail tracks, pocket tracks or spurs to temporary storage anywhere along the corridor. With the single maintenance facility way up by highway 407, it would take a long time to roll out trains in the morning especially near the southern extremities of the line. Not to mention what would happen if an LRV gets disabled midway.
Finally, the northern portion of the route is proposed to be a shared ROW with cars, eliminating street parking which I think is vital to the business and street scape on those last 2 km of the line. Furthermore, they will do away with overhead wires and run the LRV's on battery power - something I don't really seem feasible from an engineering perspective. Why would you design and build a battery powered LRV to run on a line that's 90% running from overhead wires? The battery weight and cost should be taken into consideration, along with a realignment of this part of the line or possibly tunneling.
I appreciate your discussion on my thoughts.
You can buy battery power car that can travel up to 3km without overhead power. I rode them in Nice in 2012 and since then, 2 of them have had fire caused by the batteries. There are a number of other places you will find battery power car.
Port Credit is a 3.5 block walk to the bus terminal and GO personal. Nice on a nice day, but a bitch during the winter month. Harder on non able walkers. To do what you want kills the development plan for the site as well taking the line into Port Credit itself.
The line is still to go south as plan and depends on what going to happen to the ESSO lands. Until that is know if anything can be done with it, where to put the station at One Port is up in the air as well moving ahead with the plan. The station at Port St can either be on the street a original plan with provision to go west at some future date. Current proposal calls for the station going north-south beside it with the line going over a span bridge to get to the centre of the ESSO Lands with a station going n-s for future expansion. The best I can see for the line going west from both location is 30+ years unless the minds change to allow higher density along Lakeshore to Southdown Rd.
As for Brampton, that is the best option and is supported by a large amount of the BIA, as there is more than enough parking a block away.
As for Cooksville, too narrow to do what you want, but a set of stairs from the new walkway bridge would help. An elevator would be too hard to be put in like the stair and not enough room to do so.
The plan calls for the line to run as 2 system with both using the loop requiring riders to transfer between them which is "SURE STUPID" and wasting people time if you want to bypass Sq One in the first place. The headway could be different for both lines where one is every 5 minutes while the other is 10-15 minutes, especially the Brampton line.
No place to put pocket tracks and why all the crossover are there to bypass a broken down train. They will need a truck like Edinburgh UK just bought to pull the train back to the yard. As far as I known, MU couples will be used to mate car together as either double or triple.
Edit Noted: Considering there is only 1.5/2 blocks that has been requested by Brampton Council to have no overhead if possible, is not feasibly to do so on a cost base alone.
I was at Brampton also, looking for number pertaining to the loop. The impression I got they are very poor like I though and he needs permission from higher up to give them to me. That request has been made and will sit back looking for them so I can do the killing of the loop, since it has never made senses from day one.
As for the line not going up LAC Dr, it is due to the loading bays of LAC, City Hall and One Capital. It was the first choice of the design team.
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