Mercury
New Member
"Fairview" stop is named for the neighbourhood and not the street. That said, it's more like 300m from Fairview Rd. to Central Parkway, and should be under 4 minutes to walk unless you're going real slow.
The distance from Fairview to Central Pkwy is one thing if you live on Hurontario St, but it is a different story if you live on either side of it. Because of Cal-du-sacs and ring road, that distance is close to 1500m plus and a long walking distance for any stop. The side streets provide the bulk of ridership."Fairview" stop is named for the neighbourhood and not the street. That said, it's more like 300m from Fairview Rd. to Central Parkway, and should be under 4 minutes to walk unless you're going real slow.
The distance from Fairview to Central Pkwy is one thing if you live on Hurontario St, but it is a different story if you live on either side of it. Because of Cal-du-sacs and ring road, that distance is close to 1500m plus and a long walking distance for any stop. The side streets provide the bulk of ridership.
ML has looked only at east-west bus routes to service stops and has not looked at ridership for various existing stops that have no bus service for east-west stop. Elm sees far more ridership than CP every will just like Kingsbridge along with a few other locations and ML chose not to put stops there or moved a few others to be even space. Elm has the 3 & 8 routes on it. If that happen, there would be a plan stop at Fairview.
Right now, the 2 stops between John St and Fairview are gone that where service by the residents on the side streets that now have to walk either to John St or CP stop and that is more than 4 minutes walking distance.
I live 12 minutes from Hurontario and Elm with Elm and CP have a hill to climb and that walk to the CP platform is close to 16 minutes and subject to traffic light timing once the line is in service. I walk a lot and it no big deal except from November to April when the weather is poor. Even Fairview east has a hill to Hurontario as well other walkways.
Everyone keeps talking about able body people walking to these stops as easy walking, but what about the person with a walker, cane, are slow walker for various reasons, the person pushing a stroller with children in tow or the person pulling a shopping cart??? Transit is not for able body riders, but all type of riders and that seems to be lost on planners and people who want speed and longer distance between stops. I known someone who used to work for TTC management and was shock how hard it was to get around the system when they had a hip replacement and forced to use a walker for a year that they change their tune on many things and push for better access for everyone.
They have a street edge where a lot of cities in NA don't as well quality of service with Mississauga being one of them. There is no real street edge on Hurontario other than the Dundas area with buildings in the park and long blocks for the rest of the line. The side streets are a major issues as I noted. There are long blocks in Europe like Hurontario, but the density is there which is not for Hurontario. Transit is more important Europe than the car in NA.I'd love a stop on Elm more than anyone, but I don't get why stop spacing needs to be so close in Canada, but in Europe they're much further apart. What is so different about Europe that they have their stops much further than here?
The person I was replying to was talking about the new condo right on Hurontario.The distance from Fairview to Central Pkwy is one thing if you live on Hurontario St, but it is a different story if you live on either side of it.
What's the solution then? Stops every 200m? I understand that for some people, especially those with mobility problems, the stops will be too far, but the line has to run at a reasonable pace. There has to be a balance.Everyone keeps talking about able body people walking to these stops as easy walking, but what about the person with a walker, cane, are slow walker for various reasons, the person pushing a stroller with children in tow or the person pulling a shopping cart??? Transit is not for able body riders, but all type of riders and that seems to be lost on planners and people who want speed and longer distance between stops.
The presentation for the BRT starts on page 14 with the other RT projects following it.
It will help the 407 when it becomes 10 lanes wide. The girders are very meaty to support the road and the guidewayThat bridge is a wide beast.
I shot the site on Oct 31 and the site was ready for the girders then and not surprised they were place this past week as well over the 403. There was a lot of equipment on site on that date, but very little today when I shot it.Early mornings are the best mornings. 407 ETR now has all the new girders installed. Here's to hoping they get more work done before the first snowfall.View attachment 609070View attachment 609071
You're much more optimistic about that open date than I am. I was thinking August/September of next year. I remember several pages back you had mentioned that it took them about 9-10 months to do the southbound lanes. I have a feeling it's going to take them quite a bit longer now due to the finances and what was brought to light.Depending on the weather and Mobilinx finances, I expect the northbound could open late April to early June.