Toronto Spadina Subway Extension Emergency Exits | ?m | 1s | TTC | IBI Group

Any place that lies between "gets snow" and "snowbanks that you can step over in 1 step" are all the same in my books
And yet New York City is a lot close to Vancouver. New York City has 11 days with snow a year ... Vancouver has 10.8. New York has 56.4 cm a year; Vancouver has 48 cm. Vancouver's data is for the airport at sea level, so some suburbs of Vancouver will exceed New York.

I get the impression some people don't realise how little snow cities such as New York and Washington get most winters.

But back to the main question - does anyone have any information for how the JFK Skytrain ran this winter during the storms?
 
Is anybody aware of a study of estimate of how many people are traveling between suburban nodes (these ones specifically, or all of them) either now, or in the future?
 
And how many times have you heard on the news in the morning about frozen track switches on the GO line during the coldest days of December/January?

That's GO, not the TTC subway. Apples and oranges. Actually, things are getting better on the GO trains. It used to be a real problem back at the beginning of the decade (early 2000s), but they've installed quite a few snowblowers and heated switches.
 
When the Sheppard line extends west, it would be called Allen, since Allen Road is the closest Arterial that passes over the station
Was pondering this. It could be called Dufferin. The station is certainly near, and I think partly underneath, Allen. However in terms of pedestrian access to the station, if you're standing at the corner of Sheppard and Allen, then you have to walk wast, past Dufferin Street, to actually get to either entrance.

I'm not sure if there's plans for another entrance with all the construction in the northwest of Allen/Sheppard though. Though not from the looks of it.
 
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So... there's a good chance that you're expecting us to wrap up our look at the new Spadina line stations this week, as we have reliably counted down five of the six stations over the last five Fridays... but a nasty word for reliability is predictability, and predictability is boring of course. Instead, for a little fun, we're going to run screaming from the predictable and take a look at an overlooked aspect of extending subway lines, and that

is

the emergency exit.

Ever used one? Not likely: over the subway's 57 year history in Toronto there have been, thankfully, very few times when the escape hatches have been necessary. There aren't that many of them on the system either: the TTC has generally only built the exits when the underground distance between stations is greater than one kilometre. I have used an exit once, over 22 years ago, and maybe that's why I am interested in the buildings now. In October of 1988 I took part in an emergency simulation meant to train responders in this city on how to deal with a situation unfolding in the tunnels below the streets. In our case late one Saturday night after service had finished, we were painted up with injuries, taken in a subway train to a spot between two distant stations, and the train was parked, then filled with theatrical smoke. Emergency services were called, and soon enough we were led out the back door of the train, on to the tracks, and then through a doorway in the tunnel and up a winding staircase. Near dawn we exited on to the street here:

EmExitExist.jpg

Google Streetview


The day was saved, but we certainly did not find ourselves anywhere particularly fashionable.

With the extension of the Spadina line towards the north pole, the fashionability of an early return topside is about to change: Stevens / IBI Group Architects has a design that will make an extraordinary surfacing a far more chic affair. There will be six exits built, and you will see from the renderings of the five that we have, that all share the same inner structure and plan. Building in bulk saves some coin of course, so the savings are being poured into eye-catching cladding treatments. We can't think of any doors in town we'd rather be evacuated through. So, let's start the tour, un-narrated, enjoy:


EmExit1_1.jpg


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EmExit1_3.jpg


EmExit1_4.jpg




EmExit2_1.jpg


EmExit2_2.jpg


EmExit2_3.jpg


EmExit2_4.jpg




EmExit3_1.jpg


EmExit3_2.jpg


EmExit3_3.jpg


EmExit3_4.jpg




EmExit6_1.jpg


EmExit6_2.jpg


EmExit6_3.jpg


EmExit6_4.jpg




EmExit7_1.jpg


EmExit7_2.jpg


EmExit7_3.jpg


EmExit7_4.jpg

All renderings by Stevens / IBI Group Architects, as found at ttc.ca


There you go, a story for a very small segment of the population: transit geeks who are concerned with the architectural quality of a structure that they may one day, unlikely enough, flee from. We choose to embrace all of our constituents.

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So, to start, the station, with the same team that is putting Highway 407 Station together - AECOM as Prime Consultant – Engineering & Architecture : Project Management, Aedas as Design Architect, and PB (Parsons Brinckerhoff) as Design Engineers

Aedas Expands into Canada, Opens 40th Office Worldwide
Cutting Edge Design and Int’l Expertise, Globally and Locally Now in Toronto
http://www.aedas.com/

One of the largest architectural firms in the world, is expanding its award winning design services into Canada. It was announced today that Aedas Canada, the practice’s Toronto office, has been established under the direction of local award winning architect, Walter Daschko, OAA, MRAIC, CaGBC, formerly Principal of Walter Daschko Architect, a community based Toronto practice.
Aedas Canada is the practice’s 40th office worldwide and 1st in Canada. The Toronto presence reflects Aedas’ tradition of growth, opening offices in the cities it works within, by establishing the Toronto office during the design of two new rapid transit stations, Highway 407 and Sheppard West, on the Spadina Subway Extension between Toronto and the City of Vaughan in Ontario, Canada for the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC). Both stations are integral to Toronto’s “Transit City 2050” Masterplan. The Highway 407 Station provides a strategic interchange between private car park-and-ride, subway, express guided bus transit way and local bus services adjacent to Highway 407, reducing passenger circulation distances. Sheppard West will be an important intermodal station providing an interchange with the GO Transit regional rail service. This station— located within Parc Downsview Park, slated to be the first national urban park in the Greater Toronto Area— will be a gateway to the park, designed as part of the undulating landscape, within a planned area of low-rise offices and mixed-use development.

More....http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/4/prweb8263687.htm
 
They already have an office here, somewhere in Etobicoke according to their site ?
 
Some early construction shots from March 26th. None are great photos really, but you'll have an idea of how things are progressing.

First, a couple of shots at the site of Downsview Park station. Any excavation is difficult to see from the road, but Lovat Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) parts are on display for all to see.

DownsviewPkStnConst1.jpg

Craig White

DownsviewPkStnConst2.jpg

Craig White


Three stations north, at Steeles West, there are more TBM parts lying on a now closed York University parking lot.

SteelesWStnConst1.jpg

Craig White

SteelesWStnConst2.jpg

Craig White


A deep shaft is under construction where the future station will be located. Two TBMs will be lowered piece by piece in to the ground here to start the tunnelling process.

SteelesWStnConst3.jpg

Craig White


Another station to the north, to the west of Jane Street, earth is being dug in spots to be mounded up in others in preparation for Highway 407 station.

Hwy407StnConst1.jpg

Craig White

Hwy407StnConst3.jpg

Craig White


A concrete wall with plenty of rebar can be seen under construction in this shot.

Hwy407StnConst2.jpg

Craig White


That's all for now.

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to be fair if the Downsview Parc development actually happens this stop makes a ton of sense... Keele and FInch cant be dismissed... and YORK makes sense.... ITs the 905 part that sucks...
 

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