junctionist
Senior Member
I find the lack of initiative towards electrification indefensible in a corridor with such an expansion in service, so I cannot speak out against the Weston residents.
Kind of ironic you saying that, given the misinformation you have spouted here. And you are correct, Weston itself came first, and the trains only arrived 153 years ago. Though offhand, I'm not aware of many buildings, or residents, in Weston here for 153 years.WOW, again plenty of misinformation.
Ah, here comes the misinformation. I don't think anyone here gives a flying fuddle-duddle about Blue 22. The prime reason for the upgrade is for the upgrades to the Georgetown , Milton, and Bolton GO services - and the Kitchener-Stratford VIA services. Blue 22 is simply along for the ride.I am sure that most on this board will never use Blue 22. Yet seem to know everything.
Blue 22 does nothing to improve the communities it passes through. It does nothing in its current proposed form bring any improvements to Toronto.
The idea of a diesel train running from Union to Pearson is positively 20th Century thinking.
I can't believe you would make such claims. They will be using state of the art refurbished Budd Rail Diesel Cars built as recently as 1962. For easy boarding with luggage these cars come with two wide 65cm pull open steel doors and three large steps. What could be more 21st century?
not even wheelchair accessible?
Not without help. They will be refurbished similar to VIA's RDCs which means a separate door is used for wheelchair access requiring a lift.
Weston itself came first, and the trains only arrived 153 years ago. Though offhand, I'm not aware of many buildings, or residents, in Weston here for 153 years.
The platform at Pearson will be high-platform. GO unfortunately doesn't seem to have any long term plan to migrate to the double-decked cars Montreal and NJ Transit are getting which support both platform heights and therefore any stations GO uses (including Weston, Eglinton, Bloor, and Union) are stuck at low platform heights.
A few ... but many from pre-1855?there's quite a few and some back on to the railway.
A few ... but many from pre-1855?
As the railway was operational in 1856, presumably a house that was constructed in 1854 was with the knowledge of the railway construction. Here's an 1852 newspaper article that discusses the alignment from Guelph to Toronto passing through Weston:IIRC, one time i think i saw a heritage home that backs on to the tracks that had a sign that said it was built in 1854.
I'd hardly call an obviously erroneous statement an argument.the argument was made that the railway came first (before weston) and that's not the case.
As the railway was operational in 1856, presumably a house that was constructed in 1854 was with the knowledge of the railway construction. Here's an 1852 newspaper article that discusses the alignment from Guelph to Toronto passing through Weston:
http://www.halinet.on.ca/sigs/ehs/ga1852-2.HTML
Good question - you'd have to look at plans from the 1850s. I wouldn't be surprised if the railway was built away from the village, east of Weston Road, and then people quickly built along the railway when it was under construction ... but I'm only guessing.but which of those two property types next to each other came first? residential or railway?