Not sure I really foresee too many problems. I assume they will finish all 4 walls first and then put up an overhead platform with a few supports. Doing the floor is more likely to cause problems as pinch-points are inevitable.The station is coming along well but only now has the real intrusive work begun. Digging the York Concourse and working on the West Wing was easy but renovating the Great Hall, Departures Concourse and the Moat are going to be funnnnnnnnnn. I dread to think how intrusive things will get when they finally begin work on the ceiling of the Great Hall.
Not sure I really foreseeable problems. I assume they will finish all 4 walls first and then put up an overhead platform with a few supports. Doing the floor is more likely to cause problems as pinch-points are inevitable.
Why do the washrooms always smell so gross? Is there something wrong with building ventilation?
I was so happy when the new ones opened, but now they're starting to smell as gross as the old Bay concourse ones. Puke.
Why do the washrooms always smell so gross? Is there something wrong with building ventilation?
I was so happy when the new ones opened, but now they're starting to smell as gross as the old Bay concourse ones. Puke.
Tragedy of the commons?
AoD
There are many washrooms in Union, this should likely vary between them based on which are more heavily used, ventilation differences, etc. I generally try to find the less crowded ones, anyways.
For instance, I strongly doubt the small UPX bathrooms, and especially the single-person ones in the lounge/restaurant upstairs, will have this issue--the UPX ones are really nice.
Also, there is a very little-used one up in the Front St Promenade, on the south side of the corridor, just when you cross west from the centre/VIA wing to the west/York Concourse wing.
The renovated VIA departures concourse ones are also really nice, though not necessarily much less busy than the York ones.
To maintain access between the two stations during construction, work is being conducted in stages. The remaining staircase between the subway and train station will remain open until a new concrete staircase at the far end of the image below opens. Once pedestrian traffic can be shifted to it, work will shift again, allowing further demolition and rebuilding of the old GO Bay Concourse.
Whoa, wait a minute. So there won't be flush access between the east and west moats?
Nope - staircase to the Centre moat if exiting from PATH/TTC:
http://urbantoronto.ca/database/projects/union-station-revitalization
AoD
Okay, the centre and west Front Street moats do appear to be flush with a walkway suspended above the east Front Street moat, which will be level with the upper level of the Bay Concourse. And the west moat and York Street moat are level with the upper level of the York concourse.
So I guess I'm confused as to how the York and Bay Pedestrian Retail (lower level concourses) areas tie into the Teamways? Or how the York Pedestrian Retail ties into the York Street Promenade?
Man, Union is confusing.
Nope - staircase to the Centre moat if exiting from PATH/TTC:
http://urbantoronto.ca/database/projects/union-station-revitalization
AoD
From what I remember of the street work, this tunnel (near east end of the hotel) was opened up (from above) and then fixed so I THINK it is still there and I guess (theoretically) available. Whether the Royal York wants people coming directly to the hotel is another question. The tunnel was, presumably, to allow arriving rail passengers to get to hotel easily but I doubt many GO passengers stay at the hotel these days!I notice that diagram indicates a tunnel to the Royal York under Front Street. At last check that tunnel had been walled off and pretty much abandoned. Is it still going to be in existance when all is said and done or is it one of those things that has become redundant due to the plaza?
From what I remember of the street work, this tunnel (near east end of the hotel) was opened up (from above) and then fixed so I THINK it is still there and I guess (theoretically) available. Whether the Royal York wants people coming directly to the hotel is another question. The tunnel was, presumably, to allow arriving rail passengers to get to hotel easily but I doubt many GO passengers stay at the hotel these days!