doady
Senior Member
Hydro corridors aren't healthy places to be in either...
In addition to possible zoning issues (right now there isn't much beyond parking lots, allotment gardens, playing fields and the York bus byway), I've been under the impression Hydro is not keen at all (maybe to the point of actual regulations) in having any kind of significant electrical systems (ie an electrified LRT line) right under their high voltage towers.
That's not even touching on the issues relating to the corridor being several hundred meters north of actual destinations of the expected riders on the line.
Hydro corridors aren't healthy places to be in either...
I have no idea about how all the technicalities would work. It is a fantasy map after all. My thinking is that there's already a TTC busway in the Hydro corridor, and an LRT line isn't that much different. If the electrical systems do turn out to be an issue, then simply change the Finch line from LRT to BRT.
Which still doesn't address the geographical issue in the corridor to the east of Dufferin.
Hydro corridors aren't healthy places to be in either...
Indeed, the reservoir does pose an engineering challenge. I'm thinking that the line should veer to the south a bit and cross it on a bridge where it's more narrow.
Like where to the south?
See how the reservoir is narrower near the bottom? That's where.
That's not exactly a narrow hop:
So, assuming they go with your LRT in the corridor suggestion, you've got the line coming east towards Dufferin, merging on to Dufferin heading south, either to Finch or to its northern side, turning east again and either crossing the ravine on the existing Finch embankment (just like the planned Finch LRT!) or on a hugely expensive bridge.
Once you've crossed this obstacle, then what? Cut right through that existing neighbourhood to jog back north to the corridor? Or continue on Finch itself (just like the planned Finch LRT!)?
Really, if you are going to be making up convoluted engineering plans for getting across the reservoir, I'd strongly suggest you go and have a look at the lay of the land in person, and not just draw lines on a map or satellite image. You really need to see the whole picture.
No it most certainly isn't. However it is more narrow than simply proceeding straight across the reservoir. Google Earth indicates that the bridge would be approximately 260m long. If you went straight along the path of the hydro corridor it would be 400m long.
The Milau Viaduct is an immense bridge (343m tall, 2.4km long) in France that was built for a cost of around 400 million euros, which is about $560 million CAD, according to Google's Currency Calculator. Since the bridge is 2460m long, that works out to a cost of $227million per km.
Even in the worst case scenario the cost per km is lower than a subway, so I don't see why the cost is so outrageous. After all, the hydro corridor LRT would achieve subway speeds, unlike the LRT running in the middle of the street.
I didn't realize proposing a bridge was a "convoluted engineering plan". I knew Toronto wasn't big on large infrastructure projects, but I wouldn't have thought proposing one would be so offensive.
The thread title says fantasy maps. I had no idea that fantasy maps required such detailed justifications and estimates.
Can you clarify by what the intent of the thread is?
My interpretation, and I believe that of those who are commenting that some presented maps are 'good', is that they are ideas that people hope might one day be implemented.
Or instead, is the thread really about maps that look pretty, use nice colours, have an attractive font and have no real bearing on reality?
If the latter, then why not draw a map with a Finch hydro corridor LRT and then say it will cross the reservoir through levitation technology? Practical concerns are irrelevant.
Dictionary.com
fan·ta·sy /ˈfæntəsi, -zi/ Show Spelled
[fan-tuh-see, -zee] Show IPA
noun, plural -sies, verb, -sied, -sy·ing.
–noun
1. imagination, esp. when extravagant and unrestrained.
2. the forming of mental images, esp. wondrous or strange fancies; imaginative conceptualizing.
3. a mental image, esp. when unreal or fantastic; vision: a nightmare fantasy.
4. Psychology . an imagined or conjured up sequence fulfilling a psychological need; daydream.
5. a hallucination.
6. a supposition based on no solid foundation; visionary idea; illusion: dreams of Utopias and similar fantasies.
7. caprice; whim.
8. an ingenious or fanciful thought, design, or invention.
9. Also, fantasia. Literature . an imaginative or fanciful work, esp. one dealing with supernatural or unnatural events or characters: The stories of Poe are fantasies of horror.
10. Music . fantasia ( def. 1 ) .
–verb (used with object), verb (used without object)
11. to form mental images; imagine; fantasize.
12. Rare . to write or play fantasias
Surely one can discuss the relative merits of a fantasy map, however are minutia such as construction costs really of any value?