When designing wayfinding and station names the key should be to guide the uninformed.
Sure.... but there is a question of how far to go in that pursuit. Some people are more generous to the utterly oblivious than I.....
Stations should have been place names and the move to change Eglinton West to Cedarvale makes sense and this thought process should continue
Strongly disagree. No one I've ever met in the City would call the area around Eglinton-Allen 'Cedarvale'.
The City designates an area to the south as 'Humewood-Cedarvale' ; I don't hear anyone use that either. Its a contrivance. Most people call the area from Cedarvale Park southwards 'Forest Hill' or 'Forest Hill North'.
But since Forest Hill generally covers from just south of St. Clair to Eglinton, its far too general to be a useful station appellation.
I feel strongly the default, intuitive name for any station is the major street or streets that it is crossing. The exceptions would be for very widely known landmarks (Union Station, Museum, Pearson Airport etc.)
. Name stations as unique names in the GTA. Station names don't need cross streets in the name because that is relevant to people navigating by streets... naming the station Union is OK... it doesn't need Front Street in the name. Once people get off at the station, then you can guide people to streets.
Disagree, see above. Bus routes are named by streets, destinations have street addresses. Street names provide maximum utility.
The cardinal direction for a subway line adds no value.
Strongly disagree. When people give directions from Warden Station to downtown, they will say, take Line 2 going west to Yonge
Cardinal directions provide a relative sense of placement and the trajectory of a service. I don't require the information. You could take down almost all signage in the TTC and I'd be fine, but for someone less familiar, a direction of travel is helpful in giving one a sense of whether a service merits you reading to see if it goes to your station, or if you can dismiss it as going the wrong way.
The line is yellow line 1, the directions are Finch and Vaughan... From Finch it travels SSE then WSW for a short period under Front, then NNW, then WSW a bit, then NNW, then NW then NNW... who cares. No commuter is a goose trying to fly south in general... they want to go somewhere specific.
Sure, but beyond listing a terminus, one can't clutter a basic 'Line 2' sign with every available destination. Generally, someone has the idea, my destination is west of here, and that information helps someone sort which direction to go and which map to consult looking for their desired destination.
We do need to implement it Metrolinx wayfinding standard and continue to rationalize station names.
Disagree on both counts.
There hasn't been a perfect implementation of Metrolinx wayfinding yet
On that we most certainly do agree.