Undead
Senior Member
^it was the same train driver after he got a speeding ticket for the fast run
Closing one station and having trains go through it is very different then closing a section of a line for a period of time to perform work on the signal system and also remove asbestos.Worth noting is that the TTC did close Chester station many months back to expedite work on its elevators; and managed to finish them several months early.
Not at all, when I wrote that back in June I wasn’t glass half full thinking, instead I thought, now, now’s this city’s chance to seize the opportunity of eradicated ridership to expedite the work that otherwise is delayed for years because of the need to rely on short periods of system disruption. With hundreds of thousands of dead by May 2020, no vaccine in sight and the WHO predicting this was going to last into 2021, I suggest that many people thought we will still be in lockdown now. If it was necessary to take six months to ponder the matter and rally the resources then I’m still happy about it, because they did exactly what I suggested, using the downtime to make the big repairs and updates.You really are a 'glass half-empty guy! I doubt that many people thought until at least mid-summer that we would be still be in semi-lockdown with a greatly reduced passenger load.
Not at all, when I wrote that back in June I wasn’t glass half full thinking, instead I thought, now, now’s this city’s chance to seize the opportunity of eradicated ridership to expedite the work that otherwise is delayed for years because of the need to rely on short periods of system disruption. With hundreds of thousands of dead by May 2020, no vaccine in sight and the WHO predicting this was going to last into 2021, I suggest that many people thought we will still be in lockdown now. If it was necessary to take six months of ponder the matter and rally the resources then I’m still happy about it, because they did exactly what I suggested, using the downtime to make the big repairs and updates.
Every time I look at this I am blown away by the complete lack of transit planning for connecting Peel region to Toronto. They spend Billions to connect Vaughn Centre (population 303,000) and extend the Yonge line to Richmond Hill. BUT NO PLANS at all for connecting Peel Region (population currently close to 1.500.000). The connecting highways - 401 and QEW- are both jammed with traffic and no connecting options being planned for. This is just unbelievable. Who makes these ridiculous decisions???
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Connecting "the regions" to Toronto really should be (and hopefully will be) GO RER's job - no one wants to sit on a subway train for 2 hours and 55 stops from Pickering or whatever!
I think as someone else mentioned, the Eglinton West extension will at first terminate at Renforth Gateway, which is the current terminus of the Mississauga Transitway, a fully grade separated bus corridor serving MiExpress and GO busses, meaning that it is extremely fast, and doesn't require the bus to wait at red lights or in traffic. Its in a way a lower capacity LRT line that runs on busses. The only downside then is the forced linear transfer onto the Eglinton line, but in general, Peel will be connected by meaningful Rapid Transit from Square One to Midtown Toronto, especially since Eglinton West is now fully grade separated to Mount Dennis.Every time I look at this I am blown away by the complete lack of transit planning for connecting Peel region to Toronto. They spend Billions to connect Vaughn Centre (population 303,000) and extend the Yonge line to Richmond Hill. BUT NO PLANS at all for connecting Peel Region (population currently close to 1.500.000). The connecting highways - 401 and QEW- are both jammed with traffic and no connecting options being planned for. This is just unbelievable. Who makes these ridiculous decisions???
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I think as someone else mentioned, the Eglinton West extension will at first terminate at Renforth Gateway, which is the current terminus of the Mississauga Transitway, a fully grade separated bus corridor serving MiExpress and GO busses, meaning that it is extremely fast, and doesn't require the bus to wait at red lights or in traffic. Its in a way a lower capacity LRT line that runs on busses. The only downside then is the forced linear transfer onto the Eglinton line, but in general, Peel will be connected by meaningful Rapid Transit from Square One to Midtown Toronto, especially since Eglinton West is now fully grade separated to Mount Dennis.
The Transitway becoming an LRT line will never happen in anyone life time as it part of the GO Thing that needs a lot more added to it to make it a system.Btw, there is a provision to convert the transitway to LRT in the future. Its been built with that in mind, clearances, etc. Whether that would be an extension of the Crosstown or not is undetermined.
Its actually the only reason im in favour of full grade separation on the Eglinton West extension; because you need grade separations for very long lines to stay within proper headways.
Doug Ford does! Especially since he takes the subway everyday in Toronto, I mean do you guys not see him commuting daily on the TTC? His commute consists of watching subways in his daily briefings, and on YouTube subway videos on his way to Queen's Park.Connecting "the regions" to Toronto really should be (and hopefully will be) GO RER's job - no one wants to sit on a subway train for 2 hours and 55 stops from Pickering or whatever!
GO RER's job is to provide an express service between regions, there still needs to be that more local connective tissue, something that can get you from Midtown Toronto to Mississauga, or Brampton to York Region. GO transit is far too radial to be able to accomplish those, which is where projects like Yonge North, Scarborough-Pickering BRT, and Eglinton West subway come in.Connecting "the regions" to Toronto really should be (and hopefully will be) GO RER's job - no one wants to sit on a subway train for 2 hours and 55 stops from Pickering or whatever!
Doug Ford does! Especially since he takes the subway everyday in Toronto, I mean do you guys not see him commuting daily on the TTC? His commute consists of watching subways in his daily briefings, and on YouTube subway videos on his way to Queen's Park.