ehlow
Senior Member
I'll be curious to see how a Mount-Dennis to Kennedy trip takes on the Crosstown compared to a Jane-Kennedy trip on Line 2. Are those numbers out there?
It says 38 min on the Crosstown website.
I'll be curious to see how a Mount-Dennis to Kennedy trip takes on the Crosstown compared to a Jane-Kennedy trip on Line 2. Are those numbers out there?
Google says 45 mins for the Jane-Kennedy trip on Line 2. (so probably comparable when you factor in the northern travel component on Line 2.It says 38 min on the Crosstown website.
While I understand the TTC is moving toward eliminating closely-spaced stops, I believe that this should not be applied as a "blanket policy" and instead, consideration should be given to the area in which a stop is located and the customers using the stop.
If the TTC proceeds with its plans to consolidate the existing bus stops on Weston Road and Dora Spencer Road and Sidney Belsey Crescent, residents of 200 Dora Spencer Road will have to walk an additional 105 metres to the south to reach the new consolidated stop location.
While it is appropriate for the TTC to have "Stop Guidelines", I believe that discretion should be used in the application of these guidelines. At this particular location, adhering to the guidelines will provide a barrier for the many seniors of 200 Dora Spencer Road to access public transit.
I agree the stop spacing is absolutely insane in this city. I think much of the support for it (even on this discussion forum) is inertia. There's a good NYT article that discusses San Francisco and their efforts to eliminate stops:I rode the Spadina Streetcar last week on a weekday mid afternoon and it took almost 20mins to get from Spadina station to Queen. That is only 2-2.5km. I could walk that distance in the same time. For example, the Sussex stop and the stop just north of Spadina circle should be removed. The Harbord stop is no even 100m away from either of them. South of College all of the mid-block stops should be removed and the traffic light priority needs to be enabled so streetcars aren't stuck at signals all the time waiting for the light to change.
So the southbound stop on the 511 Bathurst south of Bloor is now at Lennox, but the shelter is still mid-block. Do they usually move those as well?
Sometimes I take the Finch bus between Bathurst and Yonge, and the amount of stops on that segment is just ridiculous. In rush hour it can take an unbelievably long time to travel that short distance when the bus has to keep stopping every few metres to let off a couple of people.
Misguided community opposition and incompetent planners that can't explain to the public that transit is not meant to be at the door step. Walking 100m to catch a bus is not reason to keep a stop. Transit stops should not be decided by the community. Stops can be recommended by a community but planners need to get numbers and see if there is merit in the stop and whether it is too close to another one.
It's frankly insane the number of stops that surface transit has in this city. The number of bus routes with stops on both sides of an intersection. When I attended the Finch West LRT open houses I asked why the stop spacing was so close for an LRT. The TTC advertises it as an improvement but with the frequent stops it is not an LRT but a glorified suburban streetcar on a ROW.
I rode the Spadina Streetcar last week on a weekday mid afternoon and it took almost 20mins to get from Spadina station to Queen. That is only 2-2.5km. I could walk that distance in the same time. For example, the Sussex stop and the stop just north of Spadina circle should be removed. The Harbord stop is no even 100m away from either of them. South of College all of the mid-block stops should be removed and the traffic light priority needs to be enabled so streetcars aren't stuck at signals all the time waiting for the light to change.
Part of the frustration of taking public transit in Toronto is the glacial speed that it moves. I've ridden buses in much denser cities like London, Barcelona and Paris and buses move very efficiently through narrow roads with traffic. They certainly don't stop in every block but stop only on major intersections or landmarks.
I used to take that bus many years ago and it's absolutely brutal to have to stop every 100m just to pick up or drop off 1 person.Sometimes I take the Finch bus between Bathurst and Yonge, and the amount of stops on that segment is just ridiculous. In rush hour it can take an unbelievably long time to travel that short distance when the bus has to keep stopping every few metres to let off a couple of people.
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The new Finch Rocket will be one of the only east-west bus routes that don't terminate at Yonge. This will definitely be convenient for me.From this link. The 199B Finch Rocket will be a new branch that:
...will provide express service between Scarborough Centre Station and York University via Finch Station, during the daytime and early evening, Monday to Friday.