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VIA Rail

Just to put things into perspective:

Toronto is the largest metropolitan center in Canada (5.9 million in 2016) and Montreal the second-largest (4.1 million), whereas Berlin is the largest city in (and capital of) Germany (3.5 million in 2015) and Munich is its third-largest city (1.5 million).

When measuring a straight line (euclidean distance - or "as the crow flies"), Toronto's Union Station and Montreal's Gare Centrale are 504.5 km apart, whereas the respective main stations (Hauptbahnhof in German) of Berlin and Munich are 504.2 km apart.

In 1977, when VIA took over the passenger rail services of CN and CP, the fastest scheduled train between Toronto and Montreal was 4:30h, whereas between Berlin and Munich it was ... *drumroll* ... 8:45h (yes, almost twice as much!).

In 1989, when the Berlin wall fell, it was still 4:30h between Toronto and Montreal, but even 9:43h (i.e. more than twice as much!) between Berlin and Munich.

In 1992, when the collapsed GDR had been absorbed by the Federal Republic of Germany, the fastest travel time between Toronto and Montreal had fallen to 3:59h and (thanks to some urgent repairs on the dramatically under-maintained rail network in the former GDR) to 8:47h between Berlin and Munich.

In 2006, the fastest travel time between Toronto and Montreal increased to 4:15h, whereas it decreased to 5:49h between Berlin and Munich (thanks to the opening of the North-South mainline with its tunnel underneath Berlin - thus avoiding the detour via Berlin-Schönefeld Airport - and of various High Speed Lines just in time for the FIFA World Cup 2006, which upgraded speeds on 77.4 km to 300 km/h and on another 194.4 km to 200 km/h).

Finally, in December 2017, the fastest travel time between Toronto and Montreal increased further to 4:49h and was overtaken (for the first time!) by Berlin-Munich, which decreased to 3:58h, thanks to the opening of the final (but most crucial) piece of the Berlin-Nuremberg HSR axis: the 107 km long HSL Erfurt-Ebensfeld.

This means that Germany had to first invest a total of $22.7 billion in 2021 dollars (€3.6 billion by 2006 for Nuremberg-Munich and €10 billion by 2017 for Berlin-Nuremberg) to upgrade 73% of the route to at least 200 km/h and 40% even to 300 km/h, until they finally beat (by only a heartbeat!) what Toronto-Montreal had achieved for a few days during the ill-fated first passenger service trials of the Turbo Train in 1968/69 and then in regular revenue service with the LRC trains between October 1992 and May 1999 and again between May 2000 and May 2005.

So, why did Germany have to invest so much money to match the travel time which Canada achieved (over virtually the same - euclidean - distance!) almost exactly 50 years before? It's because the Kingston Subdivision is so incredibly direct: 539 km length between two points 504.5 km apart equals a detour of just 7% compared to the straight line, whereas the fastest route between Berlin and Munich (via Halle-Erfurt-Nuremberg-Ingolstadt) is still 622.0 km long, which equals a detour of 23% (compared to the straight line of 504.2 km) and is in fact only 11 km shorter than the 633 km which #51 covers between Montreal and Toronto as the only remaining M-O-T train:

View attachment 333919
Compiled from: timetable data obtained from official VIA schedules and the Fernbahn.de timetable database, as well as infrastructure data obtained from DB Netze.
Notes: above break down of speed limits refers to the design speed of the respective segments (a bit like Canada's track classes impose certain speed limits), while ignoring any more local speed limits (e.g. for tight curves). Also, the 80.8 km of 200 km/h infrastructure shown for the years 1977-2005 opened between Donauwörth, Augsburg and Munich between 1965 and 1977; however, equipment capable of reaching at least 200 km/h rather than just 140-160 km/h only seems to have been used from 1994 onwards. Finally, the fastest travel time has been found between München Hauptbahnhof and either Berlin Zoologischer Garten (for years 1977-1991 and 1993), Berlin Ostbahnhof (for years 1992 and 1994-2005, confusingly called "Hauptbahnhof" between 1987 and 1998) and the new Berlin Hauptbahnhof (for all years since its opening in 2006).

***

Why do I write all of this? Because the tragic of Canada's passenger rail sector is that whereas Germany continuously improved the travel time between Berlin and Munich (less than 9 hours by 1992, less than 8 by 1994, 7 by 2000, 6 by 2006 and less than 4 by 2018), we are paralyzed in this country, because at some point, the track was cleared from all other passenger and freight trains, so that one measly train per day (and direction) could achieve the travel time of 3:59h (or at least on paper, as more than the absolute minimum in track switches would make this travel time infeasible).

Therefore, no, the biggest liability of HFR (or any attempt to fix the Corridor at a price tag which doesn't instantly kill the project) is not the targeted travel time between Toronto and Montreal (even today's 4:49h is almost an hour faster than what was ever achieved between Berlin and Munich before the 108 km long and 300 km/h fast HSL Erfurt-Ebensfeld opened in December 2017), it's the historical coincidence that that distance has at some point been covered at just under 4 hours.

In other words: we can't have faster train service now because we once had even faster train service (even if it was just one train per day). If HFR fails and we'll still have just a pathetic 6 trains per day between this country's two largest cities in 10 and 15 years' time, then it will be mostly because of that 3:59h. I'm afraid that we will never achieve a service standard which is remotely comparable with what similar corridors in Europe receive, unless we stop compulsively talking about that stupid figure. It doesn't have the slightest effect on the benefits which any improvement to the current passenger rail services would bring...
I appreciate your detailed and well-researched response. I don’t dispute the value of HFR, and it will be an improvement for those who depend on the train as commuters or for mid-distance travel. I just don’t see much in the plan to entice new customers. VIA is selling reliability the way the TTC sold “state of good repair”. It’s important but uninspiring. I know the rail enthusiasts on here get apoplectic about such criticisms, but illustrating that our national passenger rail is no less mediocre than many European services isn’t especially encouraging, except perhaps in an inside baseball way.

The end user wants a fast trip. Toronto to Montreal in 3 hours isn’t the highest speed possible with existing technology, but I think it would be sufficiently fast to divert some air and auto travel. It would also represent a significant and necessary modernization. As our Air Force is mocked on South Park with fleets of WW2 prop planes, VIA is often associated with used British train sets and milk train stoppages, real or perceived. I understand that the financial constraints mean that improvements are incremental and a compromise, but really? Can we see some government investment here? There’s a lot of unspent federal infrastructure money and a climate action plan that needs fleshing out.
 
Do you mean like a comparison between the Ottawa route and this "bypass"?

We know the Ottawa route will take just over 4 hours.

Wheres that guy who does all of the really in depth calculations on the HFR, with charts and graphs and stuff?

Does he have like a bat signal I can call? haha. He would know.

I think you mean @reaperexpress

Though others sometimes contribute this type of work, he is UT's most prolific at it!
I initially did some back of the envelope calculations for travel times, but @crs1026 and @Urban Sky proceeded to find a bunch of errors/oversights in it. I think Urban Sky would be the go-to for travel time estimates given that he has developed a very detailed spreadsheet specifically for calculating it.
 
^@Urban Sky was good enough to share some of his calculations with me off line. I am in awe of the precision of his analysis.

His data convinced me that if the line can be banked sufficiently, some of the transit times VIA is suggesting are much more credible than some of us were giving VIA credit for.

I am still a bit pessimistic about what VIA can achieve end to end given slow speed through some parts - particularly, the approaches to Toronto and Montreal where track will be shared with freight and commuter. And the segments through Peterboro, Tweed, Sharbot Lake, and Perth, and the approach to Ottawa from Fallowfield - where the regulatory and political impacts (plus curvature, urban proximity, etc) may force permanent slow orders. If one adds up the minutes required for all those stretches, and deducts from 185 minutes, the remaining segments will have to be pretty fast to get to 3:05.

I can certainly see pretty impressive timings, although 2:55 - 3:05 still feels a bit unrealistic. And I'm dubious overall that a single track line could handle more than hourly service (some press reports this past week were musing about 15 minute headways, which seems like just journalistic confusion of HFR and other things eg RER). So I'm still cautious.

Anyways, all of that was predicated on HFR 1.0.... ie only restoring the as-built former line with fairly minimal curve improvements. If Ottawa has now upgraded the plan to allow significant stretches of newer, straighter track, it's a whole new ballgame.

However^2 .....if Ottawa does intend to fund a significant new alignment construction, then I am back to wondering if that's the best place for a new line. If we can afford say 50 miles of new track through the Canadian Shield, then I'd be looking for their comparison of that plan versus other routings, such as anew direct Kingston-Smiths Falls line plus new dedicated tracks paralleling the Lakeshore line from Kingston to Toronto. But I won't go down that rabbit hole til we see more of the plan.

- Paul
 
Given this discussion of 200 km/h running, here's where I can see that happening based on my non-scientific look at the existing Havelock ROW in Google Earth:

Existing 200km/h-plausible segment

There is a 16 km (10 mile) stretch of the existing ROW just east of Tweed which could be plausibly upgraded to 125 mph (200 km/h), marked in blue on the image below. The existing Havelock ROW generally has lots of sharp curves in this area because they made only the bare minimum investment to overcome geographic obstacles, but this particular segment has quite gentle curvature because it is following a ridgeline which itself is curving very gently. There are two sharp S-bends which would need to be bypassed, but that's less than a kilometre of realignment in total.
Capture1.JPG


Due to the remote location, this segment only includes two road crossings (both of Sulfide Road).

This little 200 km/h zone would bring no significant travel time benefit on its own, but there also seems to be a case for new 200+ km/h lines on both sides of it.

Tweed Bypass

Immediately to the west of this segment is the town of Tweed, which is a significant political and logistical obstacle to the alignment. The existing ROW makes a sharp curve through the middle of town and crosses numerous streets at odd angles. Trains would need to slow to a crawl, and even then they would still be extremely annoying to the town residents, who would certainly demand a station as compensation. Instead, an 8 km (5 mi) bypass could be built through relatively easy terrain north and west of the town.
Capture2.JPG


This segment would need a bridge over the Moira River, and I figure we might as well build it high enough to grade separate the two adjacent roads while we're at it.
Capture3.JPG


Combined with the possible 200 km/h zone along the existing ROW, this bypass would produce a 26 km (16 mi) 200 km/h zone if all 7 crossings are grade-separated, or a 22 km ( 14 mi) zone if the line is only the 4 easternmost crossings are grade separated (including the two Sulfide Road crossings along the existing ROW). In both scenarios, one of the crossings is a minor road which could alternatively be closed rather than grade-separated.

Sharbot Lake Bypass

East of that existing 200km/h-plausible segment is the notoriously squiggly segment which includes ploughing through the centre of the town of Sharbot Lake. As a few others here have suggested, there may be an opportunity to build a new bypass railway north of Highway 7. Since the ridgelines in this area have very gentle curvature and are running parallel to the route, the new railway line would rarely need to cross them. So there is a chance that a new high speed line here could be relatively affordable despite the rocky terrain.
Capture4.JPG


If the bypass rejoins the existing ROW east of Sharbot Lake, the length of new ROW required would be 49 km (30 mi). Combined with the possible 200 km/h zone along the existing ROW and the Tweed Bypass, there would be 75 km (47 mi) of continuous 200 km/h running.

Blue: >=200 km/h
Green: 145-180 km/h
Yellow: 105-130 km/h
Orange: 65-100 km/h

Capture5.JPG


However^2 .....if Ottawa does intend to fund a significant new alignment construction, then I am back to wondering if that's the best place for a new line. If we can afford say 50 miles of new track through the Canadian Shield, then I'd be looking for their comparison of that plan versus other routings, such as anew direct Kingston-Smiths Falls line plus new dedicated tracks paralleling the Lakeshore line from Kingston to Toronto. But I won't go down that rabbit hole til we see more of the plan.
This is of course the 6-billion dollar question. But it is plausible that the Havelock alignment still provides better bang-for-the-buck than a lakeshore alignment even with the need to build new ROW through the Shield. The two bypass lines described above only total 55 km (37 mi) of new ROW. The rest of the existing ROW is actually fairly decent and could sustain quite good speeds with some curve realignments.

It's also worth noting that the net cost of jumping from 110 mph to 125 mph is pretty low in the Shield since there are few road crossings anyway, but building a new line along the lakeshore would mean either building tons of level crossings (not future-proof) or tons of grade separations (extremely expensive). The new lines through the Shield would also be somewhat future-proof for HSR, since it wouldn't be a big deal for an otherwise 300 km/h high speed line to slow down to 225 km/h for those 75 km through rocky terrain.

His data convinced me that if the line can be banked sufficiently, some of the transit times VIA is suggesting are much more credible than some of us were giving VIA credit for.

I am still a bit pessimistic about what VIA can achieve end to end given slow speed through some parts - particularly, the approaches to Toronto and Montreal where track will be shared with freight and commuter. And the segments through Peterboro, Tweed, Sharbot Lake, and Perth, and the approach to Ottawa from Fallowfield - where the regulatory and political impacts (plus curvature, urban proximity, etc) may force permanent slow orders. If one adds up the minutes required for all those stretches, and deducts from 185 minutes, the remaining segments will have to be pretty fast to get to 3:05.

I can certainly see pretty impressive timings, although 2:55 - 3:05 still feels a bit unrealistic. And I'm dubious overall that a single track line could handle more than hourly service (some press reports this past week were musing about 15 minute headways, which seems like just journalistic confusion of HFR and other things eg RER). So I'm still cautious.

Anyways, all of that was predicated on HFR 1.0.... ie only restoring the as-built former line with fairly minimal curve improvements. If Ottawa has now upgraded the plan to allow significant stretches of newer, straighter track, it's a whole new ballgame.

My most optimistic interpretation of the newly-discussed 200 km/h top speeds and 3h00 Toronto-Ottawa travel times is that the analysis showed that the HFR 1.0 plan wouldn't actually achieve 3h15 travel times in practice once those other factors are considered (urban slow zones, schedule padding etc). But if we do actually shell out for a 200+ km/h bypass of those really bad segments around Tweed and Sharbot Lake, it would become possible to actually beat that 3h15 target by a decent margin, even accounting for those factors.
 
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The end user wants a fast trip.
They want a mix of speed, convenience, and price. When you can sit down in a larger seat, not have to shuffle through various queues, and can avoid the traffic related frustrations for less, then it seems obvious that people will see that is a viable option..

Air travel = 1h20min flight, 1h15min pre-flight/check-in, 20min post-flight/get-to-curb, 45min to get to downtown Toronto, 20min to get to downtown Montreal = approx 4h.
Driving = 5h20min
HFR to Montreal = approx 4h.

That seems competitive to me and a great starting point. The Ottawa timing of 3h is even more competitive beating easily the other two options. If it is truly frequent, then it will take market share away from the airlines, and if the ridership is significant then the appetite to put more investments into the line will be greater.
 
Those flight times are a bit long - total travel time is probably closer to 3:30-3:45, especially if you use Porter.

for the extra bit of time people would probably rather take the train anyway as it’s more comfortable and easier to work on board than on a plane. The reality is that you can take the train to Montreal and back in a day for a meeting and have basically no downtime.
 
Those flight times are a bit long - total travel time is probably closer to 3:30-3:45, especially if you use Porter.

for the extra bit of time people would probably rather take the train anyway as it’s more comfortable and easier to work on board than on a plane. The reality is that you can take the train to Montreal and back in a day for a meeting and have basically no downtime.
The issue is that the last train to Montreal leaves Toronto at around 5:30 (Pre covid). If there was a trip that left around 8pm and could get you to Montreal by 12:30 that would be useful.
 
VIA is selling reliability the way the TTC sold “state of good repair”.
I have to completely disagree with this. Of the people ive tried to convince to take the Toronto/Montreal train, or people who tried of their own volition and stopped, every single person stopped for one reason: they were on a train that was hours late. Prior to that experience, they enjoyed the train and found the 4.5h trip from Toronto to Montreal faster than driving and more convenient than flying.

Every single one, and these people continually now badmouth VIA for their terrible ontop performance. Its in my opinion the single most important issue facing VIA at this moment. One really bad trip with terrible ontime performance is all it takes and then this person not only nixes VIA, but lambastes them to others.

Were not talking about a train being 5 minutes late, we are talking about trains being quite commonly an hour late+
 
I have to completely disagree with this. Of the people ive tried to convince to take the Toronto/Montreal train, or people who tried of their own volition and stopped, every single person stopped for one reason: they were on a train that was hours late. Prior to that experience, they enjoyed the train and found the 4.5h trip from Toronto to Montreal faster than driving and more convenient than flying.

Every single one, and these people continually now badmouth VIA for their terrible ontop performance. Its in my opinion the single most important issue facing VIA at this moment. One really bad trip with terrible ontime performance is all it takes and then this person not only nixes VIA, but lambastes them to others.

Were not talking about a train being 5 minutes late, we are talking about trains being quite commonly an hour late+
Even if the train took the same amount of time it's better than driving because you can work on the train. If you drive you have to stop to answer emails and texts. It ends up taking longer.
 
Those are exactly the problems with the train as it exists today: Departure times that are inconvenient and the train arrival times being widely inconsistent. I want to be able to leave to catch a train that gets into Toronto or Montreal right around midnight so I can have dinner before I leave. I want to catch an early train around 5am so I can arrive for 9am. I want to be able to leave at times through the day and not have to book a week in advance. I want to get all the way to my destination and not once look out my window in the middle of nowhere wondering why we have stopped. Forget about 200km/h... never 0km/h would be a huge improvement. I want to tell someone at the other end of the line when I'm going to arrive and not have that be completely inaccurate. Solve that and the times that are being proposed for HFR are more than enough to significantly change the ridership in the corridor.
 
Those are exactly the problems with the train as it exists today: Departure times that are inconvenient and the train arrival times being widely inconsistent. I want to be able to leave to catch a train that gets into Toronto or Montreal right around midnight so I can have dinner before I leave. I want to catch an early train around 5am so I can arrive for 9am. I want to be able to leave at times through the day and not have to book a week in advance. I want to tell someone at the other end of the line when I'm going to arrive and not have that be completely inaccurate. Solve that and the times that are being proposed for HFR are more than enough to significantly change the ridership in the corridor.
If it actually gets built a 12am departure for a 6 am arrival at each end is ideal. If it arrives early, leave the option for the passengers to stay on board until 6am. The issue now is that union station doesn't open until 6am.
 
Given this discussion of 200 km/h running, here's where I can see that happening based on my non-scientific look at the existing Havelock ROW in Google Earth:

Existing 200km/h-plausible segment

There is a 16 km (10 mile) stretch of the existing ROW just east of Tweed which could be plausibly upgraded to 125 mph (200 km/h), marked in blue on the image below. The existing Havelock ROW generally has lots of sharp curves in this area because they made only the bare minimum investment to overcome geographic obstacles, but this particular segment has quite gentle curvature because it is following a ridgeline which itself is curving very gently. There are two sharp S-bends which would need to be bypassed, but that's less than a kilometre of realignment in total.
View attachment 334104

Due to the remote location, this segment only includes two road crossings (both of Sulfide Road).

This little 200 km/h zone would bring no significant travel time benefit on its own, but there also seems to be a case for new 200+ km/h lines on both sides of it.

Tweed Bypass

Immediately to the west of this segment is the town of Tweed, which is a significant political and logistical obstacle to the alignment. The existing ROW makes a sharp curve through the middle of town and crosses numerous streets at odd angles. Trains would need to slow to a crawl, and even then they would still be extremely annoying to the town residents, who would certainly demand a station as compensation. Instead, an 8 km (5 mi) bypass could be built through relatively easy terrain north and west of the town.
View attachment 334103

This segment would need a bridge over the Moira River, and I figure we might as well build it high enough to grade separate the two adjacent roads while we're at it.
View attachment 334102

Combined with the possible 200 km/h zone along the existing ROW, this bypass would produce a 26 km (16 mi) 200 km/h zone if all 7 crossings are grade-separated, or a 22 km ( 14 mi) zone if the line is only the 4 easternmost crossings are grade separated (including the two Sulfide Road crossings along the existing ROW). In both scenarios, one of the crossings is a minor road which could alternatively be closed rather than grade-separated.

Sharbot Lake Bypass

East of that existing 200km/h-plausible segment is the notoriously squiggly segment which includes ploughing through the centre of the town of Sharbot Lake. As a few others here have suggested, there may be an opportunity to build a new bypass railway north of Highway 7. Since the ridgelines in this area have very gentle curvature and are running parallel to the route, the new railway line would rarely need to cross them. So there is a chance that a new high speed line here could be relatively affordable despite the rocky terrain.
View attachment 334101

If the bypass rejoins the existing ROW east of Sharbot Lake, the length of new ROW required would be 49 km (30 mi). Combined with the possible 200 km/h zone along the existing ROW and the Tweed Bypass, there would be 75 km (47 mi) of continuous 200 km/h running.

Blue: >=200 km/h
Green: 145-180 km/h
Yellow: 105-130 km/h
Orange: 65-100 km/h

View attachment 334105


This is of course the 6-billion dollar question. But it is plausible that the Havelock alignment still provides better bang-for-the-buck than a lakeshore alignment even with the need to build new ROW through the Shield. The two bypass lines described above only total 55 km (37 mi) of new ROW. The rest of the existing ROW is actually fairly decent and could sustain quite good speeds with some curve realignments.

It's also worth noting that the net cost of jumping from 110 mph to 125 mph is pretty low in the Shield since there are few road crossings anyway, but building a new line along the lakeshore would mean either building tons of level crossings (not future-proof) or tons of grade separations (extremely expensive). The new lines through the Shield would also be somewhat future-proof for HSR, since it wouldn't be a big deal for an otherwise 300 km/h high speed line to slow down to 225 km/h for those 75 km through rocky terrain.



My most optimistic interpretation of the newly-discussed 200 km/h top speeds and 3h00 Toronto-Ottawa travel times is that the analysis showed that the HFR 1.0 plan wouldn't actually achieve 3h15 travel times in practice once those other factors are considered (urban slow zones, schedule padding etc). But if we do actually shell out for a 200+ km/h bypass of those really bad segments around Tweed and Sharbot Lake, it would become possible to actually beat that 3h15 target by a decent margin, even accounting for those factors.

Thanks for putting all that together.

I've been going off the wiki data on this, but you need approx 1800m curve radius with 100mm cant deficiency for non-tilting trains on all curves for continuous 200kph speeds. But that's only part of it.

I also wonder how this will work with local regs in Canada... for instance here in Victoria (AU), Class 1 track (which currently is limited to 160kph - and we have about ~300 route length km of it in use since the mid 2000s) requires: a) concrete sleepers (ties) with heavier rail (60kg), b) level crossings require booms and signals (not just one or the other), c) probably some of regs I've missed.

Is there anything like that which will inform how they build/rebuild this new corridor?
 
If it actually gets built a 12am departure for a 6 am arrival at each end is ideal. If it arrives early, leave the option for the passengers to stay on board until 6am. The issue now is that union station doesn't open until 6am.
They could have the Atlantic start in Toronto, and the Canadian start in Montreal. Allow boarding really early, at 9pm so people can get settled in early and go to sleep if they want, depart at 2am (late enough that people who went to late night games get on, get to the other city at 7am, continue on to further destinations. Hotel service were you go to sleep in one city and wake up in the other.
 
They could have the Atlantic start in Toronto, and the Canadian start in Montreal. Allow boarding really early, at 9pm so people can get settled in early and go to sleep if they want, depart at 2am (late enough that people who went to late night games get on, get to the other city at 7am, continue on to further destinations. Hotel service were you go to sleep in one city and wake up in the other.
Do you have any idea with which fleet and funding VIA should introduce such a Corridor night train service? The Ocean (not: Atlantic) operates with 2 sets, the Canadian with 4 and the Churchill service with 3 sets, for a total of 9 sets. Just for your Corridor night train service you'd need 2 additional sets (unless you don't want to run it daily, but even for one frequency per week you'd need one additional set, as the cycling of neither transcontinental services has enough layover in Montreal or Toronto to fit in an two-nights-round-trip across the Kingston Sub)...
 

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