Toronto Woodbine Station Improvements | ?m | 1s

Thanks for the update nfitz. I'm glad to see this as well since I'm one of the jay walkers. Every morning and evening I encounter other people like me who jay walk and I would imagine a large portion of the foot traffic to Woodbine station is people doing the same, whether closer to Danforth or some part north.
 
Finally someone at the TTC got a clue! I also jay walk across Woodbine every day and was incredulous that they couldn't squeeze a turnstile in to the new building.

The new exit Castle Frank is totally ridiculous!
 
Earlier today:

40IMG_6850.jpg


41IMG_6847.jpg


42IMG_6858.jpg


43IMG_6856.jpg


44IMG_6854.jpg


45IMG_6853.jpg


46IMG_6852.jpg


47IMG_6851.jpg


49IMG_6849.jpg


55IMG_6840.jpg


60IMG_6846.jpg


61IMG_6843.jpg


62IMG_6844.jpg


63IMG_6848.jpg


64IMG_6845.jpg


42
 

Attachments

  • 40IMG_6850.jpg
    40IMG_6850.jpg
    276 KB · Views: 830
  • 41IMG_6847.jpg
    41IMG_6847.jpg
    284.9 KB · Views: 822
  • 42IMG_6858.jpg
    42IMG_6858.jpg
    184.3 KB · Views: 860
  • 43IMG_6856.jpg
    43IMG_6856.jpg
    223 KB · Views: 789
  • 44IMG_6854.jpg
    44IMG_6854.jpg
    253.5 KB · Views: 804
  • 45IMG_6853.jpg
    45IMG_6853.jpg
    273.7 KB · Views: 820
  • 46IMG_6852.jpg
    46IMG_6852.jpg
    305.5 KB · Views: 787
  • 47IMG_6851.jpg
    47IMG_6851.jpg
    329.3 KB · Views: 813
  • 49IMG_6849.jpg
    49IMG_6849.jpg
    282.9 KB · Views: 812
  • 55IMG_6840.jpg
    55IMG_6840.jpg
    215 KB · Views: 791
  • 60IMG_6846.jpg
    60IMG_6846.jpg
    248 KB · Views: 750
  • 61IMG_6843.jpg
    61IMG_6843.jpg
    266 KB · Views: 783
  • 62IMG_6844.jpg
    62IMG_6844.jpg
    264.1 KB · Views: 763
  • 63IMG_6848.jpg
    63IMG_6848.jpg
    264.5 KB · Views: 785
  • 64IMG_6845.jpg
    64IMG_6845.jpg
    324.1 KB · Views: 780
Two years later the end is in sight. The main station is starting to look more finished, especially with new signage and finishes going up inside.

And the second entrance/exit is progressing!

upload_2017-6-6_19-30-31.png
 

Attachments

  • upload_2017-6-6_19-30-31.png
    upload_2017-6-6_19-30-31.png
    1.4 MB · Views: 616
It's ridiculous how long these small projects take. 90% of the time nothing gets done at construction sites.
 
It's ridiculous how long these small projects take. 90% of the time nothing gets done at construction sites.
Small projects? It's an almost $20 million project. We discussed the bids on the previous page - there were 6 bids ranging from $19.7 million to $22.4 million, all from large and some very large contractors.

It's private for-profit construction. If nothing is being done, it's to save money. (though likely they are working somewhere that can't be seen - I certainly see changes when I go in, every week or two).

Could it be done faster? Probably - but that's not the criteria. The primary criteria is cost. TTC has no real cost in it taking a year or so longer. Compare to road construction or building construction, where there are lost opportunity costs and congestion costs.

If people want to pay higher fares and taxes you might see more work happening. Alternatively, you might just have less projects.
 
$20M is a small construction project these days. I understand that the criteria is cost, but in my experience, having a crew there and not working as productively as possible raises the cost. Dragging out the timeline creates more overhead to be maintained over the entire project, and costs of salaries and inflation for material costs go up along the way. These projects can be done in 1-2 years if the TTC has bothered to add a timeline to these projects rather than just base it on primarily on costs.
 
$20M is a small construction project these days. I understand that the criteria is cost, but in my experience, having a crew there and not working as productively as possible raises the cost. Dragging out the timeline creates more overhead to be maintained over the entire project, and costs of salaries and inflation for material costs go up along the way. These projects can be done in 1-2 years if the TTC has bothered to add a timeline to these projects rather than just base it on primarily on costs.

It's not just cost. There's also the not-inconsiderable issue of keeping the station and surrounding neighbourhood open and functioning while the construction is ongoing. A significant portion of the work is staging to allow for that.

Also, this project is going to take 3 years from the time the shovels started on the early work necessary to stage the project until they flip the final switch to turn everything on. That's not too far off of your projection of "1-2 years".

Dan
Toronto, Ont.
 
Almost looks ready to open! Some of the inside temporary walls are coming down. You can see the entrance now to the eastbound elevator from the mezzanine (gosh, seems very narrow walkway connecting the new to the old - hopefully wide enough for all accessible vehicles - perhaps just an illusion though).

upload_2017-6-23_21-16-59.png
 

Attachments

  • upload_2017-6-23_21-16-59.png
    upload_2017-6-23_21-16-59.png
    2 MB · Views: 611
I took a look around Woodbine station this evening. Looks done to me, not sure what they are waiting for. Certainly the second entrance/exit looks ready - though I assume they want to open in one shot.

Here's the new entrance across Woodbine from the existing station. The new gates are installed inside. New bike lanes too.
IMG_20170917_1858215.jpg


This is the south elevator in the mezzanine. For once the tiles seem to match quite well!
IMG_20170917_1853358.jpg


And here's the south elevator at platform level. You can see some of the new ceiling tiles too.
IMG_20170917_1853166.jpg


The new exit on the north (westbound) platform to the second entrance/exit. This should be a faster way into the station, with less wandering around inside.
IMG_20170917_1852316.jpg


The south (eastbound) platform stairs up to the second exit.
IMG_20170917_1851562.jpg


The south elevator in the main entrance, looking west. I guess there's a bit of signage to do still. If I'd stood a big further to the left, you'd be able to see the new second entrance through the window to the right of the elevator. And some more ceiling tiles.
IMG_20170917_1854085.jpg


The ceiling tiles look quite good in the mezzanine. I don't think I've ever seen this station without missing metal pieces of ceiling before!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20170917_1858215.jpg
    IMG_20170917_1858215.jpg
    125.4 KB · Views: 597
  • IMG_20170917_1853358.jpg
    IMG_20170917_1853358.jpg
    89.3 KB · Views: 534
  • IMG_20170917_1853166.jpg
    IMG_20170917_1853166.jpg
    119 KB · Views: 580
  • IMG_20170917_1852316.jpg
    IMG_20170917_1852316.jpg
    121.2 KB · Views: 605
  • IMG_20170917_1851562.jpg
    IMG_20170917_1851562.jpg
    117.9 KB · Views: 580
  • IMG_20170917_1854085.jpg
    IMG_20170917_1854085.jpg
    124.4 KB · Views: 576
The only crazy part of this is that you posted in June (and it looked open or ready) and it's still not.
The new building did. The bottom of the stairs was still boarded off at that time. And I'm not sure about the interior finishes. The elevators certainly were still underway, and the new ceiling wasn't in.

I was just looking at the website - says Summer 2017. That gives them about 2-3 days! :) Though the CEO report indicates it's always been 3rd quarter 2017, with Coxwell the following quarter (now that looks like they've got a lot of work to do still!)
 
Apparently, there has been a surplus of green wall tiles for the station improvements, perhaps salvaged from the old tunnel to the streetcars, as well as Dufferin station, which no longer uses the green tiles. It means that Chester, St. George, and Runnymede have extra green tiles as well.
 

Back
Top