drum118
Superstar
YepAre you talking about the Hurontario LRT?
YepAre you talking about the Hurontario LRT?
Your train is arriving! On Saturday August 22, crews drove an LRV from Mount Dennis Station through the tunnel all the way to Caledonia, making it the furthest east a train has traveled to date!
Where does it actually say every entrance must be accessible?
Talk to MTO on the requirements. Why should you have access to an non accessible entrance while forcing accessibly/strollers/walkers riders to travel a long distance to an accessible entrance?? Good example is Bloor/Yonge entrance on Yonge St for line 2 where you have to enter the Bloor St entrance to get to the main TTC entrance, then down to line 2.Where does it actually say every entrance must be accessible?
Talk to MTO on the requirements. Why should you have access to an non accessible entrance while forcing accessibly/strollers/walkers riders to travel a long distance to an accessible entrance?? Good example is Bloor/Yonge entrance on Yonge St for line 2 where you have to enter the Bloor St entrance to get to the main TTC entrance, then down to line 2.
Attachment 2 of this report, the 2019-2023 TTC Multi-Year Accessibility Plan describes, in detail, the 52 initiatives that TTC plans to complete over the next five years which will increase the number and geographic coverage of accessible transit services and facilities, satisfy AODA requirements, and overall improve accessibility for TTC customers. These initiatives cover four broad areas: Vehicles, Facilities, Wheel-Trans, and Customer Experience. Included in the Accessibility Plan are proposed new best practice initiatives to go beyond the requirements of the AODA and further the 2018- 2022 Corporate Plan, such as system-wide signage and wayfinding upgrades and providing real-time text/visual information on subway trains. A summary of the 52 initiatives is also provided in Attachment 3, while a summary of TTC’s AODA IASR compliance status is provided in Attachment 4.
| Number of Pedestrian Entrances into Building | Minimum Number of Pedestrian Entrances Required to Be Barrier-Free |
| 1 to 3 | 1 |
| 4 or 5 | 2 |
| More than 5 | Not less than 50% |
I hope this doesn’t lead to situations where a 4th entrance is closed instead of making a second entrance accessibleAccording to Section 3.8.1.2 of the Ontario Building Code, the number of barrier-free entrances required for a building are as follows:
Number of Pedestrian Entrances into Building Minimum Number of Pedestrian Entrances Required to Be Barrier-Free 1 to 3 1 4 or 5 2 More than 5 Not less than 50%




