Bojaxs
Senior Member
Seems to be a running trend with all these LRT's they're building in Ontario, eh?But we're stuck with what we're stuck with.
Seems to be a running trend with all these LRT's they're building in Ontario, eh?But we're stuck with what we're stuck with.
Search out the construction of the Skytrain in Vancouver.What if they had built this line as an elevated metro?
God forbid Hurontario/Mississauga/the GTA grows large enough to need a metro down one of its densest corridors.Seems to be a running trend with all these LRT's they're building in Ontario, eh?
What if they had built this line as an elevated metro?
Hurontario is going to be a mess, in that the idiotic loop is going to screw it's operation. The thing wont be quick to begin with, and with the loop there's going to be trains looping through it. We dont know what the service design is going to look like, but knowing the stupidity that goes on in this province i'm willing to bet that there's going to be no form of through-service down Hurontario.God forbid Hurontario/Mississauga/the GTA grows large enough to need a metro down one of its densest corridors.
It's so funny with these delayed projects in Line 5 and Line 10, that when they started construction an LRT opened that very day would've made sense. But by the time the line is actually opened, the density would've grown to a point where full-grade separation clearly becomes the optimal choice.
To top it all off, these projects are further screwed by DBFOM P3 procurement peddled by incompetent politicians and bureaucrats who are naively unaware that 50 to 100% delays and 50% cost overruns are the norm now. Or maybe they just like handing fat stacks of taxpayer money to their buddies at the consortium.
After watching the mess for all 3 LRT lines, I have to say an elevated line was the way to go as well all of them would be in operation now.to a few years ago.It would probably be finished by now.
Below are photos of the Surrey-Langley Skytrain in BC, which began construction just barely one year ago in November 2024.
I will remind everyone that Hurontario has been under construction since 2020.
Remember, when anyone says that surface LRT is the quickest method of rapid transit construction they are straight up lying.
Elevated metro on a wide ROW like Hurontario can be done without widespread utility relocation and road rebuilding. I’m willing to bet a properly designed elevated metro would have been cheaper than this current LRT project.
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That was my thinking while driving along Hurontario the other day. It's so wide and there are so many towers being built along it. An elevated metro built along Hurontario st. would have made the whole MCC area look like Burnaby or Richmond B.C., minus the mountainous backdrop.Elevated metro on a wide ROW like Hurontario can be done without widespread utility relocation and road rebuilding. I’m willing to bet a properly designed elevated metro would have been cheaper than this current LRT project.
Line 6's fiasco has transcended Canadian social media. We are a global laughing stock. And likely will continue to be with Line 5 and Line 10. What do you think a tourist thinks when they get on "Line 10" expecting a metro, only to find out it's a low floor tram.It's crazy how demonized some of us were for having the audacity to say that Eglinton (and Sheppard East) should have been a subway and that they cooked the numbers (Neptis) to make sure LRT won over subway while excluding Skytrain/OL technology from the studies.
How the table have turned today - looks like this line will have the same issues as O-Train.
The big different between Line 6 and 10 is the fact the stops are further apart with less traffic lights and to have transit priority signals on day one.Incoming pro-LRT comments saying hOW coulD you POssIblY JustifY a metro on Hurontario / Eglinton, while conveniently forgetting about the rest of the planet and Vancouver, which is sending metro deep into comparatively sparsely populated Surrey and Langley.
Langley City Centre is effectively 50 km from downtown Vancouver. Mississauga City Centre is 25 km from downtown Toronto.
These muppets on all levels keep drinking the Metrolinx kool aid that apparently the largest city in Canada by far does not deserve more than a single new metro line in 30+ years. System justification theory in practice for politicians and the complacent public. Line 4 Sheppard 2002 - Line 3 Ontario 2035? It's already been leaked by a prominent Urban Toronto 'superstar' that that P3 POS has been ludicrously delayed. And Line 4 is effectively a small spur line, not a real line. Toronto is somewhere between nearly double and 50% bigger than Montreal's population for a similar area. Toronto is close to 3 times the size of Vancouver's population. Without being overly pedantic, how can anyone justify both Vancouver and Montreal having a larger metro system than Toronto.
Line 6's fiasco has transcended Canadian social media. We are a global laughing stock. And likely will continue to be with Line 5 and Line 10. What do you think a tourist thinks when they get on "Line 10" expecting a metro, only to find out it's a low floor tram.
Your premise of 35,000 daily ridership is flawed, which is why your conclusion is shaky at best. Hurontario connects 2 GO train stations and the largest CBD outside Toronto proper and the largest mall in Ontario. To claim 35,000 per day for the denser, longer Hurontario, while the province claims 51,000 for the shorter, suburban Line 6 doesn't make sense at all.The big different between Line 6 and 10 is the fact the stops are further apart with less traffic lights and to have transit priority signals on day one.
What is the logical in having a (Light) metro on line 10 that will see 150,000 riders by 2040-50 and seeing 35,000 on opening day??
The current mayor wanted it to be a subway like a fair number of people.
Have you check the current ridership between 502, 103, 17 and 2 lately as it is down from 32,000?? Cannot use the full 502 numbers as it is for the full route with no numbers south of Steeles.Your premise of 35,000 daily ridership is flawed, which is why your conclusion is shaky at best. You probably think Canada is still a country of 36.99 million as of 2021, and Mississauga has only 700,000 people.
I don't think you are familiar with the concept of latent transit demand. Line 6's and the 36 bus' ridership is driven by Humber College students, with low latent demand from the surrounding low density communities. A fast and reliable Hurontario LRT or metro will take many more drivers off the road. Not to mention enable residents along Milton and Lakeshore West to commute to or visit Square One. One can't just take bus ridership and assume the same ridership for higher order transit. Otherwise, how did Paris T9 take part of the 56,000 per day 183 bus route and turn it to 100,000 per weekday? If Hurontario sucks like Line 6 does right now, then obviously it won't capture much latent transit demand.Have you check the current ridership between 502, 103, 17 and 2 lately as it is down from 32,000?? Cannot use the full 502 numbers as it is for the full route with no numbers south of Steeles.
Mississauga is close to 800,000 with Brampton ahead of Mississauga by some 10,000's.
And it's not like Hurontario isn't very wide and not exactly an aesthetic masterpiece to be tarnished with a SkyTrain like line. And even the pushbox around Port Credit could have been avoided...It would probably be finished by now.
Below are photos of the Surrey-Langley Skytrain in BC, which began construction just barely one year ago in November 2024.
I will remind everyone that Hurontario has been under construction since 2020.
Remember, when anyone says that surface LRT is the quickest method of rapid transit construction they are straight up lying.
Elevated metro on a wide ROW like Hurontario can be done without widespread utility relocation and road rebuilding. I’m willing to bet a properly designed elevated metro would have been cheaper than this current LRT project.
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