Red October
Senior Member
Par course for Toronto...
It's just so sad CC, Chicago with all its violence is a better city for transit...
It also got a 50+ year head start...
Par course for Toronto...
It's just so sad CC, Chicago with all its violence is a better city for transit...
It also got a 50+ year head start...
Par course for Toronto...
It's just so sad CC, Chicago with all its violence is a better city for transit...
You can just add another "fail" in Toronto's pocket. Fun times to be had for all.
We're getting a huge new 19km transit line, the majority of which will be grade-separated, and it's a "fail" because people are going to have to walk 1 flight of stairs to transfer between this line and two other rapid transit lines, all with very frequent service? All things considered, I would still say that it's a pretty major win; the transfer is a minor inconvenience at most.
Transfers suck when they involve either a long walk or a long wait, but they're pretty painless when they're easy and fast.
^ My current commute involves me going up a flight of stairs, down a hallway, down a long flight of stairs, down another hallway, down a long escalator, one other flight of stairs and a hallway for good measure to transfer from the Circle line to the Jubilee line at Baker Street Station.
It's amazing listening to Torontonians complaint about transfers, given how painless transfers often are in Toronto compared to many cities.
Even the one people seem to complain about the most, at Kennedy, is only up a few flights of stairs ... and is going to be replaced.
Transfers are one of the things TTC got right.
It also got a 50+ year head start...
It might be that the TTC is operationally unsure of themselves to run the line on the surface in the middle segment, but they should not enshrine that in a new build.
While continuing to transfer at Kennedy will suck, I don't think it will be as bad as some may think. Currently the problem isn't the transfer, but the fact that the line goes nowhere and is essentially a middle man.
Let's compare the Scarborough RT to The York University BRT. Both have you transfer to them in the middle of nowhere, but while York is the destination for the majority of riders, Scarborough Town Centre is yet another transfer point. With the Scarborough LRT in Transit City, the line will continue to Centennial College and to the Sheppard East LRT and possibly beyond. It will become a trunk line for Scarborough rather than an extension done cheap.
This is my problem with the current plans for Sheppard. The current subway becomes nothing more than a middle man, forcing the majority of riders to transfer to actually go anywhere.




