News   Feb 10, 2026
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Toronto Eglinton Line 5 | ?m | ?s | Metrolinx | Arcadis

Took Line 5 three times yesterdays, for relatively short errands in the tunneled section. I thought it was really quick and that it will make trips that require going to Yonge way faster and easier. My two biggish disappointments were with the tiny doors on the LRT and the indirect, labyrinthine stations. The doors feel too underbuilt and the stations feel too overbuilt.

But I'm so happy it's finally open, and overall I was quite impressed. It's going to make a positive difference to my daily life.
 
After riding yesterday, I thought the line was very good. It moves very fast in the underground portion. The stations are nice but are largely a bit bland, but the screen at Mount Dennis was cool, as was the artwork at Eglinton, Don Valley and Cedarvale. Above ground moves faster then Finch but obviously, signal priority should (hopefully) fix the issues at lights of long waits. Some issues with audio on the Flexities and lack of heat in stations. Also I feel like capacity is gonna become an issue fast, and it showed yesterday. Yes it was an crowd for opening day, but that is a reflection of what rush hours will be like, and it would be wise for TTC/Metrolinx to start thinking about adding a third car to the vehicles. There was a delay on a car I was on in Scarborough due to ''something on the roof'' around 5:20-5:40 PM yesterday and it sounded like someone was on top of the vehicle but I believe it was an overhead issue of some kind. It was very quickly resolved, though. So all in all, opening day went about as well as it could.
 
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You are misstating the history. There was a subway, until Harris cancelled it. And one for Sheppard, until Lastman cancelled most of it (he only cared about the North York segment, and nobody cared about Scarborough....which gave rise to Ford's eventual platform). The cancellations were publicly known, but there was no blowback and little advocacy to challenge those decisions.
The political mood of the day was very much about not spending money on subways because they were considered too expensive. Love him or hate him, Ford fought for an underground line on Eglinton. But in general, LRT was all the voters would accept.

- Paul
I don't think that's correct either. By the time Lastman advocated to save Sheppard it was never going to go to Victoria Park. The Network 2011 plan, the original subway expansion plan, was for a FULL Sheppard Subway from Yonge to Victoria Park. Network 2011 was NEVER funded. The full Sheppard subway was again included in the Liberal governments 1990 "Let's Move" plan, which was ALSO unfunded. The Liberal government fell, Bob Rae's NDP government was elected and they adjusted "Let's Move" truncating Sheppard to Don Mills. This plan, the "The Rapid Transit Expansion Program", WAS funded by the provincial government, and the citym but again only included a 5 stop Sheppard subway. Lastman only advocated to save the part of the subway that was funded.
 
All I can think about when I took this line was...this was $13B? Looks like a $2B line or maybe max $5B line...which is absurd. We need an Audit on where the money went, every cent because I can't see anything best of breed. Even the concrete finishing or lack thereof looks bare bones.

Ummm, I'm as critical of Line 5 as anyone......but your sense of cost needs some tweaks.

The lowest tunnel cost anywhere in the world is 200M per km currently, and the average much higher.

That would get you over the 2B mark, w/o the surface section, the stations, the MSF and the rolling stock.

Over 10km of tunnel, 19km route length, 25 stations stops, 15 underground.

The cheapest you could get would be in the 9B range and that's unrealistic.

***

Yes, the stations could be finished more nicely, no question. But that doesn't get you an 80% price discount.
 
We could afford to build a subway. Money was never an issue. The issue was that politicians simply didn't want to build a subway because they didn't want to be seen supporting Rob Ford.

Had the city council voted in favour of a subway along Eglinton, the province and Feds would have helped with funding. Just like they did with this LRT project.
Money is always an issue, that's why Sheppard is half the intended length, that's why Finch is half the intended length.
Eglinton as a subway would have been half as long as cost twice as much if Ford had his way.
And the cost probably would have killed the Ontario line.
 
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Behold, the most useless staircase of the TTC network

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Behold, the most useless staircase of the TTC network

Assuming that pillar is structurally unavoidable, the handrail configuration is about the best that it can be. Merging on a staircase is to be avoided for safety reasons.

I am surprised however that the ML publicity machine hasn't bragged about this space as a new drop-in recreational space for disadvantaged youth. Or 20 new housing spaces for the housing deprived.

Yet.

- Paul

PS - Seriously, with a little tweaking , it ought to be better used. It could become the perfect platform for subway buskers. I bet the accoustics are actually pretty favourable.
 
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This is exactly right.
Rob Ford came on board wanting the B-D extended to STC. There was a lot of support for that. A year later, Ford agreed to the connected Eglinton-Scarborough Crosstown. Obviously that wasn't his idea, so it show he was willing to compromise, as long as transit didn't interfere with cars. They already had the money for this plan, using a Billion from Finch and a Billion from Sheppard LRT.
But then council killed it, along with the Provincial Liberals killing their own plan just to defeat Ford.
A classic case of defeating Rob Ford regardless of the cost. (and that cost now is a $10B B-D extension.
This is fanfic my dude.

He didn't "have the money". He cancelled a bunch of other projects and then asked the province to reallocate it to the project he wanted.

The province said "no", in part because Ford had demonstrated that the city was an unreliable partner, and partially because other levels of government don't take marching orders from the Mayor of Toronto.
 
Nolan Xuereb has a good Front Page Story up on Line 5's launch, its successes, shortcomings and solutions to the latter. Well done.


On the latter, he links to a piece by Scarborough activist, past and possible future candidate for Council, Kevin Rupasinghe, here:

 
At Don Valley Station, Metrolinx has closed the elevator between the bus terminal and the concourse level for Ontario Line construction.

At the time of this post; Monday, February 9th at 11:50 am, the only public notifications are located inside the station at the concourse and bus terminal levels.

The elevator closure is not listed on www.ttc.ca.

Pictures taken on Sunday, February 8th at 10:40 am.

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I'd say the vast majority of comments here have been positive to bery positive. Especially about the underground sections.

also, give it time. There will be legitimate issues that bubble to the surface, such as frequent emergency breaking due to intrusions.

The CBC had a live blog of this morning's Line 5 service. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/livestory/line-5-lrt-eglinton-crosstown-opening-9.7077945

100% positive - I guess, unlike here, they couldn't find anyone with negative comments.

Perhaps because CBC was
 
This is fanfic my dude.

He didn't "have the money". He cancelled a bunch of other projects and then asked the province to reallocate it to the project he wanted.

The province said "no", in part because Ford had demonstrated that the city was an unreliable partner, and partially because other levels of government don't take marching orders from the Mayor of Toronto.
The province offered him an olive branch by offering him an extra $2 billion so Sheppard would be a success if the east end was reverted to at grade. But his stubbornness on this point killed his Sheppard plan.

There's a lot of misinformation and rose-tinted glasses about the Ford's and their view of transit expansion. And the money being spent on current projects has spoiled us to believe getting money for transit is as easy as typing FUND on a Google maps screen. Not to mention we seem to allow politicians to make decisions that often ignore (or cherry pick info from) the experts who's jobs are to help research and develop these projects. And by experts I mean people who have the educational background and/or experience in this type of planning, not people with YouTube channels or consultants hocking snake oil.
 

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