SaugeenJunction
Senior Member
Love the concrete ties, they look so much better than the wood ones (and are quieter when you’re on the train).
Love the concrete ties, they look so much better than the wood ones (and are quieter when you’re on the train).
But can the concrete ties be recycled as garden walls?Love the concrete ties, they look so much better than the wood ones (and are quieter when you’re on the train).
But can the concrete ties be recycled as garden walls?
It's one of the tradeoffs to having a new track on the eastern side. The only way to solve for this issue is to build an underground concourse similar to the one at Randolph. You would have to dig it out, coordinate with the train schedule, and install four elevators (as per accessibility standards), just to somewhat assist the few people that would be getting off at Bloor Station and head north on the east side of the tracks. That project would be tens of millions of dollars. If you ask me, the juice isn't worth the squeeze.So in future, if you got off a car at the north end of the platform, you'll have to walk an extra half kilometer to get to the tunnel and back if you wanted to get to Wallace Avenue? Where previously you'd be walking about 80m?
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I guess that's the same reason why the Lansdowne GO station will not have a tunnel at the Southern end of the platform (despite the convenience this would bring for access to the new cluster of buildings around the MOCA buildingIt's one of the tradeoffs to having a new track on the eastern side. The only way to solve for this issue is to build an underground concourse similar to the one at Randolph. You would have to dig it out, coordinate with the train schedule, and install four elevators (as per accessibility standards), just to somewhat assist the few people that would be getting off at Bloor Station and head north on the east side of the tracks. That project would be tens of millions of dollars. If you ask me, the juice isn't worth the squeeze.
Just extend the platforms north to stairs that connect to the Wallace Avenue Footbridge.It's one of the tradeoffs to having a new track on the eastern side. The only way to solve for this issue is to build an underground concourse similar to the one at Randolph. You would have to dig it out, coordinate with the train schedule, and install four elevators (as per accessibility standards), just to somewhat assist the few people that would be getting off at Bloor Station and head north on the east side of the tracks. That project would be tens of millions of dollars. If you ask me, the juice isn't worth the squeeze.
Just extend the platforms north to stairs that connect to the Wallace Avenue Footbridge.
That's actually a pretty good idea. Since the bridge is an existing structure, it may allow them to circumvent accessibility standards. This may be something to bring up to Marit Stiles and Alejandra Bravo.Just extend the platforms north to stairs that connect to the Wallace Avenue Footbridge.
I doubt it would exempt them from anything - but station accessibility doesn't generally require that all entrances be accessible. You don't even see that in new subway stations - Avenue station comes to mindThat's actually a pretty good idea. Since the bridge is an existing structure, it may allow them to circumvent accessibility standards. This may be something to bring up to Marit Stiles and Alejandra Bravo.
I doubt it would exempt them from anything - but station accessibility doesn't generally require that all entrances be accessible. You don't even see that in new subway stations - Avenue station comes to mind!
probably a case of misunderstanding here -- @nfitz is saying that Avenue has inaccessible entrances, not that Avenue is inaccessiblehttps://www.ttc.ca/subway-stations/avenue-station - the TTC website says that it's accessible. Every station on the Eglinton line is accessible.
As I said, not every entrance has to be accessible. Every station has to be accessible - but if the station has, for example, 3 entrances; only one has to be accessible.https://www.ttc.ca/subway-stations/avenue-station - the TTC website says that it's accessible. Every station on the Eglinton line is accessible.
https://www.aoda.ca/ontario-public-transit/ - Legislation was passed that would make Ontario fully accessible by 2025 (yeah lol that didn't happen)
Also, I did a bit of research afterwards. There is no grandfathering. If Metrolinx builds anything, they have 100% accessibility in mind. As a father of three little ones that rely on a stroller, I'm a huge fan of this, but I also want to see things get built




