crs1026
Superstar
The issues I see with the Kennedy routing
- Interleaving with GO will constrain speed and reliability - especially once GO headways are reduced
- Speed-limiting curvature at Scarborough Jct and northwards to Kennedy - 45 mph turnouts and then a mile of 45 mph unless significant changes to alignment are made (costly)
- Speed-limiting curvature at West Highland Creek - while @reaperexpress has drawn a flyover junction here, I foresee being forced to something simpler and hence operationally inferior - the construction here will likely be tricky and curvature will constrain speed
- A 3-mile stretch between Kennedy and West Highland between the two speed-restricted curves - leaving the likelihood that trains will be speed restricted, adding time to the trip, even considering a stop at Kennedy
- The "flat" solution at Scarborough Jct and the separation of LSE/Stouffville GO to enable that solution, as opposed to an express/local track plan with a flyover/under, may prove insufficient.
However, the issues I see with the Leaside routing are
- Three very large bridges required over West Don, East Don, and Taylor-Massey
- Some number of grade separations needing widening to add Alto trackage alongside CPKC's freight trackage
- A flyover/under needed on this route as well, to get Alto to the north side of the line before branching at Agincourt
- A less ideal placement of the east-end station (Kennedy is definitely an attractive place to connect to city transit)
- Need to add new trackage between Leaside and Agincourt (versus LSE routing using the 4 tracks ML is building anyways)
All things considered, I think the Leaside route is more elegant as it promises higher and less constrained end to end speed without restrictions or operational constraints. The only barrier is a higher price tag, but in the context of the overall cost of the project it's probably lost in the rounding.... and money well spent to achieve the best possible infrastructure. Going via Kennedy seems to imply tradeoffs that aren't worth the savings.
- Paul
- Interleaving with GO will constrain speed and reliability - especially once GO headways are reduced
- Speed-limiting curvature at Scarborough Jct and northwards to Kennedy - 45 mph turnouts and then a mile of 45 mph unless significant changes to alignment are made (costly)
- Speed-limiting curvature at West Highland Creek - while @reaperexpress has drawn a flyover junction here, I foresee being forced to something simpler and hence operationally inferior - the construction here will likely be tricky and curvature will constrain speed
- A 3-mile stretch between Kennedy and West Highland between the two speed-restricted curves - leaving the likelihood that trains will be speed restricted, adding time to the trip, even considering a stop at Kennedy
- The "flat" solution at Scarborough Jct and the separation of LSE/Stouffville GO to enable that solution, as opposed to an express/local track plan with a flyover/under, may prove insufficient.
However, the issues I see with the Leaside routing are
- Three very large bridges required over West Don, East Don, and Taylor-Massey
- Some number of grade separations needing widening to add Alto trackage alongside CPKC's freight trackage
- A flyover/under needed on this route as well, to get Alto to the north side of the line before branching at Agincourt
- A less ideal placement of the east-end station (Kennedy is definitely an attractive place to connect to city transit)
- Need to add new trackage between Leaside and Agincourt (versus LSE routing using the 4 tracks ML is building anyways)
All things considered, I think the Leaside route is more elegant as it promises higher and less constrained end to end speed without restrictions or operational constraints. The only barrier is a higher price tag, but in the context of the overall cost of the project it's probably lost in the rounding.... and money well spent to achieve the best possible infrastructure. Going via Kennedy seems to imply tradeoffs that aren't worth the savings.
- Paul
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