W. K. Lis
Superstar
did we ever pay that cancellation fee for the lrt order when we decided to build the subway instead. Or if we reverted would we save that money?
Think we're still waiting for the prototype first.
did we ever pay that cancellation fee for the lrt order when we decided to build the subway instead. Or if we reverted would we save that money?
Yah, but usually they are at more logical points where ridership drops significantly.Forcing transfers on the same corridor happens on other transit systems as well, some which we consider world class.
We can't just extend the subway outward forever...there will have to be a same direction transfer at some point.
The Sheppard corridor barely has ridership outside of rush hour as it is.On the Sheppard corridor, that would be after Kennedy/Agincourt GO.
We could easily change bus routes to feed into somewhere else if we wanted.In Scarborough corridor, that would be STC (seeing as we gerrymandered Scarborough's bus routes to feed into STC).
Think we're still waiting for the prototype first.
Forcing transfers on the same corridor happens on other transit systems as well, some which we consider world class.
We can't just extend the subway outward forever...there will have to be a same direction transfer at some point.
Also a lot more people will have to take a bus and transfer to this one stop subway versus an LRT with 7 stops.
Forcing transfers on the same corridor happens on other transit systems as well, some which we consider world class.
We can't just extend the subway outward forever...there will have to be a same direction transfer at some point.
Also a lot more people will have to take a bus and transfer to this one stop subway versus an LRT with 7 stops.
Don't you mean to say: a lot more people will take a bus and transfer to the subway versus the number of people who would transfer from a bus to an LRT, then transfer again to the Subway at Kennedy.
That was the whole point of the 3 stop subway.
With the 3 stop subway, it becomes debatable if Shepard East LRT is needed at all. There'd be no point to take the LRT to transfer at Don Mills just to take the overcrowded subway at Sheppard-Yonge. I even bet that lots of riders west of McCowan (around Kennedy road) would even take the bus a little bit to the east to get on the Scarborough Subway.
- The Sheppard/McCowan station meant that all of Northern Scarborough would have converged there
- STC & Lawrence East would have got the southern 401 riders with STC getting most of the GO transit bus riders
The Sheppard Subway would still draw riders from around Agincourt to the 404, more so if it went to Victoria Park.
If LRT could be replace by BRT, there's your extra billion
Invariably someone would have to do this yes, but unless you flunked grade 7 math, the number of people needing to take a bus to a single subway stop versus the number of people within walking distance of 7 LRT stops is so disproportionately less that I didn't think I need to spell it out for you.
Obviously someone, somwhere in the state of scarborough would have to take a bus, yes. But much less with a 7 stop LRT vs a single subway stop.
Sheppard could easily be a BRT, this is true.If LRT could be replace by BRT, there's your extra billion
Ah, but that is the key fallacy though...the amount of people within walking distance of the 7 LRT stops is basically irrelevant as none of them aside from STC really matter. The vast majority of ridership will come from buses. Just look at the current SRT...it has virtually zero ridership at any stop aside from STC.