syn
Senior Member
How do you think people get downtown? I guarantee you that if the Subway didn't extend beyond St Clair, the Yonge line would have the ridership levels per km of most world subway systems. Downtown is walkable, has streetcars, PATH, and large sidewalks and bike lanes. People living down there won't take the subway 2 stops when they can walk or bike; it's not cost-effective. Here's some numbers:
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The Length of the Yonge Line Downtown
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Bloor Line Length through Downtown
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The numbers. If you subtract suburban ridership from downtown ridership, you get 220,390 passengers in the downtown area (assuming suburban riders have no choice but to use an automobile to get downtown, or use an express bus). Those counts also include transfers, but I didn't remove the SS and Line 3 to Line 2 transfers. They completely skew the results but you can still see that the ridership for 15 km of subway line is pathetic for Toronto. Don't ever give people shit claiming that the suburbs are not for subways, because the way this city is built, the subway in the suburbs is what keeps downtown alive.
With regards to your first comment, everyone here hates the current Scarborough subway extension, but the idea of a rapid transit extension, subway or LRT is having the merits discussed. Also, I proved earlier that large numbers of stops in suburban areas do nothing to help with rapid transit ridership, LRT or subway. What does is access to surface transit. This is why the Bloor Danforth line and Line 1 have such high ridership compared to other suburban-built cities (Unlike Montreal, New York, etc). There are reasons why the subways in Philadelphia, Boston, and Baltimore have relatively crappy ridership; there are no surface connections in the suburban portions, and the lines are only built to serve urban areas. LRT is great for moving people between suburbs, but not between downtown and the suburbs.
Also, what are you talking about with regards to Vic Park, Warden, and Kennedy? Those are the highest used stations on the BD line east of Broadview, and on top of it, they're aboveground.
No one is saying suburbanites shouldn't use the subway. There's a very big difference between suburban access and building subways in the suburbs. - I'm saying that Scarborough does not have the density nor ridership to justify this ridiculous multi-billion dollar extension.
Scarborough already has two subway stations, and a 3rd right on the border with Don Mills.
And we've already discussed stations like Vic Park and Warden - how far apart are they from each other? You keep cherry picking ridership numbers and ignoring context.
Vic Park to Kennedy is about 6.5km - 7km.
Broadview all the way to Main Street (the station before Vic Park) is just 5km.
What's the ridership difference?
Vic Park - Kennedy: 128,140
Broadview - Main Street: 129,800
What a surprise. The stations in a shorter, denser area have higher ridership.
And really, Vic Park should be counted along with Main - the urban grid essentially ends there.
Despite the distance between Vic Park, Warden and Kennedy, numbers for Warden still don't really compare to areas in the city. Dundas West to Dufferin is just 1.6km and it services nearly 79,000 riders.
This SSE extension is 6km for just one extra station, and the projected ridership numbers (for 2031 mind you) are terrible.
LRT is great for moving people between suburbs, but not between downtown and the suburbs.
I agree. So build a comprehensive network in Scarborough, and people who want to go downtown can take GO Transit, or get on subway at Kennedy if they really want to. Or, you can even stay on the Crosstown East LRT and head straight to the Yonge Line.
As per city stats, 77% of all transit trips beginning in Scarborough are not ending/going downtown.
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