That isn't what I claimed.
I pointed out that Dufferin, with just one bus route, has the same ridership as Warden, served by 8 routes.
The 29 Dufferin is a very long route, that's true. It's also one of the busiest -
according to 2014 stats it serves 42,000 riders each weekday.
However, the 8 routes servicing Warden handle 87,300 per weekday. Obviously a very fair argument can be made that not all riders on those routes are heading to Warden, but the same is true for the 29 Dufferin; plenty of those riders are not going to Dufferin station.
Which brings me back to my original point - Dufferin station is a great example of the kind of urban environment that subways were built for. It's dense and easily accessible via numerous modes of transportation, even walking. Serviced by just one route that has less than half the ridership of the routes serving Warden, it has serves slightly more passengers per day than Warden Station.
https://transit.toronto.on.ca/spare/0012.shtml
"The TTC continued to make an operating profit until 1972 when, under political pressure from the suburban majority on council, the TTC eliminated its fare zone system which previously obliged suburban residents to pay an additional fare. By the late 1980s, the annual cost of keeping the TTC afloat was now up to a quarter of a billion dollars of taxpayers’ money, although at 32% of all revenues, this was the lowest subsidy required of any city in North America."
I'm quite sure there are a few TTC routes that make a profit - if not more.
These YRT and MiWay cost more because they serve environments that are not efficiently designed for transit. Fortunately Mississauga is trying to remedy the situation.
The fact that the vast majority of the track between Warden and Kennedy is underground throws your entire argument out the window. The underground portion, assuming the most direct and efficient route (which it's not) is 2.22km. That's a 2.22km
portion between two stations.
Broadview to Greenwood is almost the exact length (2.33km) but encompasses 5 stations. That's efficient use of tunnel.
This of course brings us back to the absurd SSE extension - from Warden to STC you'll have over
8km of underground track with only
one station in between. That's like traveling from Ossington to Greenwood with no stops in between (there are actually 12 stops in between). Or going from Broadview to Warden.
We're seriously considering building an extension that will make traveling from Warden to STC the same distance as traveling the rest of the Danforth section of the Bloor/Danforth line, with only one stop in between. Are you seriously going to argue this is 'efficient' infrastructure'?
It's complete insanity.
It's interesting to note that 480 buses pass through Dufferin station and 920 buses pass through Warden, despite warden being served by 8* the number of routes. As I've stated before, the number of routes serving a station is a terrible metric for measuring ridership potential.
Considering the difference densities around the stations, the fact that subway counts are based on people going to the platforms and does not include people transferring at warden, the fact that it's so far out, the fact that Dufferin is pretty much downtown, I'd say that Warden does an excellent job for a subway station. Dufferin doesn't solely rely on people traveling by bus, but Warden does, and I can guarantee that a lot of people funnel through that station without going into the subway.
There is no denying that Dufferin has an excellent case for ridership, but that's because it's downtown and there are jobs around the station. Many people not only enter the station to get to work, but also exit the station because their work is around there and because there's so much entertainment around the station (ie dufferin mall, bloor street restaurants, etc). Take all that stuff away, and Dufferin would be like any other station east of Broadview or west of Dundas West (With the exceptions of Kipling, Islington, Vic Park, Warden and Kennedy).
I'd also like to mention that Warden Subway station doesn't just act as a subway station, but it's also a bus terminal. There are many people passing through the station between bus routes that aren't counted in station counts, but those people still use the TTC, right? Dufferin station doesn't have this. Factor in people transferring between buses at Warden and ridership levels will increase significantly.
When you mention the operation under a deficit, one must note that it was a tradeoff for a better-integrated network. The costs of operation didn't increase, but revenues were halved from suburban riders. Might I also mention that the subway already existed beyond the borders of the downtown fare zones at that time and if that subway line didn't exist, those suburban revenues would not exist within the system and therefore, the TTC likely wouldn't have been making any money prior to the abolishment of the fare zones. Unfortunately, we'll never know because we don't have the statistics from back then. It does, however, go to show that the importance of the suburban ridership was so important to the integrity of the TTC, that once fares were halved for the suburban riders, the operating income decreased by at least a quarter of a billion dollars (That's almost $1.5 billion in today's dollars). If a fare increase between zones was 20 cents, and 1/4 of a billion dollars were lost because of this change, then that means that there were 1.25 BILLION trips between the suburbs and downtown per year. That's 3,500,000 per day (of course, the operation of the spadina subway extension probably influenced these numbers, seeing as the population was much lower than 1.75 million within the suburbs of Toronto at the time. Nevertheless, half of that would still be 1,750,000 trips. Compare that to only downtown and you start to see how the presence of the subway in the suburbs seriously influences the ridership of the TTC downtown.
I might also mention, in that TT article, it states that ridership subsidies were the lowest in North America, which says something about the state of the TTC at the time. After that paragraph, it goes on to say: "In the 1970s and the 1980s, the Toronto Transit Commission was seen worldwide as a ‘transportation showcase’. From 1979 until 1990, it won awards after awards for safety and design." and this was very much after the abolishment of the fare zones.
I'm sure there are as well, however, that would assume that full fares are paid for a no-transfer journey (as they often are on Mi-Way). The TTC being so interconnected is what makes it quite an amazing system that allows the existence of such high capacity routes. I hope YRT and MiWay get better, and soon...
The underground section actually doesn't. Going back to my original estimates of running the system, $80,000 for stations between Broadview and Main and $60,000 for stations between Vic Park and Kennedy. @ $10,000/day for underground tunnels and $5,000/day for aboveground tracks, BV-M comes in at around $50,000/day for tunnel operation. On the other hand, $5,000 for 3 km of aboveground between Vic Park and partway to Kennedy comes to $15,000 and the underground section at $20,000. That's a total of $35,000 and a difference of about $15,000/day in tunnels alone. In total, that's $130,000 BV-M and $95,000 VP-K. A difference of $35,000/day.
More stations isn't always a good thing. It's excellent in urban areas where people can walk to stations, but it's not so good for the suburbs, which need access to efficient rapid transit to get downtown (meaning one transfer between bus and subway, because that's the most cumbersome transfer). Running a subway line in the suburbs makes sense, but only if you run it properly. ~2km between stations is excellent distancing in the suburbs; Feeder bus routes have enough distance, it makes way for future development of the surrounding stations, and most importantly, it keeps people out of their cars. In urban areas, ~1km is best, since walking distances to the nearest subway station are about 500m, which is fair. Downtown, ~500m-750m is best because of the sheer number of people getting off. I am in agreement that 7km is far too distant to sensibly build a subway, especially without fare zones. Long distances between stations work extremely well in areas like DC and the Bay Area, where fare zones are used and there's room to build aboveground efficiently. They do not work well here in Toronto, especially remaining completely underground. I'll say this again, the Scarborough subway extension makes sense GRANTED it's built aboveground at least most of the way and has stations at Eglinton, Lawerence, Scarborough Centre, and Sheppard if that extension is included. Each of those stations need the following: excellent bus terminals, access to bike storage (which I find is the best way to commute; bike to a subway station. It works extremely well in Japan), Passenger Pick-Up and Drop-Off locations (these are actually great because not everyone in the suburbs works downtown and many can't give up their car, but they can share rides with people that need to be dropped off at subway stations. This makes their ride more efficient, less expensive in the deep suburbs, and eliminates the needs for parking lots), and more bus routes serving the stations.