Brandon716
Senior Member
I take it by your response that you agree with my general assertion. I don't quite understand the negative reaction to the crosstown.
I understand the negative reaction to Eglinton LRT, I do think the system would be better served as a subway, but the problem is that Eglinton LRT has went too far to be reversed.
At this point its better to support the project and encourage its development in a positive direction. If its not supported, all that will occur is infighting and nothing, and Eglinton will be bus service for 10-20 more years before something gets started. In 20 years if Eglinton traffic is so heavy it requires upgrading, a few billion more could be dropped to complete the entire system as above ground or in a tunnel in its own right of way.
And as I've used examples of other LRT systems with intersection mixing (like Portland MAX), its also not a slow technology. The entire route shouldn't take more than 50 minutes.
And as a personal user of LRT to get to work for the past 2 years (I used the Chicago L trains as well), I can say that the technology - while not subway - isn't AS BAD as people here are making it out to be. Its certainly an upgrade from buses, and its an upgrade from the TTC Streetcar network. But is it subway? No, it will never have THAT much capacity.
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