TheTigerMaster
Superstar
Gosh I hate the Finch bus so much. The crowding is ridiculous. At Kipling & Finch I counted more than 20 people waiting for the bus, and that's just one stop. This LRT is going to provide much needed capacity.
Thats what old streetcars did for the ones that had a corner step with...you often jumped on and off while it was moving.15 seconds means that it won't even stop, just slow down a bit for passengers to jump on and off.
Will the Finch route use consists of 2 or 3 LRVs?Gosh I hate the Finch bus so much. The crowding is ridiculous. At Kipling & Finch I counted more than 20 people waiting for the bus, and that's just one stop. This LRT is going to provide much needed capacity.
Will the Finch route use consists of 2 or 3 LRVs?
Thanks. What your both basically saying and confirming is that is the critics of these projects have a point. Average speeds of 22-23, thats really slow. And, when you add stops at traffic lights, you have a very slow commute with many torcherous stops. Anyone who has every used a city bus, will tell you the most frustrating thing about buses is how slow they are at getting from point A to point B and that the frequent stops have an adverse psychological impact on you. That, and overcrowding is what sets you in bad frame of mind. Other than the overcrowing factor, this Finch line project will ultimately deliver the same kind of service as busses did.
This is why i have never believed that, at grade LRT or streetcar service will ever do anything to improve property values. Property values are higher near the subways lines because you can get downtown faster and get you to work or school faster.
That would make the most sense. The Sheppard Line connection to Downsview is enivitable so running the Finch LRT east of Finch West will be a waste.Want controversy? Stop it at Finch West and throw the money towards extending the Sheppard subway to Downsview.
Makes more sense to end the Finch LRT at Finch West and extend the Sheppard Subway to Downsview.Definitely think both sides in this argument are valid, and both have their pros and cons. Grade-separating the entire route provides higher speeds, higher capacity, more reliability; but costs significantly more and offers less local service. Tram-style offers more local service and costs considerably less; but has slower speeds, less reliability, and lower capacity. As for development, both have their benefits (one being higher-density but more nodal around stations, the other being more low/midrise stretched along the arterial)...both great, with the latter being a bit more realistic IMO.
This is why I think an Eglinton Crosstown-style premetro/stadtbahn solution can work in this instance. We get tram-style in the outer ends, but grade-separate the central portion. I also think over the decades we should do the same with our legacy streetcar system (501, 504, 505, 506), and attempt the same for waterfront transit. Nothing as exorbitantly costly like the Crosstown (with a whopping 10km of deep bore tunnel, and some very costly stations that no doubt will remain underused for centuries). Rather a few km of tunnel, cut/cover, or trenched.
Already posted this map in this thread, but since BurlOak brought up the Hydro Corridor I thought it'd be fitting to post again. I think it's a fantasy map that's worth pursuing. We get the best of both types of transit, grade-separation can be done affordably, and we fix the Sheppard Stub once and for all (by converting it for LRVs). The only change to the SELRT and FWLRT would be to use high-floor LRVs (and stops) in place of the low-floor Flexity Freedom.
Why not forget the part east of Finch West and connect the Sheppard Line to Downsview?Why not head down Bathurst instead of going beside all the buildings? It will generate more demand than having the richer neighbour complain about the construction.
Why not forget the part east of Finch West and connect the Sheppard Line to Downsview?
We will agree to disagree.It's a simple matter of cost. Routing the Finch LRT to Sheppard and Yonge rather than to Finch and Yonge makes incredible sense. A transfer at Sheppard is unfortunate but it's what we are stuck with given that Sheppard is already a subway. We have to acknowledge that given other priorities, eg the need to get on with DRL Long, at some point the money will all be spoken for and funding subway instead of LRT just isn't on.
There has been lots of debate here about the merits of converting the Sheppard subway to LRT so the ride can be seamless. Not all like that idea. I won't recycle through that, you can read it all in the Sheppard thread.
- Paul
Instead of quoting the "average" speeds for the LRT, they should say the "top speeds" they can reach in the open middle sections.
Why? What useful information does top speed provide?
Don't support the idea of taking the Finch line down to Sheppard even if the current subway is converted to LRT. Finch East should see LRT like the West as it sees the same or more so more riders than the west. More important, the east has more buses on it than west by almost 2:1
Both Finch and Sheppard should be end to end LRT and that what I saw for the first time back in 2006, just like Eglinton when I did a master plan for the GTA. Current Sheppard white elephant needs to be converted to LRT.
If Toronto took it head out of its ass and smell the air as well having new tools in place by 2018 to fund transit, there is no reason why funds can't be found to built the full Finch LRT line from end to end. Its not going to cost 50% of the cost to build the Eglinton Line, depending when construction takes place.I don't disagree with this, I just don't believe the money will ever be there to achieve it.
In our lifetimes Toronto will only afford one east-west rail transit across the top of the city. The east and west portions have to meet, to provide a direct route that crosses Yonge Street.
In the past, the ridership may have mainly wanted to get to Yonge Street to head downtown. However, if the DRL does get built, some of that ridership will divert to DRL. That will take buses off Finch East. Just as we are doing on Eglinton with Crosstown, we need to connect across the top of the city. So Finch and Sheppard have to connect.
- Paul
If Toronto took it head out of its ass and smell the air as well having new tools in place by 2018 to fund transit, there is no reason why funds can't be found to built the full Finch LRT line from end to end.