Streety McCarface
Senior Member
And one of the best examples of this is College/Carlton. Sure, the line has been seeing a steady decrease in ridership over the majority of Line 2's existence, but that's mainly because public transit ridership all over the city went to shit in the last quarter of the century. Although ridership on the is a fraction of what it was back in its heyday, the fact still remains that the line's ridership is increasing despite the speed of line 2, the fact that it is not technically overcrowded (yet), and most impressively, sees 40K PPD. That's not nothing, it's more than line 3, and that's despite having a subway less than 1 km north of it, other 2 subways within a kilometer of 1/3 of the route, and the 505 existing 500 meters to the south, it's that high.I would be surprised if the Ontario Line removed much ridership from either King or Queen, especially as further development adds even more density along those routes. Ditto College and Dundas. I'm not sure that there is much "parallel" routing.
What worries me more is actually the reverse - the impact of just constructing along the proposed route could be cancellation or at best rerouting of some routes. Can King Street handle both 501 and 504 volumes?
- Paul
Another example is the 510, and probably is a better example given the even closer proximity to the University Subway (600 meters). The Spadina route sees even more passengers (45K according to the last count, but is likely closer to 50-60K given the insane development along the corridor), and this is despite having a subway station within a 4 minute walk of any major intersection along the corridor. People want that last mile service, and the subway and streetcar systems need to work hand and hand in order to ensure that everyone has accessibility throughout the city.