mdrejhon
Senior Member
FYI!
There is already a Centennial GO station elsewhere (not on Lakeshore), so that Centennial Street station is actually called Confederation GO Station.
I know! However at the time of the proposal it was named Centennial GOFYI!
There is already a Centennial GO station elsewhere (not on Lakeshore), so that Centennial Street station is actually called Confederation GO Station.
A tender is out on Merx for bus bridging services for multi-track closures.
Seems like some large closures are in the offing.
I'd like to see a traffic count for the 24 124. Spending $460M to correct a congestion problem that doesn't exist makes no sense.
If one is projecting growth/demand between Guelph and Cambridge, let's see how long it will take to fill up the existing road, and how well a bus solution might solve that with lower cost. Especially a bus solution that addresses first/last mile and gives multiple transfer free routing options at both ends.
Cambridge is a town that has precious little experience with urban transportation and certainly none with higher order transit. Their council is remarkably unsophisticated in this area. Wanting a GO service here really is a Monorail mentality.
Looking at this from the other end - suppose $500M in transportation funding suddenly became available. How would that money be best spent to improve transportation options for Cambridge? I'm pretty confident that the G+G connection would not be at priority #1. I even wonder what an extension to the Milton service might cost.... probably some doubletracking and signalling on the CP line through Campbellville, but probably not $500M.
And yes, numerically, I do believe that the number of Cambridge transit riders trying to reach the GTA far outweighs the number that need to get to Guelph. So meeting that need on the Milton line is indeed a better use of the funding, if the funds actually existed.
- Paul
I drive 124 occasionally but I try to avoid it like the plague; I opt for county roads further south. I can say it's heavy (mostly moving, to be fair) most of the day and gridlocked during rush hours. It's certainly not Toronto-bound traffic, it's a bunch of Guelph <> Cambridge commuters like me.I'd like to see a traffic count for the 24 124. Spending $460M to correct a congestion problem that doesn't exist makes no sense.
If one is projecting growth/demand between Guelph and Cambridge, let's see how long it will take to fill up the existing road, and how well a bus solution might solve that with lower cost. Especially a bus solution that addresses first/last mile and gives multiple transfer free routing options at both ends.
Cambridge is a town that has precious little experience with urban transportation and certainly none with higher order transit. Their council is remarkably unsophisticated in this area. Wanting a GO service here really is a Monorail mentality.
Looking at this from the other end - suppose $500M in transportation funding suddenly became available. How would that money be best spent to improve transportation options for Cambridge? I'm pretty confident that the G+G connection would not be at priority #1. I even wonder what an extension to the Milton service might cost.... probably some doubletracking and signalling on the CP line through Campbellville, but probably not $500M.
And yes, numerically, I do believe that the number of Cambridge transit riders trying to reach the GTA far outweighs the number that need to get to Guelph. So meeting that need on the Milton line is indeed a better use of the funding, if the funds actually existed.
- Paul
I see what your saying here, but I offer two counterpoints. Let me first say though that the usual contention of “better ways to spend the money” is not a great basis, because time and time again we see in Ontario that money doesn’t go elsewhere, it just dissapears if not spent as allocated. But I’ll talk about the places that money could go anyway later to cover my bases.I'd like to see a traffic count for the 24 124. Spending $460M to correct a congestion problem that doesn't exist makes no sense.
If one is projecting growth/demand between Guelph and Cambridge, let's see how long it will take to fill up the existing road, and how well a bus solution might solve that with lower cost. Especially a bus solution that addresses first/last mile and gives multiple transfer free routing options at both ends.
Cambridge is a town that has precious little experience with urban transportation and certainly none with higher order transit. Their council is remarkably unsophisticated in this area. Wanting a GO service here really is a Monorail mentality.
Looking at this from the other end - suppose $500M in transportation funding suddenly became available. How would that money be best spent to improve transportation options for Cambridge? I'm pretty confident that the G+G connection would not be at priority #1. I even wonder what an extension to the Milton service might cost.... probably some doubletracking and signalling on the CP line through Campbellville, but probably not $500M.
And yes, numerically, I do believe that the number of Cambridge transit riders trying to reach the GTA far outweighs the number that need to get to Guelph. So meeting that need on the Milton line is indeed a better use of the funding, if the funds actually existed.
- Paul
In brief, considering that integrating KWC-G is a good policy direction, AND that the infrastructure alternatives are inferior, more expensive, and further off, then I think the scheme is a net economic benefit. KWC and Guelph aren’t one region, so they probably won’t be able do this on their own, even if the need arises, in 20 years or what have you. Furthermore, It’s a precursor to how things should be happening with disused corridors and ‘missing links’ once Metrolinx is done playing catch-up across the GGH. This isn’t Sheppard- it is certainly not excessively big in scope that it needs massive uptake on day 1 to justify it.
Who cares if we close the door? The case for rail to Cambridge will never be there. Not least on this corridor. The population and travel patterns will never be the right mix to make this a wise investment. Canada's population will start shrinking before then. In that case, if the land can be put to better use if not needed for rail, it should be used that way.Sure, lets forever slam the door on a proper connection to Guelph because Paul Langan thinks Toronto is the only destination in the universe and no one seems to be noticing how extraordinarily good the cost benefit ratio is on the lower end versions of this. Whether you like the shuttle or not killing this corridor would be unimaginably stupid. Even compared to the likes of Orangeville.
And frankly, how are we getting to this idiotic ‘every service must be single seat to Union’ position? It’s an obnoxious throwback to GOs management style from 15 years ago.
Who cares if we close the door? The case for rail to Cambridge will never be there. Not least on this corridor. The population and travel patterns will never be the right mix to make this a wise investment. Canada's population will start shrinking before then. In that case, if the land can be put to better use if not needed for rail, it should be used that way.
Cambridge to Guelph GO checks all the boxes of a vanity project. Cambridge wants higher order transit just so they can brag about it. They are not interested in actually creating the best transport links. If they actually push to get this and stage 2 ION funded, the province and Metrolinx will laugh in their face. It will be years wasted.
We need busses, and lots of them. Projects like this distract and deflect from doing the things that will actually improve connectivity and peoples' lives.
If you make such a line light rail instead of heavy rail, then all the street car fanatics are going to want to put a stop at every intersection. Plus the trains will have to stop at red lights.I can get behind the concept of a Guelph-Kitchener-Cambridge-Brantford-(Hamilton?) transit web, and this would fit within that. There may be merit in looking at how to get that new network away from being road dependent. I see it however as separate from GO Transit and possibly a lighter-rail service similar to Ottawa's Trillium Line, using less than heavy rail equipment which, like Ottawa and KW LRT, may imply temporally separated from any freight operation. It may be best operated as some sort of cooperative inter-Regional entity and not driven from the Provincial level.