Good, forward thinking planning decisions made early in the last century.
The bridges were all built in the last decade. The one built in the sixties on that stretch, albeit to the east of the Speed, over Stephenson, was single. All the original bridges left from the twenties (when the grades were separated) were twinned years ago.
I do not seriously believe that Guelph Council will actually pursue a strategy that would route the new passenger line around their city.
It's not their decision, is it? It's for Queen's Park and the courts if the decision is appealed under the Railway Act and some associated ones. If any MPP wants to win an election in Guelph ( one of only a few ridings that represents a city in the legislature) then they're not going to rip up the centre of the city.
Why is that so difficult for so many of you to understand? This isn't *MY* feeling on matters, I don't have the vote in this nation, it's THEIRS! Not to mention that the costs and logistics are untenable. How are you going to trench one track at a time to allow the other to continue running? Or do you plan to shut the line down to do it, contrary to the contracts w/ VIA and Goderich and Exeter?
I'll locate the prevailing grades and post them later. No shortage of broken knuckles in the ditches when walking the tracks up those hills. I guess some have better memories than others? Oddly, I don't see any broken knuckles walking and cycling up the Dundas Valley on the old TH&B RoW. Perhaps that wasn't such a steep grade either, even though they had helpers assigned at loops top and bottom.
[...][Ajay Woozageer, spokesperson for the Ontario Ministry of Transportation, wrote in an email the specific route for the high-speed rail line within the London-to-Toronto corridor has not been determined yet.
Asked about the effects the construction of such a line would have on Guelph or the surrounding area, he wrote the impacts will be identified during the environmental assessment process. He added that stage of the process will likely take four to six years to complete.
Paul Langan, of the rail advocacy group High Speed Rail Canada, said it will be difficult to solve the problem of having to slow down in Guelph on the high-speed line.
But he said the province should make improvements to the existing lines to make GO trains more reliable and faster on the Toronto route.][...]
http://www.guelphmercury.com/news-story/5233025-high-speed-rail-line-likely-to-skip-guelph-report/
I repeat, albeit it seems impossible for Train-Heads to comprehend...given the choice between HSR (or much more likely, enhanced speed rail) and having the core of their city ripped apart the *average Guelph voter* would overwhelmingly stay with status quo. Even the local bus service, something Guelphites resent supporting with their tax base (taxes are a massive issue in Guelph, thus the present mayor's election, he's well to the Right) barely serves the morning GO trains. And *there is no integrated co-fare with GO!*.
Guelph *wants to be left isolated*. Get it through your skulls, "you can be like we are" doesn't mean dick for them. In fact, they resent people with that attitude. Bad enough with the schism between "old Guelph" and the 'newbies' in the southern burbs who drive to Toronto every day. Put a station there!
Sandals know which side the toast is buttered on the this:
[...][
Guelph MPP Liz Sandals said the final route for the proposed high-speed rail line will be determined during the environmental assessment process but she said it seems likely Guelph is just too close to Kitchener for a stop to make sense.
"I would consider it a huge bonus if it happened that it was possible to stop in Guelph, but I think it's unlikely," she said in a phone interview.
Sandals said in order for a train to really be high-speed it needs to have a restricted number of stops.
"I think that what they're likely to find is that it slows the service too much to have to be speeding up and slowing down," she said.][...]
http://www.guelphmercury.com/news-story/5233025-high-speed-rail-line-likely-to-skip-guelph-report/
A carefully managed message. She wasn't about to start throwing dirt from the trenching about.