Johnny Au
Senior Member
Too early to tell for me
Because morons who don't understand what transit is (our mayor and his brother) tell everyone that LRT is the same as streetcars, and people fall for it.
LRTs are streetcars, the same way BRT are buses. Modern light rail vs. traditional light rail, that's all it is. The name for our current streetcar is Canadian Light Rail Vehicle. I think if its proponents stopped trying to pretend they are completely different things, modern LRT would have more widespread acceptance.
The City of Toronto does not hate light rail. The City of Toronto has the largest light rail system in North America by ridership, and also the largest according to track length. It is a major part of the City's identity. I don't understand why not take advantage of that.
Subways are streetcars too then right? They're just bigger streetcars which receive power from the bottom of the vehicle instead of the top.
I'm not saying you're wrong, all these terms have have multiple definitions & connotations and often have grey areas. For example many of these words imply not only a certain vehicle, but also the environment the vehicle runs in. It's no surprise people are confused. Explaining the difference between the St. Clair streetcar and the Finch West LRT, or the difference between an underground LRT and subway is not easy.
Then you have terms like BRT which could mean anything.
LRTs are streetcars, the same way BRT are buses.
Perfect example of ambiguity:
When Ford & Metrolinx had a plan to have the Eglinton LRT run underground and be connected to the Scarborough LRT on the Scarborough RT track, it was considered a "subway", even though it would have ran LRVs.
That is correct.
LRT and BRT have their own dedicated lanes while streetcars and buses never do.
LRT and BRT have all door loading while streetcars and buses never do.
Subways are streetcars too then right? They're just bigger streetcars which receive power from the bottom of the vehicle instead of the top.
I'm not saying you're wrong, all these terms have have multiple definitions & connotations and often have grey areas. For example many of these words imply not only a certain vehicle, but also the environment the vehicle runs in. It's no surprise people are confused. Explaining the difference between the St. Clair streetcar and the Finch West LRT, or the difference between an underground LRT and subway is not easy.
Then you have terms like BRT which could mean anything.
Buses have dedicated lanes when it is BRT (Highway 7, Mississauga Transitway).
Streetcar/tram/trolley have dedicated lanes when it is a modernized LRT (Spadina, Queens Quay).
Subways are heavy rail. Fully grade-separated, all-door boardings, fare-paid zones, huge capacity. Eglinton does not fit that description. With its regional importances, connection grade-separate Mississauga Transitway, the availibility of Richview corridor, the huge underground section, I think running any part of Eglinton Crosstown down the middle of the street at grade is folly, but that's another discussion.
I think from a marketing standpoint, Toronto should highlight the improvement of modern light rail vs the current legacy streetcar system. Streetcar are important to Toronto so I don't understand why act like they are completely difference. Why not leverage and build upon the past? Why not unite suburbs and inner city with a common identity?
The Mississauga Transitway, fully grade-separated, with full stations - should Mississauga and GO act like it's not a bus service? Doesn't make sense to me. I think that seems like insecurity about buses, or maybe about BRT. Same with the streetcar vs LRT thing.
The new LRVs downtown will be very similar to the Transit City LRV, they're both Flexity. They will both operate with all-door boarding with honour fare. How do you separate the two the public's mind? Is it possible? It is it really beneficial to? I don't think so but I guess that's just me.