Juan_Lennon416
Senior Member
No King streetcars during TIFF so move on. Even a left-wing Council and Mayor would agree to that.
"Let them eat cake..."What is considered "majority wish" is not always the right thing.
"Let them eat cake..."
I don't see why. That's what they want you to think.The only solution is building the festival yet another home in a location with space not on King. East Harbour on Smart Track route, anyone?
https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/2011/08/26/evolution_of_the_entertainment_district.htmlEvolution of the Entertainment District
By CHRISTOPHER HUMEStar Columnist
Fri., Aug. 26, 2011
[...]
Which brings us to the John Street Cultural Corridor, a scheme that would pedestrianize John from Grange Park and the Art Gallery of Ontario south to the Rogers Centre and beyond that to the waterfront.
Though the silence has been deafening, the president of the Entertainment District Business Improvement Association, Janice Solomon, says the project is alive and well.
“You have to go through the boring stuff first,” she insists. “It’s halfway through the environmental assessment and we hope it will go to city council this fall. It will be a destination street that links all the different elements.”
As for the arrival of TIFF, Solomon says it’s still too early to tell exactly how the changes will play out.
“It’s only coming up a year,” she notes. “Having TIFF headquartered here is good not just for the neighbourhood but for the whole city. The cultural side of things encompasses everybody, not just young people who gravitate to the area on Friday and Saturday night. But part of our effort is to keep a nightlife. We’re emerging as a 24/7 centre.”
As for that most elusive of factors, glamour, it, alas, cannot be planned or manufactured, let alone guaranteed. Otherwise, why would Yorkville ever have been considered glamorous? And yet it was, and still is. Could it be that one element of glamour is a touch of tackiness? Yorkville certainly has enough of that, too. By contrast, the Entertainment District was always more gritty than glamorous. That has changed, of course. Yorkville may be hot, but King and John is cool.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/king-street-west-closure-was-it-the-right-decision-1.2756634King Street West closure: was it the right decision?
TTC 'had concerns' about diverting busy 504 King streetcar for Toronto International Film Festival
CBC News · Posted: Sep 05, 2014 9:12 AM ET | Last Updated: September 5, 2014
The Toronto International Film Festival has closed a section of King Street West to traffic from University Avenue to Peter Street. Streetcars will divert around this section of King during the closure, which ends on Monday. (Charlsie Agro/CBC)
[...]
Here's what some people were saying on Twitter about the closure:
https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/20...al-corridor-project-gains-40m-in-funding.html[...]The proposal stretches from Rogers Centre to the south (Front St.) to the AGO to the north (Stephanie St.). Other cultural institutions along John include the CBC building at Wellington, Metro Hall at King and the Bell Media building at Queen.
The John Street Corridor project would widen sidewalks and boulevards, install new public art, add additional trees and lighting and introduce innovative road design to calm traffic. The aim is to create a street that can easily host cultural events throughout the year.
The plan would also reduce traffic to one lane each way, and Cressy knows there will be objections.
The LFs have rear controls to deal with your second scenario - presumably is possible to reverse now on the panto routes. I agree that there are some advantages in being able to create non-loop terminals though.I try to get bidirecitonals, but the Chair of TTC had no use for them back in 2005.
Not only would they work for TIFF, but other issues where you can end up with a convoy of 10 plus sitting dead in the water for hours. There should be crossovers every X distance to deal with shut down of the line.
What does this even mean? The diversion is going to cost TTC in fares lost and in extra running time on the 504/514. Maybe the answer is this: intermix the 504/514/503/502 similar to what is contemplated* for the Broadview works:TTC does not want it but the Revenue Services Department of the City of Toronto does. Guess who wins that battle unfortunately?
What on earth are you talking about? The TIFF site is where it is because the site was donated (or sold at low cost?) by the Reitman family. It is the kind of place that needs to be right downtown so moving it to East Harbour really makes no sense. That's not to say that I think they should be allowed to close King to all transit for the festival. At least on weekdays King should be open to transit ONLY during both morning and afternoon rush-hours.Re TIFF. The planning process which allowed the TIFF Bell Lightbox overlookred the need for a large outdoor space adjacent to the building. That such a space is a large (closed) urban thoroughfare is ridiculous. The only solution is building the festival yet another home in a location with space not on King. East Harbour on Smart Track route, anyone?
Much as I love Melbourne, I’m amazed at how slowly their trams run, even though they’re on their own rights of way.
The intentional slowing of trains is traced back to a 1995 J train crash that killed the a conductor and injured dozens more. After that, Gordon writes, the MTA hit the brakes. Maximum train speeds were reduced from around 55 mph to 40 mph. Speed limits were also introduced, along with consequences for breaking them. In some cases, if speeds limits aren’t met, a train’s brakes are automatically tripped. Recovering from that can take one to ten minutes, Gordon writes, and the transgression is noted in a conductor’s performance file.
That affects not just the conductors that have to sit in time-out for going too fast, but those who intentionally go very slow to avoid the punishment. Speed regulations around track work are also more stringent than they used to be, the report notes, requiring trains to move at a glacial speed as they near a work site.
That is my point. King should be open. It's kinda dopey to be closing a major transit artery for something that while grand and special in Toronto is still a tiny niche event in most people's lives.