steveintoronto
Superstar
Like extending the Relief Line westward from the touted University Av terminus to alleviate the crush on King, and Queen.While it would be useful I can think of several projects I would prioritize above it.
Like extending the Relief Line westward from the touted University Av terminus to alleviate the crush on King, and Queen.While it would be useful I can think of several projects I would prioritize above it.
I don't think ANY of King is 80 feet wide. Most of it is the standard 66 feet. There are some opportunities west of Spadina where it's 75 feet - but that's only 650 metres of the pilot area! See the figure below.The right of way on King exists for a proper design... We have 80 feet right-of-way to work with on King.
In a 66-foot right of way? No chance you can do it all. Perhaps if it really WAS 80 feet wide (24.4 metres). But it isn't.The point of the comparison is that we can accomplish all the stated goals on King Street if we were brave enough to design it as such.
I don't think ANY of King is 80 feet wide. Most of it is the standard 66 feet. There are some opportunities west of Spadina where it's 75 feet - but that's only 650 metres of the pilot area! See the figure below.
In a 66-foot right of way? No chance you can do it all. Perhaps if it really WAS 80 feet wide (24.4 metres). But it isn't.
Looking at the official plan, Front has more opportunities through the core (and expanding the ROW on Bathurst north to Queen - which is where you get the most congestion!)
That mapping isn't entirely accurate - if you saw how they digitized it, you'd be horrified! It's listed at 75 feet - but there could be variations, and I haven't looked in detail. It's outside of the King Pilot area though. They key is the core.Property Data map shows it is 80 feet row west of Bathurst, and indeed 66 feet east of Spadina.
Eglinton is a minimum of 88 feet through the core. There's a small bit east of Bayview that's only 75 feet - but they've also been expropriating where necessary. Which isn't an easy an option in the core.I don't think that is a deal-breaker. Eglinton changes ROW width multiple times throughout its corridor, and the Eglinton Connects plan just adds or removes public space accordingly.
This will be a very expensive project on King. Just Spadina through Jarvis would probably be in the $2B range and doesn't really add much capacity to the line. $200M of that might be required just to move utilities; shifting the Enwave lake cooling pipes is a multi-year project by itself.
While it would be useful I can think of several projects I would prioritize above it.
I think the ridership and economic activity on King totally justifies a below ground portion from Spadina to Jarvis or hell, Bathurst to Parliament. It's the financial core of the country and extremely densely populated. Yes, even with an eventual subway underneath Queen East it's justified.
Who's going to fund it? And for the cost, vastly more productive outcome can be had by spending that amount elsewhere.There's a very sound argument for underground transit on the downtown portion of King.
Unfortunately we don't care to build underground transit where it's justified.
Who's going to fund it? And for the cost, vastly more productive outcome can be had by spending that amount elsewhere.
The challenge is what can be done NOW, or the immediate future. You don't have to spend $Bs to get a transit mall operating better.
And residents needing access. This can be instituted with minimum cost and in short time, well within a year. The sooner the King Transit Mall becomes that, the better. It's not like other cities haven't already done this to great success and huge amounts of documentation.Personally I like the idea of removing all automobiles from King, with the exception of delivery vehicles.
And residents needing access. This can be instituted with minimum cost and in short time, well within a year. The sooner the King Transit Mall becomes that, the better. It's not like other cities haven't already done this to great success and huge amounts of documentation.
The real legal glitch remains in Queen's Park.
Steve Munro's latest installment on the King Car now up:
http://stevemunro.ca/2018/10/05/king-street-update-september-2018/
Shelters are well within the City's competence, but signs, other than larger ones or illuminated, aren't. It seems trivial, but this is one of a myriad of aspects that QP can trip Toronto on.I'd also like to see investment in updated signage/wayfinding and shelters.
https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90h08#BK383