ViveleCanada
Active Member
Using the complaints about the King Street Pilot as a base, wonder how much business was "lost" when the city closed most of the downtown streets to traffic because of the Raptors parade on June 17th?
The Raptors parade and King Street are two very different scenarios that really cannot be compared at all. Through interviews with the media, it seems that business owners are feeling losses because the pedestrian traffic has now shifted onto the King Streetcar as the line is much more reliable and frequent. The raptors parade introduced over two million pedestrians into the core so it was a gold mine for downtown businesses (and my god the amount of litter). Before the pilot, it was much more reliable to walk, at least during rush hour, rather than deal with the "Red Rocket." Nowadays, I notice a significant passenger-base willing to hop a few stops on the King streetcar rather than walk it out on the street. For a storefront business, that would be really bad news considering pedestrian traffic is your main market. From the more successful transit malls I noticed, such as Melbourne, catering to pedestrians seems just as important as transit priority if that pedestrian traffic is to be kept. I do consider the pilot to be successful, but IMO pedestrianization/beautification of the corridor is also needed if the city wants to get Queen street businesses on board with a possible pilot on the 501.