micheal_can
Senior Member
There are certain parts of downtown London that are prohibitive to building surface LRT. Maybe it's time to ditch that idea and have tunnels.
There are certain parts of downtown London that are prohibitive to building surface LRT. Maybe it's time to ditch that idea and have tunnels.
London can have all the tunnels they want. If they pay for them. Let’s be clear here. That’s what all this is about. They want the province and the feds to pay hundreds of millions for a tunnel. And they are willing to hold themselves hostage to traffic till that happens. I say, Queen’s Park and Ottawa should call their bluff. 4 seats in London are not worth hundreds of millions. That money could win more seats on just about any transit project in the GTA.
The feds and the province pay for all the other rail transit through out Canada. Even the ION got funding for all 3 levels of government. Why should London not get the same treatment?
Other communities don’t ask for gold plated transit projects. That’s why. Waterloo isn’t getting tunnels either. And the precedent set if the feds and the province cave to London on this would be terrible. Every community which doesn’t feel like compromising on road space will do the same. This is exactly why London will get the exact same treatment Brampton is getting, when they were told to take a hike on their tunnel request, and Metrolinx went ahead with terminating the Hurontario-Main LRT at Shopper’s World. And London is even less politically relevant than Brampton.
You clearly have never been to London.
To turn a street such as Richmond into 2 lanes is about as smart as making the 401 a 2 lane undivided road.
However, I feel that this may turn into a federal election promise.
My position is that London is completely entitled to ask for a government hand-out.
I'll judge provincial/federal governments for giving in, but I don't see why it would be any different than Scarborough, Brampton or York Region situations.
Kind of off topic but that is no longer the case.
The McCormick factory site is being cleaned up and it will be demolished soon for new development.
The old Kellog plant is now Canada's largest indoor 'adventure park', plus it has virtual reality, arcades, ropes and all the like. There's also a brewery there and the Children's museum is moving in next year.
A few pics from inside during a visit
More info if interested https://thefactorylondon.ca/
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RT, either BRT or LRT would be probably the most beneficial to Dundas East than anywhere else in the city in my opinion.
Wife's from there. I'm there often enough. And we've talked about retiring there, after my military career. Which is exactly why their pigheadedness on this transit file is disappointing to me. If they can the BRT, I'd rule them out from consideration for me at least. I want to live in a transit friendly city. And increasingly, I think investment and livability are correlated. So I think employment opportunities will be threatened by transit underinvestment too.
You can either have traffic running through the downtown core or transit. Both are not possible without grade separation. Simple as that. So either they build something on Richmond and move N/S traffic to Adelaide and Wharncliffe/Western or they build an elevated or tunneled line for most of Richmond. At $200-300M/km, no higher level of government is interested in paying for that. And since most Londoners think transit is for the poor and students, they aren't showing any interest in paying for it through property taxes either.
It's hilarious how much sway Londoners think they have with a whopping 4 seats in play, of which the Liberals have only 2 and might arguably have a tough time gaining more.
London is not getting more. At best, you'll now get some diamond lanes and nice bus shelters. That'll be enough for ribbon cuttings for all politicians come election time. And in 5-10 years, you'll all be wistfully reminiscing on what could have been while stuck in traffic.
They can ask for personal jetpacks if they want. Nobody gives a shit about a 4-5 seats (of which realistically fewer are in play, over transit policy). It's the same reason Brampton's request is being ignored. And more to the point, populations in Brampton and London won't reward parties that build transit. They might even penalize parties that do build something. Just imagine LRT with lots of left turn restrictions and what that might do to car-centric voters in London or Brampton, even if the number of lanes were left the same.
Scarborough has several seats in play, and possibly extended impact politically, into Pickering and Markham. York region is the same with Yonge North. And voters there will reward parties that build the subway and penalize those who don't. That's the only reason why those subway extensions are being entertained. London and Brampton will not even have half that influence in our lifetimes.
London can have all the tunnels they want. If they pay for them. Let’s be clear here. That’s what all this is about. They want the province and the feds to pay hundreds of millions for a tunnel. And they are willing to hold themselves hostage to traffic till that happens. I say, Queen’s Park and Ottawa should call their bluff. 4 seats in London are not worth hundreds of millions. That money could win more seats on just about any transit project in the GTA.
I think BRT(light) will happen.
LRT is likely at least 10-15 year away.
It seems only an underground LRT line would work now like in downtown Edmonton. But that's way too visionary / disruptive / expensive for anyone to comprehend.
It is cost prohibitive and a flood risk to try and move this underground river.
One thing missing in your long rant is Toronto. Toronto is causing people to buy property in London and commute. Regardless if HSR is built, there is a chance that GO train will one day stop at London. That will push the province, and possibly the feds too to give money.
To be clear there is a underground river crossing Richmond. The civil engineers knew about it but the urban planners ignored their concerns when they first thought of tunneling.
It is cost prohibitive and a flood risk to try and move this underground river. Money solves everything but sometimes Mother Nature will win in the long run.
Like I said, all you’re going to get are curbside bus lanes. I agree with you on that.
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Funding for long haul does not translate to support for local transit. Otherwise, every 905 burb with a GO stop would have LRTs.
And “one day” is actually many days away. Right now GO RER is precarious. So if we can’t get regular go service to Kitchener by 2025, London is definitely a long ways off. And a rail commute only becomes practical with high speed rail. I doubt most people would think a 2.5 hr GO train ride practical. So most of those people will be driving. And we’ll get to see how cost effective they think that is, once the carbon tax really gets into gear and gas costs $2/L in 2025.
Hurontario LRT, Viva, Mississauga Transitway and ION all are "GO stops"
To save millions on a mortgage, people will travel further. So, their 8 hour days become 12-14. Sounds like a regular shift at work to me. Something many people already do.