Sadly they won't use both corridors. The Richmond one would allow expansion to Masionville easily. Warncliffe and Western Rds makes sense.City of London is considering changing the designation of where the future North BRT corridor is going to be located, switching it to Wharncliffe/Western Road instead of utilizing Richmond Street north of Oxford. I personally think this is the right move since Richmond north of Oxford has lots of houses fronting out onto the street, and the road allowance is very narrow. Building a proper BRT on that corridor would involve a lot of expropriation for road realignment, and would likely meet more resistance. The Wharncliffe/Western Road corridor is much wider, the road is less awkward, and it would run right through the middle of Western.
The deputy mayor has also stated in the article that they are looking to explore additional BRT corridors, including suggestions of an East BRT extension along Oxford to YXU, and a longer West BRT corridor along Oxford to West 5 (Oxford/Westdel Bourne). They are looking to leverage the annual federal transit funding that is supposed to come online in 2026 (provided a potential new government doesn’t immediately remove this funding).
The Wharncliffe/Western road corridor will still allow for this - Richmond and Western intersect north of the campus and from there it is just a short trip up to Masonville, which they are still planning as the terminus of the North BRT. It wouldn’t really be any different than what will happen at Highbury/Oxford on the East BRT corridor.Sadly they won't use both corridors. The Richmond one would allow expansion to Masionville easily. Warncliffe and Western Rds makes sense.
Fair point.The Wharncliffe/Western road corridor will still allow for this - Richmond and Western intersect north of the campus and from there it is just a short trip up to Masonville, which they are still planning as the terminus of the North BRT. It wouldn’t really be any different than what will happen at Highbury/Oxford on the East BRT corridor.
The Richmond corridor has less options for TOD, there are too many houses along the road, and they would also have to reconstruct the bridge over the Thames. It would come at a much higher cost for lower gain.
Is it any better than going up Richmond?The north leg won't happen unless the BRT can run on it's own lane. The old Wharncliffe plan had it running in mixed traffic on it's way to downtown. Western Road was recently widened to 4 lanes, so people either need to accept losing that new lane to the bus, or widen again which would need a rail overpass replacement that was just replaced ~10 years ago.
I need to see the routing, and what they plan to do with the mixed traffic section on Wharncliffe before I am waking up to reviving the disliked north leg.
I assume yes since they're trying again with this route?Is it any better than going up Richmond?
The original idea of having LRT/BRT up Richmond was so stupid one knows hardly where to start.
The LRT would have required digging up Richmond Row and demolishing several old buildings in the process. RR is the city's premier shopping, restaurant, and nighlife area and would have destroyed many of the businesses along the route. The tunnel was needed to get under the rail crossing near Richmond. The BRT wouldn't have a tunnel and therefore was at the whim of the freight line which would make the system unreliable. In both cases, Richmond, especially north of Pall Mall, all the way up to Western is far too thin.
Wharncliff/Western Rd should have been the first choice as the rail corridor has a bridge over Wharncliff and would be vastly easier to combine with a western leg towards Hyde Park which also is a more populated road with a lot of apt towers and infill opportunities. The North/West legs could have been interlined. The further expansion of the East Leg to London aairport is a good idea as the area is also home to a lot of commercial/industrial employment.