UD2
Active Member
Another 10 years. Now scarbrough gets nothing. I wonder if those along sheppard who opposes the LRT development have considered the positive effects that the LRT have on their property value.
As to getting going on a small scale alternative, do any of us agree what that would be? BRT that eats traffic lanes will get no joy in the community I presume. What do you think? based on your previous writing I would have thought you would be a big proponent of SmartTrack.
Scarborough councillor Jim Karygiannis planning to reintroduce Sheppard subway proposal.
“I’m ecstatic,” said Karygiannis, a staunch opponent of the light rail line on Sheppard. “I’m looking forward to resuming the battle for the Sheppard subway.”
Karygiannis said he wants to try and introduce the subway plan — again — in the fall, to coincide with the federal election. He argued the cost of a subway — which he estimated to be $1.5 billion but has been estimated as costing more than $4 billion — could be covered in part with federal money, extracted from vote-hungry parties in the 2015 election.
“They want to get people elected north of the 401 they better come to the table with some cash,” said Karygiannis. “If the Liberals want to win here they should speak to the residents of Wards 39, 40, 41 and 42. They got to say we want to work with you to get a subway here.”
That is not a major valley like the Bloor Street Viaduct. I would peg that cost at about $10,000/m2 x 4.5m wide x 2 (one track on either side of existing bridge) = $90M /km + cost of track, power, signalling, etc.
Elevated transit, whether above an existing road or a shallow to moderate valley, will cost about $120M/km to $150M/km. The bridge over the West Don River would actually be the cheapest part of this line.
And so it begins. Here is some bullshit we can look forward to for many years to come now that the LRT is dead.
http://www.insidetoronto.com/news-s...ning-to-reintroduce-sheppard-subway-proposal/
And so it begins. Here is some bullshit we can look forward to for many years to come now that the LRT is dead.
http://www.insidetoronto.com/news-s...ning-to-reintroduce-sheppard-subway-proposal/
[tinfoilhat] All part of the plan to talk and talk and talk about transit to Scarborough but not actually build anything . . . ever. [/tinfoilhat]
The Sheppard East LRT budget was about $1 billion, though that didn't include the yard (which was part of the Scarborough RT replacement budget. So about $1.2 billion available. So roughly 4 km of subway. Hmm, might just be able to do it, if you just build one station at Bathurst, and another at Downsview.
Though I doubt the ridership justifies it in comparison to other projects. I'd think the Sheppard East LRT ridership would be higher entering Don Mills station.
The Sheppard East LRT budget was about $1 billion, though that didn't include the yard (which was part of the Scarborough RT replacement budget. So about $1.2 billion available. So roughly 4 km of subway. Hmm, might just be able to do it, if you just build one station at Bathurst, and another at Downsview.
Though I doubt the ridership justifies it in comparison to other projects. I'd think the Sheppard East LRT ridership would be higher entering Don Mills station.
They won't. Unless you're speaking of the East bus routes, which can be routed to new stations on the extension. There's no reason for someone who gets on at say, Finch or North York Centre to transfer at Sheppard to a train with less frequency. But the passengers already on line 4 will have the incentive to head over to the NW branch of line 1.My only question mark is something that was brought up by 44 North in a previous page. Would Yonge Line users transfer on Sheppard to the less crowded Spadina line, or would the reverse happen with Spadina users transferring to an already overcrowded Yonge line? Such a thing should be studied before a Sheppard West extension happens.