NoahB
Active Member
My personal worry is that they would not, in fact, pay the labour cost and instead end up with a low-frequency line. That could happen because the labour cost to ridership ratio might not be there for a slower LRT in the suburbs.It also seems silly to suggest that not grade separating would reduce costs. In the long run, you end up spending more on labour costs anyways.
Keep in mind that the line is 32km but only expected to have a ridership of 29k. They will need a lot of vehicles to cover that distance at anything better than every 10 minutes. CDPQs plan was to run tiny automated trains to make high frequency work cost effectively.
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