OCCheetos
Active Member
End of March opening?
San Diego Trolley ring a bell?Not too many that even approach light metro out there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Diego_TrolleyThe entire Trolley network serves 53 stations, and comprises 53.5 miles (86.1 km) of route, and three primary lines named the Blue Line, the Orange Line, and the Green Line,[1] as well as a supplementary heritage streetcar downtown circulator known as the Silver Line that operates on select weekdays, weekends and holidays. In Q4 2014, the Trolley was the 5th most-ridden light rail system in the United States, with an average of 119,800 riders per weekday.[3]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles_Metro_RailThe Los Angeles Metro Rail is an urban rail transportation system serving Los Angeles County, California. It consists of six lines, including two rapid transit subway lines (the Red and Purple lines) and four light rail lines (the Blue, Green, Gold and Expo lines) serving 93 stations. It connects with the Metro Busway bus rapid transit system (the Orange Line and Silver Line) and also with the Metrolink commuter rail system.
Metro Rail, which had an average daily weekday ridership of 359,016 in 2017,[2] is owned and operated by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) and started service in 1990. It has been extended significantly since that time and several further extensions are either in the works or being considered.
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San Diego Trolley ring a bell?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Diego_Trolley
8 stations are aerial, one underground:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Diego_State_University_Transit_Center
Then there's the LA system:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles_Metro_Rail
And the Boston lines (greatest number of passengers carried in US)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_North_American_light_rail_systems_by_ridership
It depends on the sector of Torontonians. I think it's a mistake to make it a 'Toronto' case, when it's Ontario who elected Doug Ford after Toronto rejected him. Be scared, be very scared.Edit: I think in Toronto especially people don't realize there's a whole spectrum between old fashioned on street streetcar and something like the Confed line where it's pretty much a full metro. Hence the endless LRT vs subway fights
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_Line_Foothill_ExtensionThe first stage of the plan, Phase 2A, extended the Gold Line from Pasadena to Azusa, and opened on March 5, 2016. Phase 2B, which will extend the line a further six stations to the Montclair Transcenter, broke ground in December 2017.[1]
http://spacing.ca/toronto/2012/03/01/lrt-today-los-angeless-suburban-light-rail-system/LRT Today: Los Angeles’s suburban light rail system
MARCH 1, 2012 | BY NOAH VAN DER LAAN
Spacing Magazine
Starting from scratch just over two decades ago, LA wound up with over 60 miles of track, 53 LRT stations, and 172 LRV train cars, in addition to 16 miles of subway – an over $6 billion investment.
To date, Los Angeles’s colourful light rail lines constitute the third busiest LRT system in the United States by ridership, with 160,464 average weekday boardings. LA County Metro’s Blue Line is the second largest light rail line by ridership in the United States with an average weekday ridership of 90,109.
As Spacing’s John Lorinc pointed out a few weeks ago, LA’s conversion to light rail offers a transit lesson for Toronto.
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Los Angeles County’s Metro Rail LRT routes run in a mix of environments, including on city streets, segregated from neighbouring roads, and in the median of freeways. Whether at-grade street, at-grade ROW, elevated, and underground, all trains are governed by colour light signals.
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I don't see Ottawa as an exception as much as Toronto's streetcar system being the exception. That is changing with the LRTs under construction, a continuing debate...I also think that Ottawa and the LA green line will remain rare examples of full grade separation with LRVs.
I don't see Ottawa as an exception as much as Toronto's streetcar system being the exception. That is changing with the LRTs under construction, a continuing debate...
Edit: There's a fair number of systems that have portions in freeway medians, but that strikes me as a bit of being cheap rather than smart about transit. The area around freeways are usually very pedestrian hostile, and such lines don't really do much for development.
Wow, that's the real deal. Something about the price of the line too seems like a real "deal' as well. Two Billion for 12km and 13 stations. Obviously a lot was saved from using old transitway infrastructure, but still. Just comparing the cost of our former Line 3 conversion plan, feel like Ottawa got a steal.
Now can anyone tell me if Phase II is fully grade-separated as well? If so, wonder why they went with low-floor LRVs designed for street use. And LRVs to begin with for that matter - if it is to be fully grade-separate. Either way good stuff and will like to ride next summer.
Now can anyone tell me if Phase II is fully grade-separated as well? If so, wonder why they went with low-floor LRVs designed for street use.
And LRVs to begin with for that matter - if it is to be fully grade-separate.
Lots of subway/metro rolling stock options available that can do tight turns, or ones made to order.
Wow, that's the real deal. Something about the price of the line too seems like a real "deal' as well. Two Billion for 12km and 13 stations. Obviously a lot was saved from using old transitway infrastructure, but still. Just comparing the cost of our former Line 3 conversion plan, feel like Ottawa got a steal.
I'm reminded of the old saying: "All show and no go". I've yet to visit the latest extension, and have near zero interest in doing so, the pics are enough to turn me off. Frankly, some of them are just fugging awful. And yet the Spadina line still hosts one of the most inviting stations in Toronto, on par with anything in Montreal or London, and the limited number of stations I've seen in Paris: Designed by Hobbits methinks: Dupont Station. It's inviting and warm, all rounded edges. Almost organically alive.The O-Train stations are definitely spiffy, but they aren't nearly as grandiose as what Toronto built for the Spadina extension, especially the gargantuan 407 station.
That's an engineering issue down to many factors, and Ottawa actually got that wrong in some respects in some places.Another thing is the mined single tunnel was a cheaper method than twin bored tunnels that would likely be used for the SSE.