TheTigerMaster
Superstar
Did Council ever approve spending another $1 Billion the cost overruns?
You'd think that the crowd that loves Vision Zero would be happy to spend an extra few hundred million to separate those cars from vulnerable road users.
If we want to get rid of barriers to the waterfront, we need to get rid of actual barriers like Lakeshore Boulevard...
Half of that price tag is lifetime costs over the next 100 years - in other words, $5 million per year, or less than one third of the city's cycling budget. Out of the other half, around three quarters has to be spent no matter what the city decides to do. The actual amount of money that can be saved by removing the Gardiner isn't a whole lot.
And I'll ask again, since you dodged my question the first time: How is adding 100,000+ cars per day onto surface streets compatible with the goal of reducing the number of cars on those streets and making those streets safer for people who walk and bike?
Yes because ripping out an express way with no plans for where the traffic that uses it daily will go is such a good idea. Maybe we should get rid of the lakeshore and put bike lanes along it and everyone coming into Toronto will get on bikes. The argument that everyone else tore down their equivalent highway is getting old because most of them replaced it with something else, except for San Francisco but it's different story altogether. If the gardener is torn down the lake shore would have to be at 12 lanes wide to handle the extra traffic on it.Rip it down please.
I've traveled to enough great cities around the world to realize that any other city aspiring for tier 1 status would convert it to a Grant Boulevard.
Toronto is a destination, not a place you drive through.
If the gardener is torn down the lake shore would have to be at 12 lanes wide to handle the extra traffic on it.
Neither side relly has any proof about what would happen if the Gardner is taken down. I just don't understand why it;s so important to people that it is taken down. It currently serves a purpose whether you like it or not it allows traffic to get from the east end of the city to the west end of the city unimpeded by traffic lights. Much like the 401 does in the north.It's pretty strange how often this is presented as fact when in reality it is an expression of opinion.
Neither side relly has any proof about what would happen if the Gardner is taken down. I just don't understand why it;s so important to people that it is taken down. It currently serves a purpose whether you like it or not it allows traffic to get from the east end of the city to the west end of the city unimpeded by traffic lights. Much like the 401 does in the north.
One small section isn't comparable to taking the whole thing down but the thing is you can make assessments say anything you want it to like that the poulation on shpard will incrse to the point taht we will have 6 car trains on line 4 by now.Yeah, I don't really understand how you can assert that, though; the product literally of hundreds of hours of recent study by expert engineers and planners was a recommendation to tear down the Gardiner East.
Yeah, I don't really understand how you can assert that, though; the product literally of hundreds of hours of recent study by expert engineers and planners was a recommendation to tear down the Gardiner East.
Also, just because something serves a purpose doesn't mean that the extant method of service is the most desirable one, nor does it mean that the opportunity cost is too significant to contemplate the alternative.
Is it just me, or is waterfrontoronto.com down?From the Feb WT DRP:
http://waterfrontoronto.ca/nbe/wcm/...b499d8698/GardinerEast_DRPFeb.pdf?MOD=AJPERES
AoD
Is it just me, or is waterfrontoronto.com down?