44 North
Senior Member
When you remove an expressway in a part of the city with a grid of streets, drivers end up taking the arterial roads closest to their destination like Lake Shore, Front, Richmond, Queen, Dundas or some combination of streets. So it isn't the case that the cars on the Gardiner will end up stuck in traffic on the Lake Shore boulevard. People take the Gardiner because they perceive it to be faster even if they have to drive 3 kilometres north to their destination--the span of 3-5 major east-west streets.
They perceive the Gardiner to be faster because oftentimes it is faster for crossing the south end of the Old City. I’ve driven alternate routes during peak, counter-peak, and everything in between, and the Gardiner usually comes out on top. Even before construction wrapped up a couple weeks ago, it was a better alternative in many scenarios.
I used to be very supportive of the boulevard option – and in many ways I still am. But my views have definitely changed now that we’ve learned the City plans on selling some of the corridor to develop highrises – thus rendering this potential major thoroughfare into what will most likely evolve into a local-service Avenue.
Another thing I don’t get (separate from this issue entirely because it involves the section west of Jarvis too) is why we haven’t further explored options to improve the experience under the Gardiner. There are enhancements that can be made. But other than showing a rendering of some blue X-mas lights haphazardly strung from the girders, we don’t really know what those enhancements could be. Yesterday I read a Globe piece about improvements to an underpass in Calgary, and it’s pretty cool. Surely we could do something like that here. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life...-into-thriving-public-spaces/article24283369/
Fair enough. Some of the pollution around the gardiner is from the industrial areas, but someone literally said that thousand of people will die/become ill just because a couple of stoplights are added. You also have to wonder whether downtown is really the right place to be maintaining industrial uses over the long term. Road capacity is an issue here. Industry is far more suited in the 905 where it is away from residential areas and where there's greater highway capacity and arterial roads compared to a small 6 lane freeway that is the DVP/Gardiner. Those factories have been moving out of the city for decades now but have been replaced by office development. Southcore used to be all industrial but times have changed and will continue to do so. Today it's the East Bayfront and West Don Lands that are redeveloping. Tomorrow it will be the portlands.
I think very little of the pollution around the Gardiner is from industry. My point was about the TO pollution map as a whole, and that much of it isn’t entirely from our highways. And the point about rezoning and loss of industry/manufacturing...didn’t I write something similar in a discussion we had a few mths back? Upon which you exclaimed the importance of how we should try to keep manufacturing and industrial zoning? Obviously we each haven’t done 180s, but I think it’s without question this sector of the economy has significant importance to Toronto - which we both agreed on at one point. And at the end of the day, industry in the east side of the city is definitely concerned with the Gardiner’s loss – and it’s not just those in the immediate vicinity of the highway. Clearly it’s a vital link where no others exist.
And even if we did do away with the aforementioned industries to make way for high-density downtown urban development, we simply create other industries that still rely on our road networks. Filling 1,000 acres of waterfront real estate could take half a century – with non-stop construction activity. Dump trucks, moving trucks, cement mixers..you name it. Highways into/out of the city will still be crucial during that time. Regardless, much of the planned rezoning and redevelopment of the Port Lands is still unknown. There are long-term leases for some sites, and the Prov did build a massive gas plant (which surprisingly they couldn’t do in the 905, oddly enough).
My point is that a boulevard would allow traffic to disperse onto many different streets (thank you Junctionist for trying to explain this). I count at least 20 intersections here, as opposed to just three roads for cars to get dumped on (Yonge, Sherbourne, Cherry). Note that most of these intersections are not gonna have stoplights to slow down traffic.
But prior to any dispersion there are only two areas where expwy traffic will be dumped with the Remove option – and this dumping will be substantial. Whereas with the Hybrid option there are three ramps, and the opportunity for traffic to avoid the surface network altogether.
If the DRL is not built, you should be far more worried about this city's future than a removal of this underused highway. I would be packing my bags and leaving this city, the rest of you can enjoy the gridlocked hell and daily subway meltdowns.
I believe it’s likely that the DRL won’t be built, or at least won’t be built as envisioned. I hate saying it, because I support so much. But I don't like the way things are going on the DRL front.