innsertnamehere
Superstar
The city released a report that said travel times across the stretch would increase by 10 minutes with the boulevard option. On a stretch that normally takes maybe 2 minutes today. That sounds pretty bad to me.
The city released a report that said travel times across the stretch would increase by 10 minutes with the boulevard option. On a stretch that normally takes maybe 2 minutes today. That sounds pretty bad to me.
Well, how many people does that affect during rush hour? Enough to justify spending an extra $500 million when the city is broke?
it affects ALOT of people. I use the DVP everyday from Eglinton to Bloor. There was a blocked lane at Dundas today on the DVP and my entire trip from Eglinton took 10 minutes more than usual. This was also out side of proper rush hour (9:45) so I can only imagine how this road will be affected if they closed ALL the lanes on the DVP.
Also, the city's study was very biased and pretty much useless. I won't get into the details but in summary it took a snapshot of 1 hour period in a day and studied the affect of traffic if they closed down the DVP, while making a lot of wild assumptions on decreased car usage.
The DVP during rush hour is at 100% capacity to maintain its speed limit. Any road reduction will only increase congestion, lengthen travel times, and create more pollution.
I can't believe this city even considered tearing down a vital piece of infrastructure just because some real-estate developers wanted to enhance their land values to build condos.
The Gardiner/DVP tolls are not seen in the same negative light as HOT lanes by that group. I'm glad its cancelled because it slightly hinders the lower income class from accessing the core.
If a $2 toll is enough to scare people away (as some are claiming)
Why is it ok to charge exorbitant user fees for city services, but not even a modest toll for road users? And what alternative revenue tools do you support that would address the bulk of Toronto's $33 billion in unfunded capital projects?
Also, this city report concludes the boulevard option would add between 3-5 minutes to commutes and, further, that three-quarters of all morning rush hour trips will incur delays of less than 2 minutes.
What a stupid comparison. A 4 lane highway has far less capacity than the Eglinton Crosstown will have.120,000.
Far better than spending $5.6 billion on the Eglinton Crosstown, which will serve a mere 30,000 people more daily than the Gardiner.
One group is getting $5.6 billion to vastly improve infrastructure. The other is getting $500 million "extra" to actually downgrade the infrastructure to a lower standard (4 lane highway with slower speed limits compared to existing 8 lane expressway).
Somehow I'm doubtful. 3-5 minute delay would be typical of just introducing the stoplights, never mind the additional traffic from dropping 120,000 cars a day on a road that is capable of handling 40-50,000 (capacity of an 8 lane arterial). Even with their seemingly miraculous drops in future traffic levels, its not gunna drop to 1/3 of what it was.
Regardless, the decision is made. They are building a far less impactful (than the current structure) 4 lane elevated freeway.