salsa
Senior Member
It's also worth mentioning (again bearing in mind that I support "remove") that all these travel estimates are contingent on transit (ie DRL and Waterfront LRT) being built by 2031. One would like to think the money "saved" by not going hybrid would go to transit but you can't bank on anything in this region. The lack of a comprehensive, (and funded) regional transportation plan makes it harder to generate a real consensus on the way to go, as much as I'd like to see it all gone.
Matt Elliot has some insight on what would happen if the transit isn't built as per the Gardiner report. Turns out the lack of a Gardiner should be the least of our concerns in that scenario.
City staff did run a traffic model with most of the transit improvements removed. They found, “all alternatives would place additional constraints on the TTC and GO Transit services beyond their capacities in some circumstances. The analysis also indicated that additional constraints would be experienced on the road network, particularly for auto trips on the DVP.”
In other words, without any major transit improvements, virtually all existing transit routes and roads in the downtown will be at or over capacity by 2031. That would be the much-feared traffic chaos.
In such a scenario, the configuration of a small section of the Gardiner wouldn’t really be relevant to the city’s overall level of congestion. In fact, according to transportation staff, the difference between remove and hybrid would still probably be two or three minutes for most trips. It’s just that the baseline travel times for all trips would be much much longer.