W. K. Lis
Superstar
Many of the roadways could be buried for later archaeologists (or tomb raiders) to unearth. Except for the underground utilities, watermains and sewers, which have to be relocated and/or raised.
^^^ I agree. The turning traffic is major factor in the back up. Add a long school bus or 18 wheel truck or 2 and it just snarls everything up.
Surprisingly, north bound traffic on Kipling is faring better but can get backed up also during the thick of rush hour.
Northbound traffic during rush hour STINKS. The 45 and 46 enter Kipling at St. Alban's Road, which hits Kipling on the "before" side of the traffic lights, but traffic is insanely backed up at that point. Vehicles now enter Kipling based solely on the good will of drivers on Kipling northbound. Yes, they have to yield to buses, but that doesn't matter if there's a line of cars on St. Alban's before the bus gets there.
I don't know what a better solution is, but this is going to be painful for the next 18 months. Opening up another northbound lane will help, but you'll still run into traffic backup issues with the lights at Bloor Street. There will need to be a much better semblance of coordination than there currently is.
That's not true at all.But according to City Hall there is no or minimal impact to driver. (cough cough) You must be imagining things!!!!
No they don't. The yield rule to applies to buses leaving a bus bay. Buses don't have priority for regular lane changes or entering from a side road. It's treated as a regular vehicle and if the bus decided not to wait and gets in a collision, the bus driver will be charged. Otherwise they wouldn't have a hard time getting out.Northbound traffic during rush hour STINKS. The 45 and 46 enter Kipling at St. Alban's Road, which hits Kipling on the "before" side of the traffic lights, but traffic is insanely backed up at that point. Vehicles now enter Kipling based solely on the good will of drivers on Kipling northbound. Yes, they have to yield to buses, but that doesn't matter if there's a line of cars on St. Alban's before the bus gets there.
I don't know what a better solution is, but this is going to be painful for the next 18 months. Opening up another northbound lane will help, but you'll still run into traffic backup issues with the lights at Bloor Street. There will need to be a much better semblance of coordination than there currently is.
No they don't. The yield rule to applies to buses leaving a bus bay. Buses don't have priority for regular lane changes or entering from a side road. It's treated as a regular vehicle and if the bus decided not to wait and gets in a collision, the bus driver will be charged. Otherwise they wouldn't have a hard time getting out.
Yielding only applies for buses in a bus bay:
https://www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/020393
This sign on the back of transit buses serves as a reminder to motorists of the law requiring vehicles approaching a bus stopped at a dedicated Bus Stop to yield to the bus, once the bus has signalled its intent to return to the lane.
What Yield?? Haven't seen one illegal driver get a ticket so far. Been on many buses where the bus drivers has to wait for a row of cars to them them since they refused to allow them move.
Isn’t this only for buses going flashing their left signal? Wouldn’t turning out from a Right-In-Right-Out not count?
Bus bay being defined as to include a bus stop along a street, where there are no physical bays per se. So includes entering traffic from between parked cars - but doesn't include intersections, etc.
I drove through the area for the first time today since the road reconfiguration was opened for the first time. The new configuration will take some getting used to, but what's concerning is how car-centric it still is. The streets are wide. The corners are rounded at intersections so that vehicles can make faster right turns instead of optimizing pedestrian safety by requiring slower and more careful driving. There are no medians. It needs finetuning to optimize pedestrian safety.
No they don't. The yield rule to applies to buses leaving a bus bay. Buses don't have priority for regular lane changes or entering from a side road. It's treated as a regular vehicle and if the bus decided not to wait and gets in a collision, the bus driver will be charged. Otherwise they wouldn't have a hard time getting out.
Yielding only applies for buses in a bus bay:
https://www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/020393