Irishmonk
Senior Member
Damn, that Parisian LRT looks GOOD!
Damn those French, do they have to be perfect at everything?
Damn, that Parisian LRT looks GOOD!
Damn, that Parisian LRT looks GOOD!
I love the fact that these LRTs don't have to destroy the public realm with a mass of over-head wires. Why is it, in Toronto, the streetcar wires dominate everywhere and provide way too much clutter, yet other cities can do it with minimal wires and make it look so much nicer? We need to find a way to minimize those ugly wires. Spadina is probably the best at this but Queen Street & Dundas are a disaster.
To be fair ... can you imagine what grass in the ROW would like like here with our road salt usage and hot-dry summers? Perhaps in another decade or two if this global warming continues ...Also helps when the roads department does not interfere with their excuses for not having grassy right-of-ways or control of transit priority signals.
On the streetcar right-of-way itself, the hoped-for grass median has been replaced by paving because neither the TTC nor the Fire Department were happy with the problems of driving on and maintaining sod.
If it was just streetcar wires that'd be okay. Unfortunately in downtown Toronto the electricity, telephone, cable tv and other utilities use overhead wires, in addition to streetcar wires.I love the fact that these LRTs don't have to destroy the public realm with a mass of over-head wires. Why is it, in Toronto, the streetcar wires dominate everywhere and provide way too much clutter, yet other cities can do it with minimal wires and make it look so much nicer? We need to find a way to minimize those ugly wires. Spadina is probably the best at this but Queen Street & Dundas are a disaster.
Grass requires maintenance: watering (if you want to avoid the problem of hot-dry summers), but also mowing, fertilizing, weeding, etc.
Another major consideration is that the LRT median can potentially be used as a clear route for emergency vehicles, and driving such vehicles on grass may not be optimal. It was apparently this consideration that scotched the use of grass in the median for the Queens Quay LRT. As Steve Munro reported:
Tulse said:The LRT median can potentially be used as a clear route for emergency vehicles.
Looks pretty good to me:Since it's Queen Quay, I think it still deserves some kind of special treatment. If we can't have grass, then how about paving stones, cobblestones, planking or something decorative but durable?
Since it's Queen Quay, I think it still deserves some kind of special treatment. If we can't have grass, then how about paving stones, cobblestones, planking or something decorative but durable?