Amare
Senior Member
^And they'll keep dreaming about it for the next 50 years. That's ok though, it's always nice to have a dream every now and again.
What's wrong with the proposal? The city has a housing shortage, and downtown doesn't have the capacity to sustain much more growth. This can only be good for the city, Lines 4 and 5. It may not be the next yonge street but I wouldn't be surprised if a few thousand units were built.^And they'll keep dreaming about it for the next 50 years. That's ok though, it's always nice to have a dream every now and again.
I'm talking about the subway, not the proposal.What's wrong with the proposal? The city has a housing shortage, and downtown doesn't have the capacity to sustain much more growth. This can only be good for the city, Lines 4 and 5. It may not be the next yonge street but I wouldn't be surprised if a few thousand units were built.
Can you please explain what you mean by this? Isn’t building subways downtown in a walkable environment along and around the corridor more efficient than building a subway in the suburbs where intensification only appears near the stations rather then along the whole corridor?downtown doesn't have the capacity to sustain much more growth.
I mean that the current downtown transportation network is constrained by the lack of subway/streetcar expansion. We can't, for some reason, actually build the downtown relief line, build the waterfront streetcars, give streetcars true priority, expand subway platforms, buy more subway vehicles (we won't have enough to fully utilize ATC on Line 1), upgrade Line 2's signalling system, buy new streetcars, fix the switches downtown, and we may not even electrify RER, etc etc. The politics of actually doing any of these things have interfered with downtown transit expansion for almost 50 years. Is there any genuine belief that the Governmnet of Ontario, City Council, and the people living in this city can get their act together and actually build something within the next 10 years? At least if we have employment centres and housing shift to the suburbs (in a dense manner, like those proposed on Sheppard and Eglinton), riders can shift to counter-peak service, thereby mitigating any future stress on the system.Can you please explain what you mean by this? Isn’t building subways downtown in a walkable environment along and around the corridor more efficient than building a subway in the suburbs where intensification only appears near the stations rather then along the whole corridor?
So it’s not a property of downtown that makes it unable to support growth, it’s just that the political climate does not allow for it to happen and may only allows for suburban subway expansions?I mean that the current downtown transportation network is constrained by the lack of subway/streetcar expansion. We can't, for some reason, actually build the downtown relief line, build the waterfront streetcars, give streetcars true priority, expand subway platforms, buy more subway vehicles (we won't have enough to fully utilize ATC on Line 1), upgrade Line 2's signalling system, buy new streetcars, fix the switches downtown, and we may not even electrify RER, etc etc. The politics of actually doing any of these things have interfered with downtown transit expansion for almost 50 years. Is there any genuine belief that the Governmnet of Ontario, City Council, and the people living in this city can get their act together and actually build something within the next 10 years? At least if we have employment centres and housing shift to the suburbs (in a dense manner, like those proposed on Sheppard and Eglinton), riders can shift to counter-peak service, thereby mitigating any future stress on the system.
That and a lack of current capacity downtown. We should not be continuously trying to develop all of downtown when there simply is not enough transportation capacity to do so. Once we get some of these projects actually under construction, then we can talk about expanding. It's not even like there can't be money to fund these projects. If developers want to build downtown, or if more people want to live downtown, there should be some higher taxes associated with that. Property taxes throughout the rest of the city should also be included. It's just a question of who has the political will to do it.So it’s not a property of downtown that makes it unable to support growth, it’s just that the political climate does not allow for it to happen and may only allows for suburban subway expansions?
That and a lack of current capacity downtown. We should not be continuously trying to develop all of downtown when there simply is not enough transportation capacity to do so. Once we get some of these projects actually under construction, then we can talk about expanding. It's not even like there can't be money to fund these projects. If developers want to build downtown, or if more people want to live downtown, there should be some higher taxes associated with that. Property taxes throughout the rest of the city should also be included. It's just a question of who has the political will to do it.
Downtown is being developed because that's where people and businesses want to be.
We should be building transit that addresses this reality.
There is a lot of places people want to be. We should (have been) build transit that addresses the reality and not focusing only on one narrow ideology. Your logic of Downtown vs. inner suburbs is basically a small scale way of saying because there is more money flowing into Vancouver we don't need to grow Toronto as Vancouver is were people really want to be.
Anyhow both subways are needed to connect, develop, relieve (in the case of downtown ), grow (in the case of Sheppard) and provide effective central rapid transit to various areas and classes thru-out an evolving Toronto. Nothing to be upset about, were now moving forward with transit plans people will strongly support, use and invest around.
Now what if for example a line was built in downtown that DID NOT connect with Line 2, such as a line on King from Liberty Village GO to East Harbour GO with much smaller stop spacing than currently proposed? Would anyone living in downtown use the line and would it spur a lot of development?Ironically enough, the lack of Downtown transit is likely playing a role in the increasing development we see downtown. The appeal of living downtown is that you’re close enough to work to walk or bike and avoid public transit. Indeed, if you look at the stats you’ll see that downtown-to-downtown commuters have a surprisingly low transit modal share.
Some of these people choosing to live Downtown would likely live in the suburbs, if they had a reliable way to get downtown. But they don’t, hence their decision to live downtown. Building the DRL only makes it easier for suburban residents to get downtown, increasing the development appeal of the suburbs.
If the DRL were built up to Sheppard, i‘d bet a good dollar that we‘d see a substantial boost in residential development around Sheppard and Don Mills. Why wouldn’t we? Those people would be roughly 20 mins from the downtown core, while enjoying the relative comfort and lower property costs of the inner suburbs. It would certainly be an appealing location for me
Office development capacity downtown clearly isn’t capped by transit capacity. If people can’t get downtown on the subways or GO, they’ll just move downtown or areas adjacent to downtown. From a transport POV, downtown should continue to grow as we implement RER, increase streetcar capacity, increase bike lane coverage and increase sidewalk capacity on critical pedestrian routes, such as Yonge. All of those but RER are critical to ensure people can continue to commute within Downtown
What's the point of it, when the 504 streetcar is pretty good now?Now what if for example a line was built in downtown that DID NOT connect with Line 2, such as a line on King from Liberty Village GO to East Harbour GO with much smaller stop spacing than currently proposed? Would anyone living in downtown use the line and would it spur a lot of development?
I don’t know, I just wanted to see what the implications of this scenario would be.What's the point of it, when the 504 streetcar is pretty good now?