Streety McCarface
Senior Member
Density and usage matter, comparing a line of 4 stops to one that's 20% longer and has 19 stops means that you cannot compare the two. Spadina exists to shuttle people from Spadina and Union Station along the waterfront and down Spadina Avenue. Remove it, and people will just walk from Line 1. Remove Line 4, and users will either stop taking transit, or will take the sheppard east bus. I love the 510, but it's largely a local service version of Line 1. If it's really that important to users, one would think that its ridership would be higher than a measly 40K PPD, especially in an area of the city which has 5* the density of Sheppard, and 10* the employment density of Sheppard. You can look at things optimistically, realistically, or with a confirmation bias. Yes, Sheppard has lower than expected ridership. No, it does not have awful ridership, and it does have the potential to be better used.It's only an apples to oranges comparison in that they're different classes of transit. That's exactly the point though.
Spadina has comparable ridership despite:
- being a lower capacity, above ground line (streetcar)
- less than 800m from the University subway line
Spadina functions much like the subway does for most riders. The biggest pickups and dropoffs, by far, are at major intersections (College, Queen, etc.). The vast majority of those heading north are going to Spadina station.
Sheppard has no 'competition' in that it's the only rapid transit option in the area - and it's basically used as an express line between Don Mills and Yonge, with very little activity in between. This hasn't changed in nearly 20 years.
They are completely different and should not be used to compare. A better comparison would be the Spadina subway, the TYSSE, or anyone of the long-distance suburban subway sections in the system. Line one along Allen road and the Entire TYSSE have the same ridership/km levels as the Sheppard subway, but no one is calling either of those sections failures.
If we're going to argue costs, in terms of vehicle operation only, the Sheppard subway almost certainly cheaper to operate than the 510 since vehicles come every 3 minutes on the 510, and the route requires at least 15 operators to service the route, while the Sheppard subway only requires 6. Vehicles have to stop much less so energy costs are likely about the same for both. There are the same number of vehicles required to fully run each route (16 + spares), so maintenance is also about the same. Costs to run the line generally arise from station upkeep and maintenance, so switching the line over to Light rail will not save money overall.
I am well aware of the presence of statistics: here's a screenshot of them:There are numbers from 2015, 2016 and 2018 available. The 2018 numbers show a clear drop off from those previous years.
They aren't going to improve dramatically anytime soon as the area remains decidedly suburban in nature.
For some context, The Well on Spadina is going to add 8,000 jobs and 3,000 residents. City reports from 2017 indicate there were just under 16,000 jobs on the Sheppard subway corridor. That means The Well is adding half of the employment on the entire Sheppard subway corridor. That's just one project.
Spadina is already well ahead of the Sheppard subway corridor and continues to grow at a faster rate.
If you'll take note of Sheppard Yonge's ridership, you'll notice that it hasn't changed over the 4 years of surveying. If this isn't enough for you to question the numbers provided then I don't know what is. Sampling data is taken from one day of sampling. It's not a good measure of actual ridership, because ridership on this line fluctuates significantly from day to day. For general people, it's much easier to understand and criticize numbers when they see day to day ridership, but annual entrances are a far more useful measure of ridership when trying to determine who's using a station.
Even so, if we plot the data and check their r^2 values, it becomes apparent that the only data points that have valid trends are the ridership levels of Bessarion and Leslie, which have R^2 values of 0.54 and 0.43 respectively. The trendline for both stations is showing stagnant ridership, not decreasing ridership. This makes sense because much of Concord Park place still isn't open, and the parts that are only opened in 2018, likely after the sampling for both stations was completed. It's worth noting that there is no data for 2017, and it is likely that data from 2018 was taken from 2017 given the TTC's past practices (they did the same in I believe 2008-2009). There is not enough data, the data is just too close, and important sampling context is missing; you cannot make a trend conclusion with this data.
Also, ridership between 2015 to 2018 dropped accross the entire network, so pointing fingers at 3 stations is silly.
(Note: the R^2 values are in the order of the rows shown in the table above, not in the order of trendlines on the graph)
If the Spadina corridor is seeing so many jobs, why does the line have less ridership than the Sheppard subway? Again, you cannot compare these lines, they serve different purposes.