44 North
Senior Member
So I was by the No Frills at Carlaw/Gerrard a couple hours ago and noticed an active drilling rig right there in the parking lot. Anyone know if this is part of soil/ground testing for RER, GO, or something transit-related?
I was at Keesmaat's speech the other morning at Board of Trade, and she noted that they'll be presenting the final alignment and station locations for the DRL in June, and that soil testing is already underway.So I was by the No Frills at Carlaw/Gerrard a couple hours ago and noticed an active drilling rig right there in the parking lot. Anyone know if this is part of soil/ground testing for RER, GO, or something transit-related?
I was at Keesmaat's speech the other morning at Board of Trade, and she noted that they'll be presenting the final alignment and station locations for the DRL in June, and that soil testing is already underway.
I'm guessing that means there'll be a DRL station at Gerard Square.
There was a Jane's Walk at Gerrard Square last weekend that talked a lot about the urban design of the mall and its redevelopment potential. Steve Munro was there as a guest speaker to talk about transit, and said that while there will probably be a DRL station at Gerrard Square, he does not think Metrolinx will build a GO station there that would interchange with the subway. Primarily because it would be too close to the planned station at Unilever, because Gerrard Square is not a major destination except for local residents, and because transfer volumes between GO and TTC at that location would be low.
"it might be possible there won't be any GO/RL interchanges at all"
This city is planned by morons. The entire purpose of the RL is to offer relief. Not just on Bloor/Yonge but on Union.
Union needs a $2B tunnel for a pair of through RER services; 2 minute rush-hour frequencies in the tunnel. Nothing fancier than that.
That said, interchanges seem an important part of encouraging office development to move North of the financial district now that South is starting to fill up.
Why? Having 10 stops makes it an express service that justifies premium pricing? Sheppard subway has 4-5 stops. Why not make a premium service. Wilson to Museum is 10 stops. Should that be a premium service for those going 10 stops? Makes no sense. Expecially when one can ride from Warden all the way to Kipling on a flat fareI've been thinking about the reasons for having Smart Track exist as a separate entity from GO RER. There are two important reasons. First, the route itself is new and within Toronto, though carved out of existing routes. Second, the fee structure. I think most of us have the assumption, rightly, that unlike GO, Smart Track won't have a distance-based fee structure. Instead, you'll pay one price whether you take ST one stop or 10. In this regard it's like the TTC. Where it gets sticky is in transfers with TTC. Most commentators agree that Smart Track should cost more to ride than the TTC, since it is an express service. .