unimaginative2
Senior Member
As I am obliged to periodically mention, I have a copy of a CP study from the mid-80s in which they look at the feasibility of completely burying the rail corridor and building above. This would have been the ideal, though it's now made much more difficult by the lower level shopping at Union. It would be an expensive project, but in the long run I think it would be quite worthwhile. That was the conclusion of the study as well.
There was also the Union Plaza study that looked at building over some of the trackage including a big plaza where the train shed is today. The problem was the grade differential. Anything built above the tracks would be at a very awkward elevation compared to surrounding streets. That's why, at the end of that study, they said that it would make more sense to just look at lowering the rail corridor. Unfortunately, we're building a huge number of projects right now but none of them are working together. We're redeveloping the convention centre, digging under Union, changing the train shed, reconfiguring the tracks, building an office district south of the tracks, building a huge office building on Bay Street, and even looking at building a tunnel under the rail corridor for the Lakeshore line. If we did this more comprehensively, it would become obvious that burying the tracks would provide much better building lots and allow Union Station to reconfigure its tracks and platforms into the ideal arrangement for today's operations, rather than the current obsolete configuration.
There was also the Union Plaza study that looked at building over some of the trackage including a big plaza where the train shed is today. The problem was the grade differential. Anything built above the tracks would be at a very awkward elevation compared to surrounding streets. That's why, at the end of that study, they said that it would make more sense to just look at lowering the rail corridor. Unfortunately, we're building a huge number of projects right now but none of them are working together. We're redeveloping the convention centre, digging under Union, changing the train shed, reconfiguring the tracks, building an office district south of the tracks, building a huge office building on Bay Street, and even looking at building a tunnel under the rail corridor for the Lakeshore line. If we did this more comprehensively, it would become obvious that burying the tracks would provide much better building lots and allow Union Station to reconfigure its tracks and platforms into the ideal arrangement for today's operations, rather than the current obsolete configuration.