acornman
New Member
I wonder if some of the north south bus routes that don't currently go up to Eglinton will be extended to reach the nearest LRT stop.
I wonder if some of the north south bus routes that don't currently go up to Eglinton will be extended to reach the nearest LRT stop.
They could have designed the Dufferin LRT station so that the 90 Vaughan (a frequent route, BTW) could serve it from the existing cul-de-sac area. That way the route would serve rapid transit at both ends and increase accessibility for users.
Unfortunately, it looks like the TTC designed many of their stations before figuring out how to redesign the surface network to better leverage the new LRT line.
Could the Harperites pick up more votes in Toronto if they let us get rid of all the expensive secretive bureaucrats and construction crews at the TTC and Metrolinx and use our migrant worker program to import Chinese people to build some real trains in our life time? CPR 2.0?
It would be cool if underground bus bays could be installed at Dufferin/Eglinton for 90 Vaughan and a new split Dufferin routing. Nothing complex, just something similar to the Lawrence Stn bus terminal.
That would count as a station "palace", similar to the stations they're building on the Spadina subway extension.
They could just turn the Vaughan Road cul-de-sac into a simple bus loop. I can't see that costing too much.
The area between the station building and Dufferin Street is going to be designed as an urban plaza/park which I think will be a relatively unique and exciting feature along the line. It will really make Dufferin and Eglinton stand out as a place people will want to be, which it certainly isn't now. That could create a little redevelopment boom in the neighbourhood much like what's happened along St.Clair.
Alternately, we could pave and fence off that plaza/park area and make it a bus turn-a-round so the handful of people riding the Vaughan bus don't have to walk an extra 50m.
Charming.
The addition of small plaza that won't be very well maintained is hardly going to be the reason people flock to Duff/Eg. There's a large park just down the street, complete with pool, playing fields, and a community centre, so I don't think parkland is in short supply.
Charming.
The addition of small plaza that won't be very well maintained is hardly going to be the reason people flock to Duff/Eg. There's a large park just down the street, complete with pool, playing fields, and a community centre, so I don't think parkland is in short supply.
The area between the station building and Dufferin Street is going to be designed as an urban plaza/park which I think will be a relatively unique and exciting feature along the line. It will really make Dufferin and Eglinton stand out as a place people will want to be, which it certainly isn't now. That could create a little redevelopment boom in the neighbourhood much like what's happened along St.Clair.
Alternately, we could pave and fence off that plaza/park area and make it a bus turn-a-round so the handful of people riding the Vaughan bus don't have to walk an extra 50m.
Parkland is in short supply, especially in that area. No one is going to go out of their way to get to the park you speak of. People already do congregate at the small parkette at Dufferin/Eglinton. Since it is being removed to build the station, it only makes sense that it be replaced. It's well used for the small space that it is.
And the space is actually pretty nicely maintained, so don't even pull that card.
I've got to disagree with you. Living near there, I can state first hand that there is no shortage of park space. I can also say, more often than not, that space is empty. But that's all beside the point I made, which is that the cul-de-sac could be re-purposed as a small loop, which isn't part of the parkette.