afransen
Senior Member
Sounds like the most privileged complaining about getting high quality transit to their neighbourhood, but not completely on their terms. Would most neighbourhoods complain about getting a subway, period?
This argument holds true for Leslieville and for Etobicoke Centre, in my opinion. We shouldn't be asking why elevated is necessary, we should be asking why deep boring tunnels is necessary.Sounds like the most privileged complaining about getting high quality transit to their neighbourhood, but not completely on their terms. Would most neighbourhoods complain about getting a subway, period?
Sounds like the most privileged complaining about getting high quality transit to their neighbourhood, but not completely on their terms. Would most neighbourhoods complain about getting a subway, period?
Overbuilding in Toronto prevents additional useful projects from being funded within Toronto due to local and provincial governments running into their debt limits.
Consider we're using about 20% of Sheppard's built capacity during rush-hour (pre-covid); also consider many of those components are approaching or already past mid-life and replacing them isn't cheaper than the original. A surface-mostly Sheppard route would have been 90% as effective and would have allowed a surface Eglinton West to also be built in the 90's. 30 years of buses on Eglinton happened, in part, because we insisted on over-building Sheppard (and intended to overbuild Eglinton too).
That said, I'm in favour of a significant tax bump to enable transit over-building and operations subsidies; but without a tax bump it just means other useful things get ignored and much of what we do over-build will be replaced at least once before ridership grows into it. G-Line in NY is 87 years old with ridership still well under capacity.
Very disingenuous post. REM is essentially a commuter/regional system. The Eglinton line has stops at every major intersection, so the travel time savings are much lower since its making the stops anyway (and reaches a much lower top speed in between stops). No one at Metrolinx is proposing we run GO trains in the street ROW (yet..)
This argument holds true for Leslieville and for Etobicoke Centre, in my opinion. We shouldn't be asking why elevated is necessary, we should be asking why deep boring tunnels is necessary.
If we are *honest* Sheppard doesn't get used as much as it could because its super short . . . if it was longer it would probably carry significantly more people . .
s through solid rock is cheaper than tunnelling through watery, sandy soils closer to the surface. The engineering is simpler.
Tunneling is usually not the costly part, its the stations.
The amount of NIMBYism present in the Leslieville neighborhood is just incredible.
Nothing we can do now. Let's just sit back, relax and enjoy the tunnelling for the next few years. Get on with the construction!I can't believe they are seriously going forward with this. No reason that Eglinton West shouldn't be elevated.
I'd say it's moreso that it requires informed and accurate media reporting. I don't think our media is good at explaining how and why things are wasteful regarding transit. It's too focused on LRT vs Subway rather than the trade off between construction cost and capacity resulting from different forms of grade separation.
Money spent on Oakville gas plant was a total waste because it got cancelled and nothing came out of it. This line is getting built and will be used by people. Economic benefits of transit projects are many times higher than the costs. Let's say if an elevated line would have had a benefit-cost ratio of 5:1, then underground line too will have a benefit-cost ratio of 3:1. We will still get more benefits than the money we are spending, even if it is an underground line.This is just two or three 'Oakville gas plants' worth of waste. That this isn't more scandalous is disappointing. Shows how much taxpayers care about the public purse.
... Economic benefits of transit projects are many times higher than the costs. ...