fanoftoronto
Active Member
This is a very outdated view of how Toronto's transit system should be viewed as. We shouldn't be constraining ourselves to these hard municipal borders when looking at how a regional network should be played out. While the local-regional dynamic works at a very high level - it is still much more valuable view to look at each corridor individually and see what's important there.
Travel to STC and MCC is important. These are going to be extremely important developmental nodes, and having a rapid link between the two would be extremely useful - especially if the goal is to reduce car dependancy.
Eglinton is a massive arterial, and end to end transit could be extremely valuable. Valuable enough for a go line? Probably not. Viable enough for 20k pphpd? Quite possibly. We should honestly forget that municipal borders exist when thinking about how to plan for a regional transit network.
Where is your source on 20k pphpd?
Here is my source of 6,000 pphpd along Eglinton: Eglinton Crosstown LRT Demand Forecasting Report
From going through the document in more detail, it furthers my support of removing the Hakimi-Lebovic stop as well as the Aga Khan stop because of the low patronage.
The Eglinton Crosstown is meant to service the folks along Eglinton Ave or transferring onto Eglinton. Regional GO trains and buses are supposed to service demand between city centres. To mix the 2 would create a hybrid that would do a half assed job at both.
For a perfect example, the Eglinton West portion, the ridership dropped from 42,500 to 37,000 when it went from at-grade LRT with 9 stops to underground LRT with 6 stations. If there is major requirement for a fast connection across Eglinton, then ridership should've gone up when comparing at-grade LRT vs underground with fewer stops. The same might've been the case for Eglinton East as well. You can read more about this here: Eglinton Crosstown West Extension Initial Business Case