I am more confused now than before!
You're suggesting that the Eglinton line is worse than the Toronto Streetcar System that travels in downtown in mixed use? In what way? Speed, comfort, passengers carried? All are better on the Eglinton line vs the downtown streetcar system.
- Downtown streetcars running in mixed traffic use makes the streetcars slow and prone to being blocked by accidents, breakdowns, and general traffic. Heck, an illegally parked moving truck could block the entire line for 20-30 minutes. This is not going to be a much, much smaller issue for the Eglinton line as it is using dedicated lanes.
- There's no signal prioritization for the downtown section as well, and they have to deal with traffic lights every 100-200 metres - Much worse than the Eglinton line. In peak traffic time, I've walked faster than the Queen, Dundas streetcars in certain times. Traffic lights on Eglinton are also much, much further apart allowing the LRVs to achieve higher speeds between stops, thereby being inherently faster than the streetcars.
- Stop spacing is on average 500m for the Eglinton Line vs 150m for the downtown streetcars. The maximum speed that the streetcars reach is 30 km/h before they have to slow down again for the next stop or light. Again, making it much faster than the streetcars.
- The downtown sections can't have multiple LRV's coupled together as that would potentially block intersections while waiting for traffic to clear. That's not an issue for the Eglinton line as we already have 2-LRV trains already, with a potential for 3-car expansion in the future when demand requires it.
- The downtown streetcars in mixed-use traffic has a pphpd of 3,000. The pphpd for the Eglinton LRT can be 10,000 with 3 minute headways and 2 LRV trains, and as high as 15,000 with 3 minute headways and 3 LRV trains, which is miles ahead of the downtown streetcar system. Again, according to the estimates, we won't even need 15,000 pphpd for years to come.
I agree that the Eglinton LRT isn't going to be perfect, but to suggest that the downtown streetcar system is a well implemented LRT system is just plain incorrect. The downtown streetcar system is a tram that is slow, but good for that implementation. It is by no means an example of a well implemented LRT system. What we have on Eglinton is much, much better than the downtown network. It has its shortcomings, but it will be faster, more comfortable, carry more passengers, and be more efficient than the downtown streetcar network. Eglinton is getting a subway for a good portion of its length and a semi-bad implemented surface section. Could it be better? Sure, but then every single public works project could be better. From roads, to bridges, to highways, and transit lines.
The following is from the Metrolinx Relief Line Appendix for difference in transit technology. Notice the Streetcar at the bottom, just a littler higher than Bus/BRT. The 20,100 is the AM Peak on the Relief line.
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