youngblood
Active Member
Drove along eglinton today and saw some graffiti on the station building at eglinton/bayview. Reddit post also shows one of the glass panels is cracked at eglinton station.
People's preferences vary. Shakiness is not a factor for me, but may be a factor for other riders.
On Eglinton, we can expect a massive inflow of riders, but it will be hard to classify what brought them to this line because multiple factors will be in play.
New residential construction => a greater pool of potential riders.
Much faster operation in the tunnel part => Eglinton route is more attractive for existing riders who previously chose other routes.
Plus, the comfort factor.
Which is why there will be a "34 EGLINTON" bus running from Mt. Dennis Station to Kennedy Station, when Line 5 opens (allegedly). Useful when an elevator (or escalator) is out-of-service due to maintenance or mischief. The rush hour bus lane signs will be removed when Line 5 opens, so the 34 will be in mixed traffic.If we're talking specifically about passenger comfort, then in the specific case of Eglinton, there's also a pretty significant push factor for a minority of riders.
To board the Eglinton Bus, you stand on a kerb, then step aboard the bus. To disembark, you stand at the door, then step to the kerb. In a lot of ways this is even easier than doing the same maneuver from a car, especially if you are travelling with stroller-aged children or you use a mobility aid.
To board the Eglinton Crosstown at the underground stations, you've got to descend 3-4 flights of stairs and escalators, or take at least 2 elevators. It's a thing.
This thing will not be offputting to most passengers, and it has other compensations. (A dry, well-lit waiting area. Little coffee shops at certain stations. Bike parking. Off-street bus transfers. An LRT...)
But there will be other people (especially those who will struggle most with the flights of stairs) who might reasonably prefer a bus. For these people, the above-ground platforms meet this specific need much better. (And, indeed, they have nothing to complain about on the Finch Line or the ION.)
Still, if they properly center the sign in the visible space it will look far better than the Don Valley renaming (using a big black background sign instead of a glass frosting treatment) or the TMU signs.Kind of a shame about the Cedarvale signage. The stainless steel looks much more refined. Obviously this was done on the cheap.
Not sure if this explanation would apply in Toronto, but in Ottawa line 2 is *slower* than the bus it replaced to the most popular destination: Rideau and the Byward market. But it's popular and has high ridership. Comfort is one factor, but reliability was the main reason it wins. The bus you could theoretically save 10 minutes, but the reliability was so poor it could be anywhere from a few minutes faster to 20 minutes slower. The train shows up at the same time every time, which is a huge deciding factor.
Hey, I was referring to it's depiction on the map, as a nub with no terminal station or any other info.I'm not sure I'd call Etobicoke General Hospital and the 20,000 people at Humber Polytechnic – the western terminus – nowhere. Or the Jane & Finch neighbourhood. With almost 40,000 riders a day in Fall 2024, the 36 Finch West has the highest ridership of any bus route in Toronto, exceed only by the 504 King and even higher than Line 4. It was 55,000 pre-Covid in 2019. Admittedly some of the 36 traffic is between Finch West and Finch station.
I'm hoping the signage is temporary (the black background is there to hide the station's previous name), and will eventually be replaced.Still, if they properly center the sign in the visible space it will look far better than the Don Valley renaming (using a big black background sign instead of a glass frosting treatment) or the TMU signs.
You're quite correct.Line 2 - is it O-Train? Or, the new Ottawa LRT? I did not have a chance to visit and ride the new LRT since it opened. On the OC Transpo map, it shows the new LRT as Line 1, and O-Train as Line 2.
But if we are talking about the new LRT, then I am a bit puzzled how the underground line can end up being slower than the mixed-traffic bus via Albert St / Slater St.
You're quite correct.
It's confusing, because Ottawa's Line 2 opened nearly two decades before Line 1. But it makes sense contextually.
Line 1 was a purpose-built transit corridor, featuring a tunnel through downtown and then broadly following a former busway into the suburbs at either end. It was designed to replace more than a thouand daily bus trips, with the entire bus network re-engineered around it, and most stations outside the downtown core having off-street bus bays. It is meant to be the spine of a growing transit network, fully integrated with other services.
Line 2 was the cheapest possible project that could plausibly be called a "rail pilot". It is a converted freight corridor, and it does not serve downtown Ottawa: in fact, before its recent expansion, the only major destinations it served were Carleton University and the large South Keys strip mall. There was no effort at bus integration except where the line already met the Transitway, many of the stations basically amounted to bus stops, and several portions of the line were single-tracked, forcing it to operate with 15-minute headways. Which is to say, hardly anybody used it, except for people who lived near stations and wanted to go to Carleton or the mall.
When Line 1 opened, Line 2 became much more useful by virtue of connecting: you could now reach Carleton and South Keys from downtown with a single off-street transfer. Line 4, which connects Line 2 to the Ottawa Airport, makes it even more useful, although with two transfers, this service is notably slower than the direct bus that used to run out of downtown. And double-tracking of the line now makes more useful headways practical, which has made it more generally attractive.
Of course, clever readers will have noticed that this means Line 4 has opened before Line 3, which does rather make this all more confusing. But that's what you get with OC Transpo.
Ah.Hey, I was referring to it's depiction on the map, as a nub with no terminal station or any other info.




