nightstreak
Active Member
I am looking at low cost solutions that require very little closure of the area. It would be a couple of hours to post signs. Then it is just having them out there. What you are talking is weeks of construction closing the line.
Signs won't work. All you have to do is go to King Street and see how many drivers ignore and/or are ignorant of the signage. You might as well do nothing. We have decades of streetcar ROW signage on King Street to prove this point.
But the point is moot. Queen Street is not going to get a transit ROW. Like @McGillicuddy points out…
… once there’s a subway running under Queen it would be a hard, if not impossible sell to also get cars banned or even a car lane removed immediately above the subway line along the same street.I do agree that 17-kilometre streetcar line which runs in mixed traffic for much of its length is an obvious problem, and that this problem becomes substantially unfixable after the Ontario Line goes in. (While a competing surface route may not be redundant, it is unlikely to demand the frequency or attract the ridership that might justify shutting down Queen Street within the current planning paradigm. If we accept this paradigm as a parameter, we're kind of stuck.)
Future pro-car municipal leaders and a particular present Provincial leader will see that as double dipping and demand the end of transit “in the way of cars”. You can bet on it.
The Ford government isn’t building transit because he loves transit, pro-car governments build transit to get transit out of the way of cars. It’s been done for decades. Rob Ford wanted underground subways subways subways not because he liked transit (he was red faced against LRTs and streetcars) he wanted transit underground so streetcars wouldn’t be in the way of his car.
After the Ontario Line opens, the 501 as we know it has its fate sealed. It’s just a matter of time. What we can do now is ensure that the Queen Streetcar serves another purpose as to avoid that fate.
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