GenerationW
Senior Member
The current EA is for downtown to the Danforth.As the thing is likely to be built in stages even if the EA is all done it once, it could make sense to built to Eglinton and keep the options open.
The current EA is for downtown to the Danforth.As the thing is likely to be built in stages even if the EA is all done it once, it could make sense to built to Eglinton and keep the options open.
The current EA is for downtown to the Danforth.
Yeah, that doesn't make sense to me either. When it comes to the DRL, I don't have full trust in what Mr Munro writes. Sometimes it seems he has a bit of a bias, or is kinda closed-minded on the topic.
Immediately west of Don Mills there is a large, low density commercial and industrial area. This is an area that might be ideal for a large scale redevelopment, similar to the proposal Unilever lands. This area is roughly centred at York Mills @ Lesmill Road, which is where I'd put York Mills Station for the Don Mills line. I envision an urban area, with good mixture of commercial, residential, mid and high rise.
The connectivity of this neighbourhood would potentially make it one of Toronto's most attractive. Just about all of the neighbourhood would be walking distance (800 meters) from York Mills subway station, and from there it would be less than 5 minutes to the Eglinton Crosstown LRT and Fairview Mall and less than 15 minutes to downtown. There would be opportunities for two additional stations in the north and south ends of the neighbourhood (denoted by grey pins on the map). Finally, the DVP and 401 are both only minutes away.
Thoughts?
I'm a little sceptical about a subway past Eglinton. What is the ridership potential for the northernmost part of "long"? Would an LRT from Eglinton to Steeles for half the money actually serve the people in that area better?
Ridership between Eglinton and Sheppard increases by only 6,300. However, keep in mind that it relieves ridership on Yonge by another 5,600 pphpd. This is another primary benefit of the line that would make 6,300 pphpd between Sheppard and Eglinton more palatable.
Also, it's not entirely clear if future land use patterns was used to generate the ridership estimates. I suspect they did not. Of the 6,300 pphpd expected between Sheppard and Eglinton, 5,600 were diverted from Yonge. This leaves only 700 pphpd in new trips generated on that section. That number is unbelievably low. Even a handful of new condos between Sheppard and Eglinton on Don Mills would generate more trips than that.
My thoughts exactly. Why did they choose LRT all the way from Sheppard to Downtown as an option when it is not technically feasible to have an LRT through downtown unless it's buried for almost the entire length south of Eglinton?
My thoughts exactly. Why did they choose LRT all the way from Sheppard to Downtown as an option when it is not technically feasible to have an LRT through downtown unless it's buried for almost the entire length south of Eglinton?
It's been mentioned that the options shown have been whittled down from many more. It could be that stopping the DRL at Eglinton was looked at and extending it to Sheppard added enough value to make that the option to get shortlisted. It could also be that they looked at extending even farther and the benefits weren't worth the cost. From a network connectivity perspective, going to Sheppard makes sense because it would connect to another subway line. And the farther north you go, the more you relieve Yonge.-Why did they only compare the Relief line stub to an extension all the way to Sheppard? In none of the compared options does it include the usual option of going north to Eglinton (e.g. the "full' DRL from the metrolinx study). This feels like a political sop to make it seem less like the DRL is a line for "downtowners" than a legitimate study on the best options for transit in the area.
I agree completely and I've long thought that focusing entirely on Yonge relief is shortsighted. And it's probably true that if Metrolinx looked at streetcar relief and network redundancy the DRL would be even more urgent. Hopefully what they're saying is true that the studies are all being coordinated so the goals between the different agencies don't keep conflicting. It seems, based on what I've seen so far, that the DRL will achieve the other goals even if Metrolinx considers them secondary.-Why are the terms of reference so completely different than in the city's downtown rapid transit study? I don't see anything about supporting growth in shoulder areas, relieving streetcar lines, encouraging TOD, supporting network redundancy. Of course if your only criteria is "how does this relieve the yonge line" then a line running exactly parallel to the Yonge line for 90% of its length is going to score well.
That's the thing though, it wouldn't intercept everyone heading downtown from the west end. Unlike in the east end, that can be achieved with RER in the west end. I do agree that the DRL should go west through the highly dense west end that's away from the RER tracks. That doesn't seem to get recognized when they're only looking at Yonge relief.I think that it's kind of unfair to compare between different studies with different demand models. I have some other issues with their estimate: How is it that adding the western DRL only adds 300 pphpd? Going through the densest residential part of Toronto and intercepting everyone heading downtown coming from the west end of the BD line only adds 300?
Plus the study looked at how much the DRL-West would relief Yonge-Bloor station. Answer is not much, because DRL-West would relieve St. George if anything.That's the thing though, it wouldn't intercept everyone heading downtown from the west end. Unlike in the east end, that can be achieved with RER in the west end. I do agree that the DRL should go west through the highly dense west end that's away from the RER tracks. That doesn't seem to get recognized when they're only looking at Yonge relief.
So, a few things about this new study, which is completely bizarre to me:
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I think that it's kind of unfair to compare between different studies with different demand models. I have some other issues with their estimate: How is it that adding the western DRL only adds 300 pphpd? Going through the densest residential part of Toronto and intercepting everyone heading downtown coming from the west end of the BD line only adds 300?
-Why are the terms of reference so completely different than in the city's downtown rapid transit study? I don't see anything about supporting growth in shoulder areas, relieving streetcar lines, encouraging TOD, supporting network redundancy. Of course if your only criteria is "how does this relieve the yonge line" then a line running exactly parallel to the Yonge line for 90% of its length is going to score well.
My thoughts exactly. Why did they choose LRT all the way from Sheppard to Downtown as an option when it is not technically feasible to have an LRT through downtown unless it's buried for almost the entire length south of Eglinton?
I think so too. The purpose of this study was to study 'Yonge Line Relief' not to study the DRL. The Yonge Line Relief study unsurprisingly found that the DRL East/Long was the best option for relieving Yonge.To me, this omission is purposeful to make DRL Long look better than DRL U, without presenting the actual comparable of which one brings more people to downtown (rather than which brings more down from the east).
And Toronto cares about the DRL? The number one project at city hall is Smart Track and not the DRL.