This is a bit off topic, but there's no wall or curtain blocking anything. Why should drivers have a view of the water from the Gardiner? It's not on the waterfront! Toronto is a city of high rises that stops at the last major street before the water. It's no different from Hong Kong or Sydney or Chicago.
Now if you could barely see the water while driving along Queen's Quay, then the "wall of condos" argument would have some merit.
Really? Than why is it that our chattering classes keep arguing that the Gardiner cuts off the city from the waterfront? How is the Gardiner any less of a psychological barrier than the condos?
Now, I am not opposed to the condos or redoing the Gardiner corridor. I am just pointing out the argument that's used and it's limitations. I was just responding to Darren who said, 'I simply dont think that the city would allow more condos so close to our lakeshore. It cuts off the lakeshore to the rest of the city.'
I wouldn't be so quick to assume that a Queen alignment would prioritize relatively fewer riders than Union based on GO ridership. More people ride the downtown streetcars than the GO lines.
It'll be interesting to see the results of the study that the TTC has been instructed to do.
Like I said, there's no point debating it now. We'll have to wait to see the ridership estimates. That's what makes debates about where to put the line irrelevant at the moment. Though, it's a valid exercise for CDL.TO and Darren B to go back and forth on how much development there is on Queen vs. Front.
For me, I'll support whichever alignment pulls in the most riders.
Yeah, I think alot will be riding on this study. I think many councillors will wait for this study to decide if they should further back the DRL
It won't be downtown councilors deciding the merits of this line. It will be their suburban counterparts who have to hear complaints from their constituents who make the transfer at Yonge and Bloor everyday. You know those same monday to friday 9 to 5'ers that you were giving less importance to. They will form the bulk of the ridership for the new line. All the riders drawn from the development in the core will not compare to the number of inner suburbanites who will be riding the DRL.
The alignment will be whatever is convenient for most of those riders coming into the core. IMHO, that's why it's hard to make the case for Queen, when most of them are heading for offices somewhere between King and Front. Combine that point with the development taking place at the edge of the core at the Portlands and on Lakeshore west, the tourist attractions along Front, the presence of an existing transit hub at Union and you have a very strong case for a Front-Wellington alignment.
That's what Queen is competing with. It would have to commercial development to rival Wellington/Front, residential development to rival the Lakeshore and sufficient traffic from the entertainment district to rival all the attractions on Front. After all, who'd argue against having a subway stop specifically for the CN Tower and the SkyDome.
But I guess we'll all have to wait for the study to be proven right or wrong. Maybe the best corridor win.