drum118
Superstar
That what shows on the schedule.Why has TPAP completion been pushed back a year?
That what shows on the schedule.Why has TPAP completion been pushed back a year?
There's no existing/planned rapid transit near Yonge like there is two blocks from King (RER). Plus Jarvis is a lot farther from the heart of the financial district than Queen St is - almost double the distance from King and Bay (700 m vs 380 m). The whole Jarvis thing is a red herring.
What exactly is a planning supporter? Are we talking about sports teams now? Maybe we should debate the issues on their own merits instead of trying to assign everybody to some sort of faction.
Henchmen? You must be confused. Rob Ford isn't mayor anymore.
I don't know why you're talking about detours. You mention College - if someone on College wants to go east or west they will be able to choose between going north to the Bloor subway or south to the Queen subway. It's a long walk, but doable. People will take whatever route makes sense, no detours required.
Look, if there were any possibility of two new east-west subways through the downtown area (and I have no doubt that they'd be successful), I might agree with you. But that's not going to happen in any of our lifetimes. This new line is indeed a jack of all trades, because that's exactly what it has to be.
With RER/Smarttrack stations at Liberty Village and Unilever, a King subway would duplicate much of the market for RER, which will have subway-like service where the lines converge downtown. Queen avoids that duplication along with expanding the rapid transit network to more of downtown and making rapid transit walkable to most of the core, including the financial district. College and the employment cluster in that area will still be a bit of a stretch to either subway line, but less so than if the new line goes along King.
they are putting up the money for the DRL? Is that what you are trying to say? Where did you dream that up,. The give $150M and you equate that with paying for the line!
If the NIMBYs want the Relief Line to use Carlaw instead of Pape south of Gerrard, then we'll expect a subway jog with turns (and noise) bigger than the jog between College and Wellesley Stations.
Be careful what you wish for, you might get it.
Looks like that alignment goes under even more homes.As you can see, fewer homeowners would be affected via this alignment. And Carlaw is already zoned for higher-order development, Pape is single family homes with no development potential.
Yes, as I said, College is pretty much the outer limit of the area that a Queen line would serve. And beyond the area that King would serve. People on College would be just as likely to use the Queen line as they are to use Bloor. As for Queen avoiding major destinations in the core, it's 380 m from King and Bay and there's no shortage of high density homes, offices and shopping on Queen Street. It's within easy walking distance of most of the downtown core, including all kinds of major destinations north and south of the line.You're the one that says Queen St might even serve people on College so you brought it up. People won't do as you speculate because it's a waste of time for short 2-4km trips across downtown that becomes transfer city when the major line is on an axis that avoids the major destinations in the core.
Are you saying that significant numbers of people won't use RER? Or are you saying that Metrolinx's projections for massive ridership growth were part of the Smarttrack lie years before Smarttrack was even dreamed up?Still believing the Tory SmartTrack lie... The report commissioned by the city actually says the opposite of what you say here. Note I mean the report with the numbers in it, not the fluff Powerpoints the TTC and planners present at public events.
Here is what the DRL could look like on the subway map. Might be able to make it line 3 if the SSE went ahead.
View attachment 78301
Actually - I think that re-cycling line 3 is very likely for this. By the time this is real though, the Finch West LRT will be there, and probably Crosstown West to Airport and East to University of Toronto Scarborough. I am not the artist you are. What might that look like? Also - just keep extending that red line vertically to Science Centre and then to Don Mills. With Metrolinx involvement, the likelihood of that is probably high.
Lines are numbered in the order that they were built. Based on this policy, I don't expect line 3 to be reused for anything else.
Why has TPAP completion been pushed back a year?
Based on the latests info, construction will not happen until 2025.