crs1026
Superstar
The City seems to feel that the connection to Line 2 will be needed for relief on the west side, but a properly built GO Service ought to be sufficient.
- Paul
- Paul
The City seems to feel that the connection to Line 2 will be needed for relief on the west side, but a properly built GO Service ought to be sufficient.
- Paul
Totally agree. If only the Federal government was willing to drop 20 billion dollars on transit in Toronto.I'm of the belief that by mid-century there will be enough demand to warrant 2 subway lines through the core: the original DRL on Queen and the DRL II along King. Looking at the timeline of projects in the West end (Subway Extension to Vaughan, Finch, Eglinton, Jane & Waterfront West LRTs) as well as GO RER along the rail corridors, it seems the University Line will eventually need some sort of relief. There are impending capacity issues at Union Station with the implementation of GO RER as well.
Why does everyone think a city the size of Toronto needs only two heavy rail subway lines? Is everyone arguing what is best for transit in a city of 6M, or just hoping to do something/ anything better than more buses within a limited funding envelope.
Why is going to Dundas West / Bloor Subway so important for the Western Extension?
I see it as an argument if you want to build the subway out to Mount Dennis and begin relieving the University line. However, there is much greater density being underserved by transit by Humber Bay Shores.
And better GO service going through Dundas West may already serve that amount Dennis corridor anyway.
Or how about going north on Dufferin? The Dufferin bus is one of the busiest surface routes, and this way the Western spur would connect with the Bloor line and the Eglinton Crosstown, without duplicating service provided by GO RER.
Some possible western Relief Line alignments:
I see the western extension of Relief Line being built in two Stages; University to Sunnyside (GO), and then Sunnyside (GO) to the Bloor.
I'm personally not sure how the relief line is supposed to reasonably get from Queen back down to King on the west end (if Queen ultimately ends up chosen), but there are some definite advantages to the King routing, especially when it comes to staging and western extension. King allows for better station placement to interface with other local transit at Queen/Roncesvalles as well as making a better location to extract TBMs.
The curve radii are at 200m, I can't imagine them being able to be built much tighter than that. Most Queen alignment would have a setback from the Queen/Roncesvalles intersection, as well as significant distance from a potential Sunnyside GO station on the Lakeshore line. I have a personal preference for a King-Sunnyside routing as it allows the alignment to avoid much disruption to the Roncesvalles streetcar corridor and businesses in Roncesvalles Village, and has good potential to support development of the Roncesvalles Carhouse.