doady
Senior Member
Updated plan is excellent. It bugs me that people dump on the new OL because of partisan feelings. Can people stop being so political all the time just vote for good transit for a change?
Updated plan is excellent. It bugs me that people dump on the new OL because of partisan feelings. Can people stop being so political all the time just vote for good transit for a change?
Updated plan is excellent. It bugs me that people dump on the new OL because of partisan feelings. Can people stop being so political all the time just vote for good transit for a change?
Excellent is subjective. Some people thought transit city was excellent. It died. Some people thought a Sheppard subway would be excellent. It got cut. A long time ago people thought Eglinton west getting a subway would be excellent. Then it got filled in. I'll be perfectly happy with this thing dying a quick death. To me that would be excellent.Updated plan is excellent. It bugs me that people dump on the new OL because of partisan feelings. Can people stop being so political all the time just vote for good transit for a change?
Updated plan is excellent. It bugs me that people dump on the new OL because of partisan feelings. Can people stop being so political all the time just vote for good transit for a change?
The previous DRL planned may be better, but it is just too costly. If planners of the DRL would have put cost efficiency as the number one goal, and shaved off a couple of Billion $ off the price tag - then I think more people would have supported the DRL.The OL plan has a number of issues, regardless of any partisan feelings.
Funny how when talking about building a danforth extension to Scarborough that is apparently money well spent. For years the subway subway subway crowd mocked the lrt crowd for going cheap. Now we are embarking on building the most important piece of transit infrastructure and the same people who were all about not introducing new technology and spending what needed to be spent are advocating for a cheaper design and new tech because this is what we can afford.The previous DRL planned may be better, but it is just too costly. If planners of the DRL would have put cost efficiency as the number one goal, and shaved off a couple of Billion $ off the price tag - then I think more people would have supported the DRL.
It comes down to the question.
Spend $9B on the 7.5km DRL, or spend $11B on the 15.5km OL?
If the DRL would have been $7B, and for $10B is could have made it to Eglinton - then it would be a different discussion.
If there is any common sense, those opposed to the OL should be finding ways of improving and reducing the costs of the DRL. I fear it will be a repeat of the Scarborough subway debate where the one side refuse to make any compromise away from the transfer LRT - and because of that their voice was ridiculed and shut out.
The previous DRL planned may be better, but it is just too costly. If planners of the DRL would have put cost efficiency as the number one goal, and shaved off a couple of Billion $ off the price tag - then I think more people would have supported the DRL.
It comes down to the question.
Spend $9B on the 7.5km DRL, or spend $11B on the 15.5km OL?
The previous DRL planned may be better, but it is just too costly. If planners of the DRL would have put cost efficiency as the number one goal, and shaved off a couple of Billion $ off the price tag - then I think more people would have supported the DRL.
It comes down to the question.
Spend $9B on the 7.5km DRL, or spend $11B on the 15.5km OL?
If the DRL would have been $7B, and for $10B is could have made it to Eglinton - then it would be a different discussion.
If there is any common sense, those opposed to the OL should be finding ways of improving and reducing the costs of the DRL. I fear it will be a repeat of the Scarborough subway debate where the one side refuse to make any compromise away from the transfer LRT - and because of that their voice was ridiculed and shut out.
Funny how when talking about building a danforth extension to Scarborough that is apparently money well spent. For years the subway subway subway crowd mocked the lrt crowd for going cheap. Now we are embarking on building the most important piece of transit infrastructure and the same people who were all about not introducing new technology and spending what needed to be spent are advocating for a cheaper design and new tech because this is what we can afford.
Combine the 2 plans is the best option - but history shows that Toronto won't explore this.Even if the choice is binary, either DRL South "as is" or OL "as is", the answer is not obvious. Those $9B on the 7.5km DRL would result in a) potentially higher capacity limit for the future demand, and b) space in the eastern rail corridor preserved for the RER expansion.
Furthermore, elements of the DRL and OL plans could be combined for the best outcome. I definitely like it that OL is going to reach Eglinton in Phase 1. If the provincial government was more open about their design process, a better outcome would be more likely.
Combine the 2 plans is the best option - but history shows that Toronto won't explore this.
I use the Scarborough subway as the example. During the 2010 campaign, Ford was against the Transit City transfer LRT plan and was in favour of the B-D subway extension to STC. Then, he an McGuinty found a compromise between the 2 - creating a continuous transfer free connection to STC. Unfortunately, City Council and the Provincial Liberals decided to kill this plan and go back to the subway extension plan. After that point, not one person tried to find a compromise. The Subway plan was going ahead, so it was imperative for the LRT supporters to meet halfway with some type of compromise. None was ever presented to we end up with the subway extension.
In this case, I am confident that nobody will question the planning and design that resulted in the proposed expensive DRL plan. Nobody will suggest ways of reducing the cost. It will turn into a binary choice of a 15.5km line or a 7.5km line. Maybe if this was 30 years ago, we could afford to built the DRL short and extend it a few decades in the future. However, we are so far behind that there needs to be a major push to build a network, not a stub.
SmartTrack was originally supposed to use the railway lines as rapid transit routes. Things are getting quieter there.
If we're drawing lines on maps, and SkyTrain-capacity is what we're talking about, why not combine Ontario Line, relief-line long, Sheppard subway east, part of the existing Line 3 and a Line 3 east extension to Malvern to get the most out of this. Circuitous yes, not ideal no, but more of a possible reality if Ontario Line goes ahead as planned? (and yes this has a mid-town GO)View attachment 196874