M II A II R II K
Senior Member
It was a 2nd short line.
I'm personally not a fan of this naming scheme. Subways do not necessarily have to run directly under roads. Plus this naming scheme isn't accurate at all.
Of the 32 stations on the Yonge-University-Spadina line, only two are actually on Spadina Road. The name completely ignores the Allen Road and Vaughan portion of the line. If the TTC were to actually follow their own naming scheme the line it would be called the Yonge-University-Spadina-Allen line.
My personal preference is to use an alphanumerical or colour coded naming scheme. Or maybe something similar to Vancouver's naming sceme which is a little less dull and boring.
Maybe the YUS should be called Yonge-University-Spadina-Allen-Keele-Jane Line.
I would use letters and colours.
1. Yonge-Universities "V" Line. Hits both U of T and York U - general shape on map is "V". Yellow.
2. Bloor-Danforth Crosstown ("C") Line. (Eglinton needs to drop the "crosstown" name. Green.
3. Sheppard-Scarborough Northern ("N") Line. Purple.
4. Eglinton-Malvern Midtown ("M") Line. Follows SRT route up to Malvern. Blue.
5. Don Mills-Downtown "J" Line. East leg will be longer than West. Goes from Seneca College to the Ex. Orange.
Something I have been thinking about:
NIMBYism, property values, and urban realm be damned, how much faster and cheaper would building the DRL above ground be? Underground transit in the developed world seems to be a dying trend. Besides Toronto, most rapid transit projects in North America and Europe are being built at or above grade, rather than below. The capital costs are simply becoming too high to push ahead with long underground tunnels, even if ridership fares are high enough to cover the maintenance and operating costs. New York is spending $6.5 billion for less than 4km of new subway, meanwhile Honolulu is building a whole new 32km elevated line for $5.3 billion, more than a billion less than NYC!
My gosh ... it's not complicated.Maybe the YUS should be called Yonge-University-Spadina-Allen-Keele-Jane Line.
I would use letters and colours.
1. Yonge-Universities "V" Line. Hits both U of T and York U - general shape on map is "V". Yellow.
2. Bloor-Danforth Crosstown ("C") Line. (Eglinton needs to drop the "crosstown" name. Green.
3. Sheppard-Scarborough Northern ("N") Line. Purple.
4. Eglinton-Malvern Midtown ("M") Line. Follows SRT route up to Malvern. Blue.
5. Don Mills-Downtown "J" Line. East leg will be longer than West. Goes from Seneca College to the Ex. Orange.
My gosh ... it's not complicated.
We have a system already. No need to change it.
Bloor-Danforth
Yonge-University (just drop the Spadina ... and now we'll have a University at both ends - 3 if you count Ryerson at Dundas station).
Sheppard
Eglinton
Scarborough
... so whatever we call the new line should follow this guideline. We know it will go up Don Mills sooner or later. So when we know the downtown alignment, the name should be obvious. Say it goes along King. We call it the King subway. When Phase 2 is built, it becomes the King-Don Mills line.
How about elevated outside of the core then?
Also, could we make an elevated line less ugly, by tasking artists to paint over the ugly concrete?
In that case I'd opt for converting the Spadina ROW into an LRT if you want rapid transit between the two Spadina Stations. With 3 subway stations and 5 streetcar lines, the area is already saturated with transit.
Only potential for elevation/at-grade that I can see is the rail corridor connecting Pape and Queen. The 1km portion along Pape Ave may also be able to be elevated, but get luck getting that through Council.