emphurent
Active Member
Interesting - so Spadina will be mined and appears to have elevators proposed for access from the northeast entrance?
Only Elevators, correct. (plus emergency stairs).
Interesting - so Spadina will be mined and appears to have elevators proposed for access from the northeast entrance?
Cut and cover would be very difficult, I imagine, with the amount and complexity of utilities on Queen.I'm seeing a few secondary entrances as elevators only. King-Bathurst, Queen-Spadina, Osgoode.
It's still baffling to me that Osgoode transfers are going to be so long! At peak traffic it's going to take 2-3 minutes to go between track level of OL to Line 1 or vice versa. Per person, per day, for the rest of the life of the Ontario Line.
The with the cost needed to go down so deep to mine the station, added to the recurring additional cost of lost time due to long transfers for passengers should easily outweigh the engineering cost and challenge of coming shallower at that station and underpinning the current station for a seamless transfer. Cut-and-cover the station. You're closing Queen street West for years anyway!
Cut and cover would be very difficult, I imagine, with the amount and complexity of utilities on Queen.
Cut and cover would be very difficult, I imagine, with the amount and complexity of utilities on Queen.
what im more curious about is why the stations at moss park, corktown and queen spadina are so deep.
those 2 line 1 stations i get, but why couldn't they like incline the tunnel to get shallow especially at moss park being cutncover.
Or are the condo buildings with the deep parking garages and utilities a problem?
There are a few developments happening along Queen Street that have basements that could conflict with the station. Additionally, the fewer utilities that have to be moved generally help to reduce risk. We all know how outdated some of the City's plans are and that "secret" utilities come up quite often.
Also, there are likely other considerations on energy use, and efficient vehicle operations to minimize maintenance requirements from varying grades too much along the alignment.
The non-mined stations here (Moss park and Corktown) look overly complex with massive mezzanines. What is all that space going to be used for? Hopefully, they have some use and we're not paying for it to just sit empty all day.Documents seem to have already been made available for some! Curious to see the layout of Queen station, but nothing seems to be there yet.
Here's just a few isometric diagrams as a preview, along with the application links:
King Bathurst
View attachment 484772
Spadina
View attachment 484769
University
View attachment 484773
Moss Park
View attachment 484770
Corktown
View attachment 484771
I would argue that having stations shallower than the rest of the tunnel actually helps with the energy usage. The tunnel goes up when the train needs to slow down entering the station, meaning less braking is required to slow the train down. The tunnel then goes down when leaving the station, meaning less acceleration is required by the motors to get up to speed.
I don't know, many aspects of Ontario Line are shady and unnecessarily complex. But at least we're building it!
It's been many decades since I first heard about it. Didn't the Montreal Metro start incorporating this into designs in the 1970s?Regenerative braking had been a thing for awhile now.