AnnetteMeetsJane
Active Member
Some of the London Underground platforms are very deep, and escalators work fine... The escalator at Angel has a rise of 27m and no one seems to have a major problem with it.
DC actually has a subway station so deep that the only way to access it is via a high speed elevator. There are no escalators/stairs other than an emergency stair well. But to your point, that'd never happen here.Ideally they'd look at better, faster ways of moving people within the station (high speed elevators, for example), which would allow them to build it at the current depth, while improving passenger experience. But sadly, this is metrolinx, so it'll be 5-6 escalators to get between platforms. But there are ways to make the current station depths work, if they would just make the effort/spend the money.
Looks to me like there’s no a lot of hope for the escalators going below three (honestly, it looks like there probably is room, but the designs are farther along then they will want to make that large a structural change). At this point I think we should probably be emphasizing optimized elevators.A reminder of what Metrolinx is planning for Queen. It will be a net of 4 escalators between platofrms. OL Platform > OL Concourse > middle concourse > Line 1 lower concourse > Line 1 platform.
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We don't have to go to DC to see super deep platforms - Montreal is building an elevator-access-only station on REM as well.
Hopefully whoever ends up winning the bid finds a way to reduce the escalator count. Ideally down to 2 escalators, if possible.
Their existing metro has some super deep platforms too. I remember Lucien L'Allier station having at least four loooooong escalator rides from platform to surface level.We don't have to go to DC to see super deep platforms - Montreal is building an elevator-access-only station on REM as well.
There needs to be a OL concourse level to provide more access points to the platform, that's 1 flight escalators.Looks to me like there’s no a lot of hope for the escalators going below three (honestly, it looks like there probably is room, but the designs are farther along then they will want to make that large a structural change). At this point I think we should probably be emphasizing optimized elevators.
The London Underground has a station like this as well. I can't remember off the top of my head what station or how deep it is but it's just elevators and emergency stairs.DC actually has a subway station so deep that the only way to access it is via a high speed elevator. There are no escalators/stairs other than an emergency stair well. But to your point, that'd never happen here.
The problem is, that for Queen and Osgoode anyway, due to the buildings, PATH tunnels, and other infrastructure around Queen in the area, this is probably how deep it needs to be without it costing an absolute fortune to build. Building it in a layer of rock as planned, also avoids having to deal with the complete engineering nightmare of underpinning the existing Queen station, because underpinning stations was a big part of what held up the Crosstown at Eglinton and Eglinton West for so long.
Ideally they'd look at better, faster ways of moving people within the station (high speed elevators, for example), which would allow them to build it at the current depth, while improving passenger experience. But sadly, this is metrolinx, so it'll be 5-6 escalators to get between platforms. But there are ways to make the current station depths work, if they would just make the effort/spend the money.
Exactly!We're building fairly deep in other areas of the city/GTA and it doesn't seem to be much of an issue.
Here, it's a necessity.
Exactly!
I feel like people are acting like it's fine to put tunnels 25m below ground at SCC but somehow they expect a cut and cover tunnel through the heart of the city, which is the one place it makes no sense to do so.
This really comes down to whether you trust the engineers that work at our public institutions. I am sure these decisions aren't being made off the cuff and there is solid engineering behind them, but presenting that in a public report is difficult to do. Taking all the information gathered and reporting it adds a lot of time and cost to the process. The other problem engineers face nowadays is dishonest reporting of sections of a report and trying to take things out of context. I would love for all this to be public, but I also trust the engineers behind these decisions to be making them in good faith.To be fair, I don't support SCC needing to be 25m below ground either. Scarborough has literally the widest streets in all of Toronto, which is ripe for either cut-and-cover shallow stations or elevation.
Also, this is a horrible argument: "they're doing it in other projects, why not here?"
A bad engineering decision is a bad engineering decision regardless of where it is being implemented.
With regards to Queen and Osgoode stations, I do understand why they'd rather go that deep than deal with the myriad of engineering challenges with a shallow tunnel, but it more seems like there is no proper decision making process.
How much more expensive is it to have shallow tunnels between University and Yonge streets vs the currently proposed deep tunnels?
How much time is saved by going shallow vs going deep and having the passengers traverse 4 sets of elevators/stairs to get between lines?
It would be super easy for Metrolinx to nix any naysayers by providing the cost-benefit analysis of shallow vs deep tunnels. If it's going to cost (just for an example) $5 billion extra to tunnel shallow, then it's a moot point to support shallow tunnels. But they don't provide any of their decision making processes and that makes me suspicious if they even do any proper cost-benefit analysis for the different options.
This really comes down to whether you trust the engineers that work at our public institutions. I am sure these decisions aren't being made off the cuff and there is solid engineering behind them, but presenting that in a public report is difficult to do. Taking all the information gathered and reporting it adds a lot of time and cost to the process. The other problem engineers face nowadays is dishonest reporting of sections of a report and trying to take things out of context. I would love for all this to be public, but I also trust the engineers behind these decisions to be making them in good faith.
The answer for why they went so deep on the downtown section is in this forum back a few pages. Essentially, there is a lot in the way of doing the tunnels shallower.To be fair, I don't support SCC needing to be 25m below ground either. Scarborough has literally the widest streets in all of Toronto, which is ripe for either cut-and-cover shallow stations or elevation.
Also, this is a horrible argument: "they're doing it in other projects, why not here?"
A bad engineering decision is a bad engineering decision regardless of where it is being implemented.
With regards to Queen and Osgoode stations, I do understand why they'd rather go that deep than deal with the myriad of engineering challenges with a shallow tunnel, but it more seems like there is no proper decision making process.
How much more expensive is it to have shallow tunnels between University and Yonge streets vs the currently proposed deep tunnels?
How much time is saved by going shallow vs going deep and having the passengers traverse 4 sets of elevators/stairs to get between lines?
It would be super easy for Metrolinx to nix any naysayers by providing the cost-benefit analysis of shallow vs deep tunnels. If it's going to cost (just for an example) $5 billion extra to tunnel shallow, then it's a moot point to support shallow tunnels. But they don't provide any of their decision making processes and that makes me suspicious if they even do any proper cost-benefit analysis for the different options.
The London Underground has a station like this as well. I can't remember off the top of my head what station or how deep it is but it's just elevators and emergency stairs.