kotsy
Senior Member
They've begun construction on the temporary pedestrian bridge @ Exhibition Station.
Bringing up a well known case of a system being poorly designed and managed as a reason not to do something that system does is not as convincing as you think. It feels only a step away from "those urban trains are all a boondoggle!".Confederation Line was down for six days, with the catenary mangled and melted. Using the same voltage and current as OL is supposed to. Can't recall that happening with our subway.
I think it is worth asking why the elevated in Toronto looks so much worse than in Seattle, the wires look messier and the bridge structure is not a box the way larger segmental guideways are.
They've begun construction on the temporary pedestrian bridge @ Exhibition Station.
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It should be convincing. And compared to all the untruths people were waxing poetic about catenary, it's relevant. As well as local and recent.Bringing up a well known case of a system being poorly designed and managed as a reason not to do something that system does is not as convincing as you think. It feels only a step away from "those urban trains are all a boondoggle!".
The wires look a bit messier, the guidwway looks fine. Keep in mind this is a short awkward part with an incline, jig, leading over an intersection. With a long level section we'd likely see box girders. The I-beams may need some pigeon netting in the future tho.I think it is worth asking why the elevated in Toronto looks so much worse than in Seattle, the wires look messier and the bridge structure is not a box the way larger segmental guideways are.
It should be convincing. And compared to all the untruths people were waxing poetic about catenary, it's relevant. As well as local and recent.
To recap, third rail:
-lower capital cost
-lower operating/maintenance cost
-greater ease of planning/construction (obvious since train profile way smaller)
-less susceptible to our winter weather events
-more reliable
-significantly less conspicuity (sleeker, smaller guideways)
-trains likely more efficient due to lower drag (add a roof rack to your car and watch mileage go down)
-possibly quieter due to greater train aerodynamics
The last two I thought of right now.
The wires look a bit messier, the guidwway looks fine. Keep in mind this is a short awkward part with an incline, jig, leading over an intersection. With a long level section we'd likely see box girders. The I-beams may need some pigeon netting in the future tho.
closest I can find is this air photo which seems to show it (notice the remnants of the original platform at Dufferin as well which are much more visible than today.. the stairs still exist for that former station, fenced off but clearly visible).That caused me to do a double-take.........for a second, I was like............wait didn't they demolish that bridge years ago? LOL
For those not getting the reference, Exhibition Station used to have an overhead bridge connecting the platforms, before the tunnel was built. I'd honestly forgotten that until I saw the structure rising in this pic, and I flashed to a memory of using the old bridge as a child.
I had a quick look-see, but couldn't find a pic of the station w/the bridge. Someone here should go find it!![]()
I feel I'm slightly out of the loop - why was Broadview/Dundas/McCaul chosen as the routing instead of Parliament (or Victoria)/King/Spadina? I imagine the McCaul routing is more convenient for those on the west side, but Broadview is quite a ways away on the east side.@Steve Munro has obtained some clarity on the Ontario-Line diversion streetcar tracks and shuttle bus plans:
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From: https://stevemunro.ca/2023/02/28/501-queen-diversions-and-shuttles-for-the-ontario-line/
I feel I'm slightly out of the loop - why was Broadview/Dundas/McCaul chosen as the routing instead of Parliament (or Victoria)/King/Spadina? I imagine the McCaul routing is more convenient for those on the west side, but Broadview is quite a ways away on the east side.
"something to do with there being no NB Parliament to WB Dundas curve" would seem to be EVERYTHING to do with it! I still think that if ML were told they could not obstruct Victoria at Queen and the City/TTC replaced the tracks on Victoria in the short blocks from Dundas to Queen, they could use Victoria - once Hydro and Enbridge finish their current projects there. This would bring the streetcars pretty close to Queen station.I don't know the reasoning for certain; but I might suspect it has something to do with there being no NB Parliament to WB Dundas curve at that intersection. Which would seem to make that routing unworkable.
View attachment 459326
To clarify, I envisioned a SB Parliament to WB King routing, not NB to Dundas.I don't know the reasoning for certain; but I might suspect it has something to do with there being no NB Parliament to WB Dundas curve at that intersection. Which would seem to make that routing unworkable.
I think some places do not have enough 'road space' to accommodate a streetcar curve and I read figures a few years ago of the cost of curves - the cost to add a curve is really rather large. In some cases a perfectly viable solution using existing track is available - Queen & Church being an example where the right curves are there a few hundred meters away at Victoria (if the Victoria track north of Queen were fixed! )In theory, Church Street would be another option, but its missing relevant turns at both Queen and Dundas.
This is the problem of the TTC's short-sighted decision to remove so many turning movements that were rarely used over the years. (or not install them in the first place in some cases).
I think virtually every streetcar on streetcar intersection should be a grand union to maximize flexibility.
They have also had missing curves that were approved and planned to be added in, but forgotten about when it came time to rebuild those intersectionsIn theory, Church Street would be another option, but its missing relevant turns at both Queen and Dundas.
This is the problem of the TTC's short-sighted decision to remove so many turning movements that were rarely used over the years. (or not install them in the first place in some cases).
I think virtually every streetcar on streetcar intersection should be a grand union to maximize flexibility.