Toronto Ontario Line 3 | ?m | ?s

Shout out to VINCI's press release, with a truly abysmal rendering of a subway train!

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Boxes of stuff was being carried into the old Fancy Frank’s (453 Queen W) by a bunch of construction-engineer-type individuals in hi-vis. They aren’t mucking about at Queen/Spadina.
The city is going to need to think about parking restrictions on the street sooner rather than later as there is going to be endless conflict between traffic, street cars, construction and pedestrians.
 
Boxes of stuff was being carried into the old Fancy Frank’s (453 Queen W) by a bunch of construction-engineer-type individuals in hi-vis. They aren’t mucking about at Queen/Spadina.
The city is going to need to think about parking restrictions on the street sooner rather than later as there is going to be endless conflict between traffic, street cars, construction and pedestrians.

I wonder how the demolition is going in the basement of the Hudson Bay building at Yonge and Queen. Would be cool to see pictures of the progress.
 
Unfortunately the appointed team doesn't really have a standout design / architect team - it's just giant multinational engineering companies, really.
Ferrovial and VINCI are well regarded around the world - with many, many major projects.
Metrolinx has a very detailed document about everything related to station design. I doubt whoever the architect was, we were ever going to get anything more than a design that follows the specifications Metrolinx has laid out. This has never seemed like a project where there's the level of architectural freedom that the Spadina Line or the TYSSE had. Likely this is to attempt to enforce uniformity despite giving different contracts to different vendors for each part of the line. Metrolinx has essentially designed the stations at a fundamental aesthetic level via their standards, the contractors are being left to do the details.
 
Ontario Line news today via this news release.


NEWS RELEASE
Ontario Takes Next Steps in Building Signature Subway Line
All-new Ontario Line will deliver faster and better transit for the Greater Toronto Area and spur economic growth
November 17, 2022
Ministry of Transportation


TORONTO — The Ontario government is awarding a major contract and issuing two Requests for Qualifications (RFQ) for the Ontario Line subway, marking important milestones in the province’s plan to deliver faster and better transit for the Greater Toronto Area (GTA).
“These milestones bring us one step closer to delivering a world-class transit system for the GTA,” said Caroline Mulroney, Minister of Transportation. “Our government continues to work at an unprecedented pace to move the Ontario Line forward, alleviating gridlock on our roads and creating thousands of good local jobs.”

The province has officially awarded the Rolling Stock, Systems, Operations and Maintenance (RSSOM) contract to Connect 6ix. The contract includes designing and supplying the Ontario Line fleet of trains, as well as designing and building the maintenance and storage facility.
The Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for the northern segment of the Ontario Line will support the building of underground stations and tunnels underneath Pape Avenue between the Gerrard portal and the Don Valley bridge and the construction of three kilometres of elevated tracks in Thorncliffe Park and Flemingdon Park.

“Public transit is key to improving Canadians’ quality of life – it reduces gridlock on our roads, shortens commute times and improves air quality. In collaboration with the Government of Ontario and the City of Toronto, we are delivering on major transit projects for residents in the Greater Toronto Area,” said the Honourable Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Infrastructure and Communities. “These investments will ensure that the region can keep welcoming more residents in the coming years and decades.”
Ontario’s bold transit plan for the Greater Toronto Area is the largest joint investment in transit in the region’s history – which includes the all-new Ontario Line, the three-stop Scarborough Subway Extension, the Yonge North Subway Extension and the Eglinton Crosstown West Extension.

Quick Facts
• The 15-stop Ontario Line will extend 15.6-kilometres from Exhibition/Ontario Place to the Ontario Science Centre and will offer more than 40 transit connections to other subway, bus, streetcar, light-rail transit and regional rail services, linking communities from east to west, north to south.
• The Province also released a sample of the subway train renderings prepared by Connect 6ix, showing early-concept designs that will be finalized after further consultation with municipal partners and communities.
• The trains will be packed with the latest technology and feature onboard Wi-Fi, digital passenger information screens, charging points, dedicated spaces for bicycles, double wheelchair areas, and continuous, connected carriages.
• On November 9, 2022, the Province awarded the South contract, which includes a six-kilometre twin-bore tunnel, as well as four new underground stations (King-Bathurst, Queen-Spadina, Moss Park, Corktown), two underground stations that will integrate with the existing Osgoode and Queen TTC subway stations, and one above-ground station that will integrate with the existing Exhibition GO Station served by the Lakeshore West line.
• Early works construction for the Ontario Line is already underway at Exhibition Station, at the site of the future Corktown and Moss Park stations, and in the joint corridor west of the Don River.
• By 2041, the Ontario Line will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 14,000 tonnes annually and cut overall fuel consumption by more than 7 million litres a year – the equivalent to nearly 120,000 fill ups at the pump.
• Improving public transit is vital to supporting Ontario’s economic development and recovery. Every $1 billion invested in transit helps support 10,000 jobs and boosts Ontario’s real GDP by another $1 billion.

Quotes
"The Ontario Line will bring much needed rapid transit to the people of Toronto, with 15 stations that will connect Exhibition Place to the Ontario Science Centre in 30 minutes or less. Our government is making it easier for people to travel by taking real steps towards improving network connectivity, reducing gridlock, and boosting our economic growth."
- Stan Cho
Associate Minister of Transportation

"The Ontario Line is part of our government’s historic $159.3 billion plan to build Ontario by getting shovels in the ground on vital infrastructure projects. We are building vibrant, mixed-used communities along the province's four priority subway projects. Our Transit-Oriented Communities program will create more jobs, parkland, retail, office space, and homes, including affordable housing options, making it faster and easier for everyone to access reliable transit, right in their own neighbourhoods. Through these kinds of critical infrastructure investments, we’re building stronger and more resilient communities, while also boosting the economy."
- Kinga Surma
Minister of Infrastructure

"People want us to get on with getting transit built. I committed to moving Toronto transit forward during the last election and it is good to see another important step in the construction of the Ontario Line moving ahead today. Expanding public transit is vital to supporting Toronto’s economic development and pandemic recovery."
- John Tory
Mayor of Toronto

"These important steps forward in procurement mean we are even closer to giving communities across Toronto a new subway line that will take 28,000 cars off the road each day and also ease congestion across the existing transit network – reducing crowding by as much as 22 per cent at Bloor-Yonge subway station and 14 per cent at Union subway station. With connections to more than 40 other transit routes along the way, the Ontario Line will make it easier than ever for Torontonians to choose transit first."
- Phil Verster
President and CEO of Metrolinx

"We are pleased to arrive at the end of an exceptionally competitive set of procurements which attracted leading firms from around the world. We have worked tirelessly as a team, engaging the market to understand how best to procure these works even as the world dealt with an unprecedented set of conditions and challenges. As we move forward with more procurements, we will continue to think deliberately about project packaging and risk as we work with our partners to implement the government’s historic plan for subways in the GTHA."
- Michael Lindsay
President and CEO of Infrastructure Ontario

Additional Resources [see link above for these links]
Infrastructure Ontario South Package Project Update
Infrastructure Ontario RSSOM Package Project Update
Ontario Line Station Renderings: Electronic Media Kit
More about Ontario’s priority transit projects
Signing of the Ontario-Toronto Transit Partnership Preliminary Agreement
 
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Oh baby:

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  • The trains will be packed with the latest technology and feature onboard Wi-Fi, digital passenger information screens, charging points, dedicated spaces for bicycles, double wheelchair areas, and continuous, connected carriages.
 
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Important Update from below links "The project is anticipated to be completed in 2031." IMO - With delays the opening will likely not be until 2033 ish.

Contract Awarded for Ontario Line RSSOM Package


Requests for Qualifications Issued for Ontario Line North

The North segment will be delivered through four packages of work: two smaller early works contracts and two major works contracts. The RFQs issued today are for the major works contracts.


Someone please pinch me so I know this is real and not a dream that Ford was able to pull this off somehow. Out of all people Ford.
 
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Connect 6ix sounds like a new company. Where they bought by someone else and renamed or is it a really new company that's making new trains for this brand new line ?
 
Connect 6ix sounds like a new company. Where they bought by someone else and renamed or is it a really new company that's making new trains for this brand new line ?
Connect6ix is the consortium that consists of multiple companies. A consortium is a group of companies that partner to make collective use of their strengths to bid on projects. The trains will be manufactured by Hitachi Rail (a member of the consortium).
 
Someone please pinch me so I know this is real and not a dream that Ford was able to pull this off somehow. Out of all people Ford.
I believe it to be because he eliminated public consultations, and funny thing about it is it speed up his transit projects.

He's done more for transit than what the previous liberal governments cooked up.
 
I believe it to be because he eliminated public consultations, and funny thing about it is it speed up his transit projects.

He's done more for transit than what the previous liberal governments cooked up.

I really want Ford to propose OLNE for his next campaign platform... If so will vote for him 110%. At this rate if OLNE is elevated then we could get to Seneca College by 2035 easily.
 

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