unimaginative2
Senior Member
Ugh, you just don't get it. The only approved subway extension in MoveOntario is the Yonge Richmond Hill extension. Everything else is LRT, BRT or highway improvements.
No, evidently you just don't get it. The only approved subway extensions are York U and Yonge Richmond Hill because they are the only subway extensions that municipalities were asking for. If Toronto asked for a Sheppard extension or a Scarborough extension, it would have been included. There are no highway projects in MoveOntario2020.
By the time Sheppard's built the cost to construct subways could balloon to the point most of the budget is squendered on one silly extension. 8kms of 'stubway' vs. 120 kms of LRT, there's nothing silly about safeguarding improved service for most of the city, not merely for lethargics too lazy to switch vehicles adjacent to eachother on the same platform.
Okay, so now you're claiming that a Sheppard extension will cost over $6 billion? That's just ridiculous. Ever thought it strange that it costs more to build subway in Toronto than almost any other city in the world? Maybe we should be looking into that.
If you can suggest 750m proximity is good enough walking distance between stops downtown, I don't see why you're so adament about keeping subways on Sheppard at all costs when the concept of having trains there is still very new and commuters aren't inflexible to change?
Commuters aren't inflexible to change? What does that even mean? I can assure you that commuters on Sheppard who bought thousands of condos because there's a subway there would be damned pissed off if it were shut down and replaced with a streetcar.
If it costs less than GO they might, maybe not all the way to Peel, but why not to commute to West Hill or Golden Mile or Don Mills or Yonge-Eglinton or Black Creek/Weston or the airport?
Oh wow, haven't I heard this before. It doesn't make sense to plan a subway line based on a tiny handful of people who are going to do a wild commute from Durham to Peel, or Rouge Hill to Kipling.
I'd actually recommend NOT adhering to straight lines if an east-west subway line were to be built downtown. Queen could be used as the archetype but the line could be branched off (interlining) in the CBD area. As good as YUS loop is I'd add secondary stops exclusively at City Hall, CBD (King/Bay), St Lawrence Market, Queens Quay, Skydome, Chinatown/Grange and Ryerson University to name a few.
So you'd have the line split of into one-station dead end branches? Or it would zig-zag all over downtown? Or it would split into multiple routes meaning 10 minute frequencies or worse on the busiest section of the line?