lordmandeep
Banned
Sydney's Cityrail carries 900,000 riders per day
Oh, now it makes sense why did not have a subway...
Go Transit plus Subway is around what 1.1 million people???
Sydney's Cityrail carries 900,000 riders per day
I wasn't proposing just GO improvements. I was proposing a complete conversion to regional rail, which can be capable of carrying loads almost as heavy as a subway line. Sydney's Cityrail carries 900,000 riders per day. In that city the idea of commuter rail and subway being separate doesn't exist.
You're misunderstanding me - I'm not saying we should convert all our existing subways to regional rail. I was just using Sydney as an example. I meant converting GO Transit. There's no reason that high capacity regional rail lines couldn't be built to complement the existing subway network. They can be built on rail rights of way, along streets, or in tunnels, wherever they're needed. You can bet the Lakeshore line will start to resemble regional rail when it gets electrified. A lot of cities have both heavy rail and regional rail. Look at Berlin.We can't just convert to a Sydney model because we already have subways.
Why cant they just release the bloody money? Bureaucrats piss me off.
However, it is in Harper's vested interest to delay the official announcement of funding to the project until just before the next election, to buy votes in the 905. There is no doubt that this is the real reason behind the delay in transferring the federal money. This line has been in planning for a long time, tenders are already going out for various works.. to switch it to a P3 at this point is utterly pointless.
And quite simply, IMO, if the Cities and Province have both put up their cash, that's a 67% voting share. The Feds shouldn't have a say anymore.. Harper keeps talking of taking a hands off approach to the provinces and the cities.. yet this is the most hands on approach one can take.
It's impossible to tell how far GO will morph because we're incapable of thinking big right now...if we limit it to existing rail corridors, then it's safe to say that GO improvements most certainly cannot solve all of our problems. When I said GO improvements can't replace the DRL, obviously a different rail system could take someone from Markham to Union station, but it won't be able to provide a local service along the way that's as useful...and I think the DRL's biggest plus is that it has so much more potential than simply shuttling suburbanites to the CBD.
Of course, if we start building new corridors for what GO morphs into, it'll open up all kinds of doors.
In the case of everything south of Bloor that's not along Yonge or University, they're over a century behind development. I would much rather see that dealt with than spend billions digging tunnels to empty fields.
And I'm personally tired of people going off about the "Sorbara Line." People who live in the 416 tend to have an awful short-sighted view of what goes on in the other side of Steeles. There are multiple proposals for 30-40 storey skycrapers along both proposed subway extensions and suburbia is changing.