Leo_Chan
Senior Member
Nah, let's get to the UK, then it can be a Province of Canada!Why stop there? Why not a subway to Casino Rama!
Nah, let's get to the UK, then it can be a Province of Canada!Why stop there? Why not a subway to Casino Rama!
...and to Wonderland!
Sarcasm aside, even if one does make a case for subways to the northern hinterlands (I lied on the sarcasm), why make them so expensive by burying them? That approach is so incredibly dated by World City standards.You know Wonderland is literally next door to Vaughan Mills, right?
But, sure, why not! For 3 months a year dozens of people will use it every day! But, no, I do enjoy the notion that anything north of Steeles is regarded as functionally the same as Barrie or apparently the UK. I don't think they need our subways there. We can ask them, though...
http://www.londonreconnections.com/2011/stretching-the-line-why-we-do-and-dont-extend-tube-lines/[...]
Ultimately extending a tube line is very expensive. Modern day underground stations are even more expensive and tube track in bored tunnels is incredibly expensive to maintain. Nowadays this becomes even more difficult to justify as current rules mean an extension to an existing line must be built with an emergency walkway – adding to the cost of tunnelling but providing no offsetting revenue benefit.
As a result, there has to be somewhere worthwhile to extend it to that has sufficient traffic demand and sometimes the problem is simply that all the capacity has already been used up. This is why it is unlikely that the Victoria line will ever be extended.
Given the efficiency of modern tunnel boring machines and the fact that the size (bore) of the tunnel is no longer a critical fact in the cost, the pendulum is swinging in favour of building totally new lines capable of taking full size trains rather than tube extensions. And once you have started boring, you might as well keep going so megaprojects such as Crossrail are now seen as the cost-effective way to spend money.
So what about taking over existing lines – assuming there are any suitable ones still around? Well for a start a lot of the advantages have gone. We don’t have steam trains so the image of the sliding-door electric underground train doesn’t offer any appeal over mainline suburban stock. The smog is gone and the cheering thought of a warm underground has been replaced by the dread of being trapped in a sweltering Underground train that isn’t going anywhere. Indeed it might be a good idea to look back at the some schemes that were implemented and see if they really were fit for the 21st century. [...]
http://www.economist.com/news/brita...t-network-it-could-given-its-constraints-timeUnderground, overground
London has built about as good a transport network as it could, given its constraints. Time to remove the constraints
Oct 19th 2013
[...] Projects are already underway to deal with this. Automatic signalling is being introduced on the Northern line so that more trains can run more frequently. There are plans to extend the line to Nine Elms in Battersea. Antediluvian rolling stock on most of the other routes will be replaced by air-conditioned trains; signalling will be improved too. The first section of Crossrail, a new east-west train service, will open by 2016. The mayor and TfL are lobbying hard for Crossrail 2, a mooted north-south line that would cut through London either as a metropolitan system or as part of a longer railway network.
Grand projects help, at huge cost. But there is a simpler, cheaper way of adding capacity, insists Sir Peter: make much better use of London’s huge existing commuter railway network. Which means giving him more control.
TfL has been granted the West Anglia route, which runs from Liverpool Street through east London. As with the Overground, it will run under a concession rather than a more complex rail franchise. This means TfL taking on most of the financial risk, and with luck making it efficient. If the mayor gets his wish, other lines may join West Anglia in TfL’s embrace. “We need to start thinking about rail as a supplementary link to the Tube,” says Isabel Dedring, the deputy mayor for transport.
This power grab worries some. Members of Kent County Council initially bristled at the idea of London-run lines slinking through their county. Surely the city would cut back on trains beyond its boundary, they said. But such anxiety is misplaced, thinks Christian Wolmar, a transport expert. If commuters are travelling to London, the city and passengers would benefit if TfL had control over those lines. Stations blighted by lack of investment would be refurbished; auxiliary routes would be connected to the busier central lines.
London’s transport could be improved even more if the mayor were given control over local taxes. Crossrail is being financed through a combination of government cash, fares and an increase in land values. A business-rate supplement on non-domestic properties with a rateable value of £55,000 ($80,000) or more has supplied £4 billion for the project. This arrangement could be extended for Crossrail 2, and more widely.
As elsewhere, but even more so, investment in London transport helps the economy. The city accounts for nearly a fifth of Britain’s economic output. But the benefits are local, too. Since the London Overground came to Hackney, house prices have jumped by 25%. Only parts of central London have seen faster rises. [...]
Subway under Lake Ontario to Niagara Falls? Anyone?Clearly, the old method of demarcation (ie. municipal boundaries ) is somewhat archaic, arbitrary and not fitting for a region like the GTA and we have to figure out what we will use instead....but if we don't figure it out, I fear that the joking subway extensions noted in the last page or so will creep in and become real suggestions (perhaps not here...but elsewhere, where it matters).
I feel, for example, for the poor Councillors in London who made the perfectly rational decision to opt for BRT over LRT......all indicators pointed to BRT as the appropriate transit solution for their situation. I have seen them mocked, I have seen them criticized because municipality "X" is getting LRT but I have not seen many congratulatory comments/articles saying they did the right thing.
Anyone else remember this?
I suspect TO will take issue with that as that pertains to London Ont. London UK is embracing LRTs as well as other light rail transit (Docklands Light Railway is the largest system of its kind in the world):A lot of that belittling came from people here in Toronto. Just like there's a "subways, subways, subways" crowd, there also seems to be an "LRTs, LRTs, LRTs" crowd that thinks its a one-size-fits-all solution, and looks at the mere possibility of a BRT the same way Doug Ford looks at an LRT.
https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/trams/the-future-of-tramsThe future of trams
As we celebrate 15 years of trams serving south London, we are sharing our plans for the future of the trams network.
Trams 2030
Since 2000, we have seen the number of passengers on trams increase from 14 million to 32 million passengers in 2015. Passenger numbers are expected to reach nearly 60 million by 2030.
We need to upgrade the trams network to accommodate this growth.
Trams 2030 summarises our proposed 15-year plan to accommodate growing demand, improve reliability and support the regeneration of Croydon town centre.
Trams 2030 sets out our ongoing works (including the Wimbledon line enhancement programme), the current proposals including major upgrades and expansions to the network, such as Dingwall Road Loop, and our longer term plan for trams in south London.
Trams for growth
PDF 3.05MB
What Planners of Brooklyn-Queens Streetcar Line Can Learn in New Jersey
By
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/16/nyregion/what-planners-of-brooklyn-queens-streetcar-line-can-learn-in-new-jersey.htmlEMMA G. FITZSIMMONS NYTimes
FEB. 15, 2016
HOBOKEN, N.J. — With Mayor Bill de Blasio proposing a streetcar line from Brooklyn to Queens, city planners do not have to search far for an example of a similar system to help guide them.
Just across the Hudson River, traveling from Bayonne through Jersey City and Hoboken to Weehawken, the thriving Hudson-Bergen Light Rail first opened more than a decade ago and now carries about 46,800 passengers each weekday. With views of the Manhattan skyline and sleek cars that glide over 18 miles, it has become increasingly popular and has spurred development in once-blighted areas of the New Jersey waterfront.
On a recent morning, Derrick Ladson, a 32-year-old dance teacher, took the line through Hoboken, looking out the window as snow fell outside.
“It’s so convenient; I love it,” Mr. Ladson said. “You get a nice view as you’re riding into work.”
After opening an initial seven-mile section in 2000, New Jersey Transit gradually extended the line, completing the most recent station, in Bayonne, in 2011. Despite its name, the system never reached Bergen County. Efforts to extend it farther north have stalled over a lack of funding.
The system offers a look at the benefits, and challenges, of creating a modern transit system that blends into the urban streetscape. On Tuesday morning, Mr. de Blasio plans to provide more details about his plans for the streetcar at a news conference in Red Hook, Brooklyn, one of the waterfront neighborhoods through which the route would travel.
New York City’s proposal, which is being called the Brooklyn Queens Connector, is part of a wave of attention-grabbing streetcar and light-rail projects across the country that seek to capitalize on both urban revitalization and nostalgia for trolleys. But several projects have faced major delays and cost overruns — most notably, a still-unopened streetcar system in Washington — and other plans have been scrapped.
The Brooklyn-to-Queens streetcar, which is expected to cost about $2.5 billion, and the Hudson-Bergen line address the same transit reality: Not everyone needs to travel to Manhattan.
The Hudson-Bergen Light Rail shows how a system like this can pay off, said Harris Schechtman, the national transit director for Sam Schwartz Engineering, who worked on a feasibility study for the city’s streetcar system.
“Those who have any questions need to look across the river,” Mr. Schechtman said, citing the line’s popularity.
The New Jersey system cost about $2.2 billion and encountered plenty of obstacles along the way, stirring up opposition from some residents who worried it would harm their neighborhood’s appeal and produce unwanted noise.
The Brooklyn Queens Connector is likely to face similar resistance over the route and lost parking, said Mayor Steven M. Fulop of Jersey City.
“There was tremendous pushback from the community,” Mr. Fulop said of early hostility to the light rail’s route along Essex Street in Jersey City. “Today, I think the residents there would tell you it was a huge success.”
So far, criticism of Mr. de Blasio’s streetcar plan has focused on whether the idea was prompted by developers, not public demand, and whether it is the best use of time and money among the region’s many transit needs.
In New Jersey, Mr. Fulop and other leaders have called for the light rail to expand north, but officials have not been able to secure federal and state funding, he said. While it was originally supposed to run to Ridgefield, in Bergen County, it currently ends at Tonnelle Avenue in Hudson County.
The feasibility study for the Brooklyn-Queens streetcar route, which was paid for by a group that includes real estate interests, recommended what amounted to a hybrid streetcar and light-rail system.
A Hudson-Bergen Light Rail train crossing Marin Boulevard in Jersey City. Credit Bryan Anselm for The New York Times
Light rail generally has clear separation from streets and longer distances between stops, while streetcars fit in more seamlessly with city traffic. The plan under consideration calls for a streetcar with light-rail features, including more space between stations and a dedicated lane when possible. But the streetcar would move at slower speeds than light rail, at an average of 11.3 miles per hour, according to the mayor’s office.
Hudson-Bergen Light Rail trains can travel at 25 m.p.h. in sections where it merges with traffic and up to 60 m.p.h. in areas where it has an exclusive right of way. In an example of problems that can arise when trains and cars mix, a car backed out of a parking space in Jersey City last week and hit a light-rail vehicle, causing delays along the line. Collisions between trains and cars have raised concerns in other cities, like Houston and Salt Lake City.
[...]
So the Sheppard West Extension...this has been proposed, but we'll more likely see Finch West LRT connect to Yonge-Finch (or Yonge-Sheppard) rather than Sheppard extension.How possible would it be to break YUS into branches before Downsview and running the Eastern Branch down Sheppard? Such a small gap to close and doing it by way of YUS should be plausible with all the capacity on the Spadina Leg.
"plausible"? Not fiscally. The cost entailed would show vastly more result in other places, like under Queen.How possible would it be to break YUS into branches before Downsview and running the Eastern Branch down Sheppard? Such a small gap to close and doing it by way of YUS should be plausible with all the capacity on the Spadina Leg.
I don't remember the exact math that I described earlier, but it went something like this.How possible would it be to break YUS into branches before Downsview and running the Eastern Branch down Sheppard? Such a small gap to close and doing it by way of YUS should be plausible with all the capacity on the Spadina Leg.