innsertnamehere
Superstar
not saying it will be heavily used, just saying that it will be one of the most heavily used on the extension....
It's pretty clear that all comments were within the context of stations on the extenstion.not saying it will be heavily used, just saying that it will be one of the most heavily used on the extension....
There you have it, ladies and gentlemen.
The 407 station will be either the least used, most used, or somewhere in between!
There you have it, ladies and gentlemen.
The 407 station will be either the least used, most used, or somewhere in between!
I'm not familiar enough with the transitway project to say for sure, but 9000 per hour sounds quite high. Is every 30 second service what is proposed for it's launch?
Maybe. Once the 407 transitway is built out I can see that station being middle of the pack (40,000 users per day) without too much difficulty.
A double-decker feeder bus every 30 seconds (~9000 passengers per hour) and extremely busy as a kiss & ride (several hundred passengers per hour).
Certainly the fewest walkins.
I would assume YRT/VIVA/BTZUM buses too, right?Yep, just lots of forced transfers from GO buses that used to directly serve York U.
My bet is that York U station is the busiest on the extension. Students generally have a much higher transit modal split than most other demographic groups, and York U has a pretty massive student population.
But what's great about York U station though is that the flow into and out of it will be very much a counter-flow. Outbound towards York U in the AM, and southbound in the PM. This will be very different than all other stations on the extension, which will be very southbound AM, northbound PM driven.
York U is what is going to drive a good counter-flow on the Spadina line, ensuring that trains headed both directions will be reasonably full. If it weren't for York U, northbound AM trains on the Spadina extension might as well be deadheading up to Vaughan, because that's about how many riders they'd have on them.
The_Architect: No, they don't. Honestly, considering that UT, Ryerson, York, OCADU, etc students are coming from the entire GTA, a mandatory UPASS for them would have to include all GTA systems, would be exorbitantly expensive, and be infeasible.
My bet is that York U station is the busiest on the extension. Students generally have a much higher transit modal split than most other demographic groups, and York U has a pretty massive student population.
But what's great about York U station though is that the flow into and out of it will be very much a counter-flow. Outbound towards York U in the AM, and southbound in the PM. This will be very different than all other stations on the extension, which will be very southbound AM, northbound PM driven.
York U is what is going to drive a good counter-flow on the Spadina line, ensuring that trains headed both directions will be reasonably full. If it weren't for York U, northbound AM trains on the Spadina extension might as well be deadheading up to Vaughan, because that's about how many riders they'd have on them.
Wrong... at least for the TTC
http://www.ttc.ca/Fares_and_passes/Fare_information/Seniors_students_and_children/Post_Secondary_Students.jsp
Post secondary students get a $22 discount on their monthly pass
That's not a UPASS in the sense of other Ontario universities though and in the context of The_Architect's understanding. At UW and WLU, for both undergrads and grads, the UPASS is mandatory, because it's flash the student card and go. Pay $70 with tuition and you have it for four months, but you can't opt out.
What you've pointed out is NOT a UPASS. The TTC pass is opt-in.