I don't mind Museum at all. It's thematic and it's easy for tourists to find their way around.
It's good in theory, but the implementation was pretty poor. It looks like it's permanently half finished.
I don't mind Museum at all. It's thematic and it's easy for tourists to find their way around.
both made deals with developers.
http://hansardindex.ontla.on.ca/hansardECAT/38-1/L113A-6.htm
"A dozen developers were invited by the Liberal Party to the finance minister's home for an exclusive meeting with the two most powerful politicians in Ontario, and it cost them $10,000 each for that privilege. TVO obtained a letter addressed to you from one of the developers. The letter states that you were making promises to developers at the fundraiser regarding what lands would and would not be included in your greenbelt scheme. You seem incapable of keeping your promises to the public but quite happy to make them and keep them to those who can afford to pay."
"Premier, you have failed to release any scientific basis for the boundaries of your greenbelt and you were caught making promises to developers in return for a $10,000 cheque payable to the Ontario Liberal Party. This is what it looks like: It appears that the going rate is $10,000 a promise and that paying more taxes doesn't guarantee someone that your promises will be kept. It has to be a direct donation to your party."
Of course these are statements by the opposition so they are not 100% proof, and since the Liberals had a majority this issue was swept aside.
I'd have to disagree with that, the B-D tiles are a cohesive design scheme that are worth keeping on their own merits.
If you see the same thing every day for years, the subway stations on your commute for example, you'll get bored with them regardless of what they look like. How often does anyone who regularly commutes on the Spadina line really notice Museum station anymore?
To be clear, I was responding to junctionist's particular comment that the view out the train windows makes people dislike travelling on the Bloor-Danforth line more than other lines. Of course I agree that the B-D stations are often cramped, claustrophobic, and boring places to walk through, and that the Spadina and Sheppard stations are much more pleasant and desirable spaces to be in, and that it's certainly worthwhile for new stations to be beautiful. But once you're on the train itself, are these things actually noticeable anymore? If it's crowded you can barely see out the windows at all, and even when you can see out, you usually just see a small square of the platform wall, which is going to be boring regardless of how beautiful the station building itself is -- and on the new trains, the darkly tinted windows obscure most of the view anyway.
If done artistically - like in Montreal that's fine. Sheppard line just looks like it was done to save money - which is the case.
What do you mean? Sheppard was on budget - slighly under if I remember. The Spadina extension is still on budget. I can't remember if Downsview station was on budget or not, but it was over 20 years ago they started on it, and I don't recall seeing stories about it being over budget.
Do you really think Spadina is on budget?
There's talk that they've underestimated the number of train sets for complete conversion to TR and increase service. However 10 additional trainsets for the extension is more than enough. And there is still plenty of T1 sets available, as there's more than necessary to operate the BD and Sheppard lines.As I recall, they underestimated the number of new train cars they would need, then had to add more for that.
Hard to say. Every major contract except one I've seen awarded has been somewhat to significantly below the engineers estimate - likely because the construction industry was soft during the period the contracts were awarded. The only exception to that was the most recent contract that was awarded - to build York University station, which was slightly over the estimate.And though we don't know yet, it seems pretty likely the long construction delay following last year's accident will put the construction phase well overbudget too.
All the contracts that this would impact are yet to come. Signalling, electrification, etc.Copper wiring has taken a huge jump over the last few years to the point its double or triple the cost today.
I think we are seeing that with the final station that was just awarded - there seemed to be far less bids than the other stations that were awarded earlier. Good timing I guess.If the market was hot, cost at all levels will be higher to the point there will be few company's bidding on this type of work.
You can often be awfully harsh with your comments, Dan. Of course I understand it. I just don't like it. It's "art" - of course people are supposed to have different opinions.
And yet, I actually took the time to re-write it twice because I figured if I didn't you would complain. Would it be better if I sugar-coated it rather than just be matter-of-fact? Maybe the issue isn't on my side of the keyboard....
And yet, I actually took the time to re-write it twice because I figured if I didn't you would complain. Would it be better if I sugar-coated it rather than just be matter-of-fact? Maybe the issue isn't on my side of the keyboard...
In any case, your mocking deference to "repeating tiles" and the misspelled tile certainly makes it appear that you don't understand its point. They are supposed to be the same and yet different. That's what happens when you get 3000 people writing the same thing down, including children who may not yet know how to spell correctly. Your handwriting wouldn't be the same as mine, and I don't know if I would have spelled "Sheppard" correctly when I was 5. There are certainly enough people on this forum and elsewhere who have difficulty with "Sheppard" and "Eglinton".
Dan
Toronto, Ont.