ADRM
Senior Member
When I lived in NYC I used to take the Roosevelt Island tram fairly frequently and always enjoyed it, though it is beset by the same problems as the Toronto Ferries (long waits and crowded queuing areas). I do think a draw bridge or swing bridge is a critical element feature to add here, and I think there's a very good rationale for it being located in the eastern gap, when you consider the billions spent in making the Portlands a livable place. In the fullness of time, the urbanization of that area is sure to continue southwards beyond its current boundary, and there is federal ownership of some of those areas that would make a bridge of some sort more feasible.
I'm not particularly sympathetic to the view that marine access is required for all boats of all types at all times; the western gap is sufficient for pleasure craft and sailboats (and I say this as an RCYC member who has often ventured out through both gaps), and you could probably engineer the span in such a way so as to allow many of the former to pass underneath. Bridge draw/swings could happen for only essential commercial traffic (i.e. Redpath) that can't fit through the western gap.
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I'm not particularly sympathetic to the view that marine access is required for all boats of all types at all times; the western gap is sufficient for pleasure craft and sailboats (and I say this as an RCYC member who has often ventured out through both gaps), and you could probably engineer the span in such a way so as to allow many of the former to pass underneath. Bridge draw/swings could happen for only essential commercial traffic (i.e. Redpath) that can't fit through the western gap.
source