$137.5M makeover for Union
http://thestar.ca/news/gta/article/687077
Toronto Transit Commission councillors approved a $137.5 million makeover of the TTC's Union Station presence yesterday, including a second subway platform, expanded entry points to accommodate double the current number of passengers and a brighter look.
Financed by Waterfront Toronto, the renovation is to begin next year, with completion expected in 2014.
At 6.9 metres wide, the Union station platform is among the narrowest in the city's subway system because of structural restrictions of the 1927 station.
The new platforms will be about 10 metres wide and better able to cope with the surge of riders that arrives at rush hours and before and after big events at the Air Canada Centre and Rogers Centre, said TTC chair Adam Giambrone.
The biggest challenge of the project will be keeping the station operational during construction and coordinating work on the platforms with other work going on at Union over the same period.
The project will have to be carefully staged, and in some cases construction will take place in small areas, according to transit officials.
The TTC project is in addition to a $640 million facelift of the main Union Station, slated for completion in 2015, and an expanded streetcar loop, the total cost of which still isn't known.
Subway Platform
Currently, riders boarding the Yonge and University subway lines at Union do so from a single central platform. A second platform will be built to the south, with a direct connection to the underground streetcar station that will accommodate LRT passengers heading to new development along the waterfront.
Escalators and elevators going up to the concourse area will be moved to the south edge of the existing platform from the centre of the platform and will line up with a new art feature wall.
New stairs, with bike channels and non-slip treads, will be built at the east end of both platforms and a new automatic entrance will be built at the Brookfield Place tunnel at the east end of the station.
The Moat
One of the city's less pleasant public places, the moat area used by GO commuters to enter the subway or the PATH system to Toronto's business district will get an expanded – though temporary – entry point via a 37-metre wide staircase. Once the larger Union Station renovation is complete, the moat will be connected to the TTC concourse without stairs.
The canopy that currently covers the pedestrian area will be removed during construction, and a permanent roof will be added in 2014. The city is still pondering whether to move up the timeline on the roof or install a temporary canopy.
subway Concourse
The stairs leading to the centre platform will be moved to the south edge of that platform.
A series of ramps will connect the moat and concourse levels.
The two collector booths will be replaced by three central booths and an accessible gate.
Streetcar loop
Transit commissioners approved $11 million in initial expenses for design and engineering of the streetcar loop that enters Union Station underground from the waterfront line on Queens Quay. The current loop is already operating at capacity, with cars queuing up in the tunnel to board and unload passengers.
The plan would expand the streetcar platforms so that two, or conceivably three, vehicles can be boarding passengers at one time, said Giambrone.
The project will probably begin next year, and "it's going to be designed so it can be expanded," he said.
When the waterfront is fully built out some years from now, 5 per cent of the TTC's ridership will ride those lakeshore routes – more than the Spadina streetcar currently carries, Giambrone said.