Dan416
Senior Member
Unless a GO station is in York Region, Metrolinx will go as cheap as possible. I too would have liked covered platforms here.
This is going to sound insane but the removal of covered platforms was to leave flexibility for freight movements through Union. Yes, it doesn’t happen any more, nor would it during GO operating hours in the future with the coming increased frequency. One freight railway did try to get MX to allow it during nights within the past two years however (this is second hand info).Unless a GO station is in York Region, Metrolinx will go as cheap as possible. I too would have liked covered platforms here.
It's incase there's a derailment, or some kind of blockage/ protest on the York sub. CN can avoid the York sub by staying on Lakeshore, diverting through Union via platforms 26 or 27, and then make their way up the Barrie line to get to the MAC yard and the Brampton Intermodal facility.This is going to sound insane but the removal of covered platforms was to leave flexibility for freight movements through Union. Yes, it doesn’t happen any more, nor would it during GO operating hours in the future with the coming increased frequency. One freight railway did try to get MX to allow it during nights within the past two years however (this is second hand info).
This could be a bargaining chip for MX.One freight railway did try to get MX to allow it during nights within the past two years however (this is second hand info).
This could be a bargaining chip for MX.
"If you want to shortcut through Union at night, let us run a few more trains on the (Milton/ RH) line during the day."
As with anything Milton-related, I'll believe it when I see it. It's been decades without any major progress.
It's extremely silly how neglected Milton line is for decades. The answer is always that the line is not owned by GO. Well then how do we change that!
$6 billion announced with zero plan or motivation.
Unless a GO station is in York Region, Metrolinx will go as cheap as possible. I too would have liked covered platforms here.
The butt-ugly art on the Union platforms is an example of this.
Australia is doing much better because its location near Asia where it looks at countries near its region such as Singapore, Hong Kong, China and Japan and thus has to build infrastructure at the same level as its regional counterparts.I have to say the approach here does make Toronto feel like a provincial backwater instead of the financial capital of a G7 nation. I guess I've gotten so used to it I don't expect anything better, but seeing Australia do so much better than us is kinda disheartening.
Australia is doing much better because its location near Asia where it looks at countries near its region such as Singapore, Hong Kong, China and Japan and thus has to build infrastructure at the same level as its regional counterparts.
Canada is located in North America which has a transit deficit and it shifted towards the car culture after World War II. As such it builds very utilitarian type of infrastructure which is very monotonous and no one really complains or pushes for inspiration given the risk averse nature of Canadians.
Interesting theory. I would counter that places like Vancouver share a somewhat similar migration pattern as Australia, (Vancouver has a large Hong Kong population) yet outside of the Sky Train, remains quite auto-centric.You make a good point. The effect on the national psyche of Australia when every person travelling outside of the country has at some point transited through HK/Singapore/KL/Tokyo/Osaka/Seoul/Shanghai/Dubai/Doha cannot be underestimated. Australia's middle and political classes are of the world while Canada's remain insular and US-centric.
I'll stop there at risk of going too far off topic of this thread though.
Interesting theory. I would counter that places like Vancouver share a somewhat similar migration pattern as Australia, (Vancouver also has a large Hong Kong population) yet outside of the Sky Train, remains quite auto-centric.