Hipster Duck
Senior Member
Serving the west and east ends is also of critical importance. The urban west and east ends are dense and full of businesses and institutions and seeing more development, but getting around them is very time-consuming by transit. The system is too reliant on buses and streetcars in these areas. I live in The Junction and getting downtown is important, but I regularly travel to places like Roncesvalles, Parkdale, Trinity-Bellwoods, and King West, and transit can be double or even triple the amount of time compared with cycling and driving. Some armchair planners think that all-day GO service on the Georgetown corridor will be a panacea, but even a regional train every twenty minutes stopping at a limited number of stations en route to Union simply isn't a very useful alternative to local rapid transit.
The problem is that, with only a few exceptions like the 47 Lansdowne, 63 Ossington and 29 Dufferin, most north-south TTC surface routes terminate on the Bloor Danforth subway line, and don't continue either north or south. Someone traveling south on Bathurst from Dupont to College, for example, might be better off walking when the transfer at Bathurst subway station is factored in. In many cases, we don't even need more rapid transit - we just need to reconfigure certain surface routes.