TJ O'Pootertoot
Senior Member
Yeah. I agree with everyone above who sees this article as much ado about nothing. The route alignment info has been public forever and they selected the cheapest option, which made sense in the context of the directive being to get within the funding envelope. Two aboveground stations is a lot cheaper than doing underground. This is old hat and an obvious excuse for the re-alignment, if not the weird turns to get around the cemetery.
The developers were already there and already had a subway station at the west end. (The final station barely moved so no gain there for the DeGasperis folks.) I guess central location is better but it is also more logical and desirable for planning the site so I don't see anything nefarious there. We don't want more density at station sites?
Sure, the scale of the extra density is problematic on its own terms but that has to do with IO getting involved and not the subway route, per se. In theory, they could have made the same deal even with the station at Long bridge and, as I just said, the alignment shift didn't change anything at High Tech. So... Shrug.
The developers were already there and already had a subway station at the west end. (The final station barely moved so no gain there for the DeGasperis folks.) I guess central location is better but it is also more logical and desirable for planning the site so I don't see anything nefarious there. We don't want more density at station sites?
Sure, the scale of the extra density is problematic on its own terms but that has to do with IO getting involved and not the subway route, per se. In theory, they could have made the same deal even with the station at Long bridge and, as I just said, the alignment shift didn't change anything at High Tech. So... Shrug.