andrewpmk
Senior Member
Since the Richmond Hill GO line only travels down to Union Station....I guess the answer is "Travel everywhere in the GTA that isn't Union Station."
This is the same conceptual problem: The idea that the entire region should be built around people getting to/from the financial district. More destinations=less congestion at a single point.
If I live in Richmond Hill and want to to Eglinton, I wouldn't take the GO train.
If I live in Markham and want to get to Sheppard, I wouldn't take the GO train.
If I live in Thornhill and want to get to Bloor or St. Clair or Wellesley or, indeed, anywhere other than Union Station, I wouldn't take the GO train.
(Oh, and this all works backwards as well, assuming we want to create more jobs in the "suburbs." So, the GO line is useless to go from Yonge/Eg to my shiny office job in Markham etc. etc. Or, hey, the new casino! )
Is there any point at all in upgrading the Richmond Hill line, as the Metrolinx Big Move proposes?
It is a very indirect alignment which avoids pretty much all the high density areas along Don Mills Road, and it is slower than the Yonge Line extension when going to Richmond Hill. Oriole Station is well served by the Sheppard subway. Furthermore the northern end of it has significant freight traffic and can't easily have service increased. The very south end of it is vulnerable to flooding as we found out a few weeks ago.
It probably just makes sense to extend the Yonge line to Major Mackenzie, and build the DRL, and then close the Richmond Hill line. Unlike other GO lines like Lakeshore, Georgetown or Milton where major upgrades make sense, I don't think there is any point in upgrading the Richmond Hill line because it is a poor alignment.