sixrings
Senior Member
Also if Sheppard was converted to LRT it would be cheaper to extend west to Downsview or even Weston in comparison to a SUBWAY.
It's now 4 trains to downtown in morning rush, and 5 back in PM rush (departures about every 30 minutes from 4:20 pm to 6:30 pm). And there's always the option of only taking it some days, or one direction. Or when you know the TTC is really messed up somehow.You could make a point for option 4. (Go train) Only problem is that I believe that train only runs twice in the morning and twice at night... That to me isnt frequent enough to be considered a viable option.
They are adding trains. And they've promised to go to all-day service by 2020. (whether that means in 2012 or 2020 remains a mystery - but I expect they will continue to add trains).I havent lived in that area in about 6 years. If things have changed, I wouldnt know.
Agreed ... however if one isn't concerned about the extra fare, it's an option. Personally I do this from Danforth station to save a few minutes and transfers.The whole problem with that is the double fare and lack of fare integration.
It's a tool. It's not perfect ... and it's hard to have local knowledge of every route at every time of day. Google Transit has some strange quirks though ... try taking the GO Train from Oshawa station to Oakville station - it doesn't know that you don't have to change trains at Union, or when you do it's a guaranteed connection ... so it makes you wait an hour at Union, or take a bus:And while Google Transit is nice and all....it's still not better than local knowledge. Quite handy if you are going to a new part of town though.
Lakeshore East Train Service
Train towards Union Station
12:41pm - 1:40pm (59 mins, 9 stops)
Lakeshore West Train Service
Train towards Aldershot GO Station
2:43pm - 3:22pm (39 mins, 6 stops)
Much cheaper as you can run it as surface LRT for part of the route. If I was mayor I'd really push to look at cheaper ways of converting it.Also if Sheppard was converted to LRT it would be cheaper to extend west to Downsview or even Weston in comparison to a SUBWAY.
So how would Commisioner Norm Kelly vote on that? His ward extends approximately from Victoria Park in the wset to the railway tracks half-way between Kennedy and Midland in the east; and from Finch to Ellesmere.As I said before, I'd use the SELRT money to replace the SRT with a subway extension to STC.
Some of the case of extending it west to Downsview, is it allows you to feed trains from Wilson Yard to the Yonge Extension, without having to build a new subway yard on Yonge in Richmond Hill.
Is it really? In 35 years downtown, the area with less vacant land than anywhere, added over 200,000 jobs. Yonge-St Clair, Yonge-Eglinton are also spots that have grown. By contrast areas with plenty of vacant or underused land like SCC, ECC, and East Danforth have had disappointing growth.
Available land matters when density is a negative, e.g. for single family homes. Where density is a neutral to positive factor, such as office towers and condos, availability of land is far less important. There are a million places in Toronto where a developer could have put in 200 units far more cheaply and efficiently than Trump Tower, but there is vastly more demand for units in that part of town. If an area is desirable enough, a shortage of easy to develop land is little hindrance.
You can add all the zoning incentives and transit lines you like, but if an area is not one where people have a strong desire to live and work, it's not going to be very successful.
Are malls such a great trip generator? If they are why doesn't Yorkdale station have vastly more riders than the others along the Spadina line? Or why don't the buses to Sherway have much higher ridership? Suburban malls are fundamentally car oriented developments, and even great transit won't do much to change that. Moreover, traditional malls are becoming somewhat archaic. Today it is big box power centres that people prefer to shop at and developers like to build. STC is still doing fine, but if current trends continue, where will it be in 20 or 30 years?
As to concentration vs. density, I don't really see how it matters. What I feel matters is how many people are within walking distance of a subway station. If a station serves only a single tower with 1000 people surrounded by parking lots or serves 500 houses each with 2 people the total ridership won't be much different, if the demographics match.
I also think you're very wrong that Toronto's pattern is one of concentrated nodes. Outside of downtown it's really quite even. As the numbers posted earlier show there are only about 60,000 workers in the outer nodes, and 700,000 workers outside the core but not in nodes. Residential patterns are similar.