AlvinofDiaspar
Moderator
Cities the size of Toronto need S U B W A Y S. Elevated rail and high frequency commuter trains are basically the same thing as subways because they are high capacity and grade separated. A tram line is not the same thing as a subway. Most tram lines are just like buses with a slightly higher capacity. Maybe they provide enough capacity for a line like Waterfront West. Whenever there is an 18 lane freeway that is the busiest highway in North America and it is basically impassible in rush hour that you need SUBWAYS.
You haven't yet demonstrated how having an 18 lane freeway translate into the need for a subway line - where do the trips originate and where are the destinations? How will building a subway from say STC to Downsview change that without even knowing the commuting patterns? Repeating soundbites like "cities of our size; world class city; etc" isn't making a logical case. I've noticed that few, if any actually bothered to rebutt the matter of projected ridership - other than some vague assurance that somehow if we don't build a subway it will get a) saturated in no time or b) be totally unsuccessful in attracting riders. Really?
ILuvTO:
But the other side of me wonders where we would be today if we applied that same thinking to the Yonge/University/Spadina and Bloor/Danforth lines?
Actually, both the Yonge Line and BD started off as streetcar (!) lines - and were converted into subways as they reached saturation point. Why is that such a logical approach no longer suffice? That we somehow have to jump right into subways?
AoD
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