rbt
Senior Member
You heard it here first, folks...construction on the Sheppard subway was apparently finished in 1997!
The date the contract was signed is the important one for price setting as the price was fixed for the project.
You heard it here first, folks...construction on the Sheppard subway was apparently finished in 1997!
The date the contract was signed is the important one for price setting as the price was fixed for the project.
That doesn't mean you can go back and add inflation a second time to the cost.
Your being pedantic. You know full well that the the $300-million/km estimates are based on completion in 2015. Sheppard was completed in 2002. I was conservative and used 12 years instead of 13.You heard it here first, folks...construction on the Sheppard subway was apparently finished in 1997!
Your being pedantic. You know full well that the the $300-million/km estimates are based on completion in 2015. Sheppard was completed in 2002. I was conservative and used 12 years instead of 13.
Perhaps if you didn't wag the dog in such obvious ways, people might take you a bit more seriously.
? How many posts of your have I followed up this month? 4? 5? I can't think of one other for over a week. Compare that to the number of posts you've followed up ...You know, it's cute that you're insecure and need to seem "serious" around here, an anonymous internet forum, by being preoccupied with what I post.
Your personal attack is without basis, and factually untrue. I'll point out when people use wrong numbers ... as anyone would when someone is wrong. People have pointed out when my numbers are wrong ... and so they should.All you do is bitch about other people's numbers.
How is using the $2.6 billion cost of the Spadina extension, dividing by the length of 8.7 km, to get $0.3 billion per km a bizarre number?and then you go and use bizarre numbers yourself.
I'm okay with slightly bigger platforms (I think that the Sheppard stations are a bit bigger than needed) and wider tunnels. More entrances, I'm a bit iffy about.Safety codes require wider platforms, wider tunnels, more entrances, and better ventilation. They do not require 26 bay underground bus stations, 30,000 square foot mezzanine levels, and hundreds of metres of underground passageways at each station. Had the original Yonge line stations been built to today's safety standards, they would look almost identical to what you see today. The platforms may be a foot or two wider, there would be an extra staircase at the end of each platform, and there may be a few more grates in the sidewalk for ventilation. Nothing more.
Agreed. Well if you put a subway at about $200-220 mil/km, and elevated and trenched portions (Eglinton, maybe Don Mills, DRL,) at $130-150 mil/km, it should average around there. Over 60 km of subway could be built (if you build it smartly) instead of Transit City. If you include the logical LRT routes (Finch for now,) it could be a great start to expanding our transit system.What the TTC has done or plans to do at stations such as Downsview, Leslie, and the proposed Steeles station on Yonge borders on insanity, and the increased construction costs we see today have very little to do with safety codes. Simply using a 13 foot diameter TBM rather than 11 feet, or adding a few feet to the platform width (or whatever the actual figures may be) is nothing compared to building even one bus station underground.
With a little common sense, the TTC could easily pare tens of millions of dollars from their subway costs per kilometre - and still meet the current code. I believe that $150 million per km is very reasonable in 2009 dollars, which would get us at least 67km for the same budget cost as Transit City.
? How many posts of your have I followed up this month? 4? 5? I can't think of one other for over a week. Compare that to the number of posts you've followed up ...
Your personal attack is without basis, and factually untrue. I'll point out when people use wrong numbers ... as anyone would when someone is wrong. People have pointed out when my numbers are wrong ... and so they should.
You consistently underestimate subway costs, and overestimate LRT costs to advance your completely biased notion that subway is more cost effective than LRT. You belittle and badger those that disagree with you. And when someone nails your ass to the wall, you go for personal attacks.
Your a troll ... be gone with you.
How is using the $2.6 billion cost of the Spadina extension, dividing by the length of 8.7 km, to get $0.3 billion per km a bizarre number?
And if the expense is due to safety restrictions, I don't think there's been one station-related death in the entire TTC, yet most the subway was built before these new safety restrictions came into place. I think they could be cut back just a bit, which would save millions upon millions of dollars when constructing subway.
Agreed but that isn't for the TTC to decide. Province (and feds?) dictate the various building codes which Toronto is required to follow. Construction methodology regulations for safety of the workers also adds significantly to the cost of construction in Ontario.