Midtown Urbanist
Superstar
I am skeptical how much of a priority Jane LRT is compared to all the other transit projects in the city. It will be a rather costly LRT.
I am skeptical how much of a priority Jane LRT is compared to all the other transit projects in the city. It will be a rather costly LRT.
so what to do about travel between eglinton and Bloor?Me too. If anything, I'd like to see it be a branch of the Eglinton LRT north of Eglinton, with the portion south of Eglinton dropped. That route could run from Steeles to Kennedy Station or Science Centre Station via Jane and Eglinton.
so what to do about travel between eglinton and Bloor?
Jane is wide enough for 2 tracks and 2 lanes south of Eglinton.It would have to be underground since the road isn't wide enough south of Eglinton
Jane is wide enough for 2 tracks and 2 lanes south of Eglinton.
It's wide than King Street, which is also getting a ROW in this new plan.
And now the Jane LRT also rises from the dead (along with the Waterfront LRT): http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...on-subway-light-rail-service/article28763019/
Transit City lives!
Jane south of St. Clair is mostly 20 metres wide - just like King. You can stick two lanes of traffic and two lanes of tracks.Definitely not south of St. Clair though. It's a 4 lane cross section, like many Old Toronto arterials. King can be turned into a ROW because of the number of parallel E-W arterials to handle the capacity. Jane has no such parallel options.
??? There were multiple plans for Eglinton West int the City release last month - but most were heavy rail (SmartTrack). As far as I know they only provided a single LRT option - and that's the one from the EA - which includes Jane:I laugh that last month the City releases 5 plans for an Eglinton West LRT and 3 of them have no stop at Jane. Now they propose a Jane LRT. The inmates are definitely running the asylum - just say what pops into your head without logical thought.
Jane south of St. Clair is mostly 20 metres wide - just like King. You can stick two lanes of traffic and two lanes of tracks.
What you can't do is stick four lanes of traffic and two lanes of tracks. But nothing stopping you eliminating parking - ala Sherbourne.
By city by-law.Not to sure how you could eliminate street parking by the business around Annette Street
By city by-law.
When I've walked around there in the past, it seems pretty minor. Could add a Green P. Or park on side streets - which many already do.
Change the rules for the sidestreet.Where could you add the Green P? Also, most of the people going into the businesses park on Jane. Parking on the side streets are for the residents.
I am confused. How does the Jane bus from Eglinton to Bloor eliminate transfer at St George and Jane St and just a transfer at Eglinton West? What route does this Jane bus take anyways? I assumed south to Bloor and then off you come and transfer (depending on destination) to Bloor subway, etc.Keep the local bus route. The road is too narrow to put in a ROW, and the ridership isn't worth the expense of tunnelling. For riders destined for downtown, it actually eliminates a transfer, since they don't have to transfer at Jane Station and again at St. George. They just transfer once at Eglinton West.