Richard White
Senior Member
really not a high bar
Well unless you have tens of billions of dollars lying around we can't tear down every station and rebuild it
really not a high bar
Is vitrolite not the tile material they used in the 60s? Or was that for the original 50s stations?
I don't understand why you seem to think they need to have trains by pas warden well they rebuild it to put in elevators. They didn't do that with Victoria park it was fully open with the buses boarding on street with one or two diverted to either Warden or Main street. Honestly, if they can keep Kenedy station running well the crosstown is being built I think they can handle Warden station's bus terminal being rebult.TTC needs to start from the ground up for the existing station to the point the station is out of service for a year or 2, with trains bypassing it.
I don't understand why you seem to think they need to have trains by pas warden well they rebuild it to put in elevators. They didn't do that with Victoria park it was fully open with the buses boarding on street with one or two diverted to either Warden or Main street. Honestly, if they can keep Kenedy station running well the crosstown is being built I think they can handle Warden station's bus terminal being rebult.
In order to make Warden AODA compliant you need 11 elevators (9 for the bus bays, 1 to/from the subway platform and 1 to/from street level). Combine that with the fact that station was built as a terminal and has all the surplus spaces to show for it. You need to keep in mind that there is a massive corridor that runs behind the stores and behind the escalators to the subway platform.
The station is aging, it is overbuilt for its current needs and is in need of repairs (the windows are busted, the station mezzanine leaks and the exterior cladding is slowly being replaced by wood in spots).
That said you really cannot by-pass Warden if you are to demo and rebuild it. The subway tracks are directly above the mezzanine level meaning that any attempt to demolish that area would demolish the subway tracks. You also have a second exit running directly behind the bus bays out to Warden and the main entrance is via the kiss and ride directly beside the bus bays.
In order to demolish Warden Station you would need to turn back at Vic Park.
Plans in the past for Warden Station that I I have seen had a new island bus terminal in the south parking lot with the existing terminal demolished and sold for development.
It can't be impossible to update the subway station part without shutting it down.
I don't think that they plan to keep the current setup for the buss bays at all. They are very likely to be torn down and replaced like the one at Victoria park station was.In order to make Warden AODA compliant you need 11 elevators (9 for the bus bays, 1 to/from the subway platform and 1 to/from street level). Combine that with the fact that station was built as a terminal and has all the surplus spaces to show for it. You need to keep in mind that there is a massive corridor that runs behind the stores and behind the escalators to the subway platform.
The station is aging, it is overbuilt for its current needs and is in need of repairs (the windows are busted, the station mezzanine leaks and the exterior cladding is slowly being replaced by wood in spots).
That said you really cannot by-pass Warden if you are to demo and rebuild it. The subway tracks are directly above the mezzanine level meaning that any attempt to demolish that area would demolish the subway tracks. You also have a second exit running directly behind the bus bays out to Warden and the main entrance is via the kiss and ride directly beside the bus bays.
In order to demolish Warden Station you would need to turn back at Vic Park.
Yup I remember using it too as Victoria park and Main Street station are the ones I use most.Not impossible but not ideal.
I used VP daily when they tore down the bays and that wasn't fun. It was messy and dusty.
I watched them bring down Bay 1 from Albion.. that thing made a hell of a boom.
Beginning Fri., Dec. 4 at 11 p.m., the TTC will be closing the portion of Line 1 between Finch and Sheppard-Yonge stations for tunnel improvements that will accelerate installation of the ATC signal system. The closure will take place in two phases:
That was my understanding as well. May go hand and hand with this shut down, with asbestos being done first/last.I thought I read somewhere that the closure was asbestos related.
That's probably why the TTC announcement above says so. They are also adding on other things best done when there is no service.I thought I read somewhere that the closure was asbestos related.