50,000 for a 5km line is actually quite decent. However, I think an extension to STC wouldn't increase that amount greatly. Maybe another 10-15,000?
I wouldn't expand it all the way there right away.
I can see an extension to Vic Park increasing the line by a few thousand/day. My problem would be that many would be park-and-ride - i.e people new to using the TTC. The Yonge line can barely handle any more TTC users.
Eh I think they'll get by. Many of those are going on the yonge line anyway.
But, that's good nonetheless to get people to use transit more. If anything it would put more pressure for doing something about capacity issues.
It is fair. The demand doesn't exist for HRT subways. Look at the most current (2006) density maps for that area. Even around STC the employment/residential density is virtually nil.
But it was so for much of Toronto's system. So, if we used that logic, our system today would be half its size. :/
That is a good point. My go-to for comparing Toronto to worldwide metro systems is Chicago. Identical geography and similar population. Their system consists solely of lines radiating from their core...just like most systems worldwide. No crosstown lines. No feeder lines. All lines leading to their core/CBD. When Eglinton is complete, we'll have two crosstown lines. That is more than enough. We need to deal with the important NW to SE and NE to SW travel patterns.
Make that a big
'cause I know a thing or two about Chicago, considering I lived there for some years.
Chicago is not so close to compare. It's a city which has many small suburbs. They have some 70% of the chicagoland's population. Kinda scary if you think about it, if you ask me. Toronto does not have that situation.
The other thing about Chicago is that it is a system which was for the most part built 100 years ago. It's not a modern transit system. Since ww2 it has not developed like a normal world city would. If anything, the city became a ghetto for the most part. There was very little expansion of the system. In fact there was contraction! *shudder*
Chicago desperately wants to expand its metro system. It simply does not have money to fund anything. Whatever they do expand, it's thanks to big federal grants or because someone secured funding. They're building a station called Morgan right now... it was supposed to have been made almost 20 years ago but it took them 15 years to get funding for it. I mean hey, they built only one line in 40 years. And that's thanks to political dealings for someone supporting reagan for a war. Are we really going to compare Toronto to this disaster called Chicago?
They do have a feeder line... it's the yellow line. They are gonna open a third stop on that stub line, it's about 10 years late.
Oh, remember that washington station on the red line? It was under construction/renovation for like 18 out of 20 years. And then they decided to permanently close it a couple years ago. XD That's Chicago.
Compared to North American standard, yes the ridership is okay. Compared to Toronto standards, not really. The problem is we have bus and streetcar lines with identical ridership: +200,000 using 4 E/W streetcar lines in mixed traffic within a km of one another, Finch E/W carrying almost 100,000, Dufferin, Don Mills etc... Comparatively speaking, Sheppard is nothing special.
A new line branching out from downtown (DRL) is a priority. If it eventually reaches to Sheppard, its benefits would be quantum leaps ahead of a Downsview to STC Sheppard Subway.
Toronto standards are exceptionally high for North American standards. Keep that in mind.
But, we did not use those standards to build most of the subway in Toronto.