The next steps are to complete the preliminary design and identify property requirements, and host another round of public consultations around those in the fall. The goal is to submit provincial and federal funding applications in 2020, once all the legwork is done.
Street width...ostensibly. There's some festering sores there, to be certain. And for the regional road 24 route through Cambridge...that's their main drag. horrendous as it seems. ION was destined to be the product of accommodating wildly different demands. My thought looking at that route map half an hour ago was "What has the regional amalgamation wrought?" Cambridge in itself was a forced merge of distinct entities. Oddly much of what was possible for regional services wasn't predicated on full amalgamation.What's the rational for the roundabout route? I can't think of a city that builds a system specifically to bypass downtown
Misses old Cambridge area? The move to King and Shantz Hill in Preston wiith the second alignment would allow access for far more people than the old winding train alignment - plus hitting Sportsworld. There's an alignment change in Galt - but the station locations aren't moved. I'm not seeing what is lost with the second alignment?What a noodley mess the Cambridge portion has become. This is what happens when too many hands get in the pot.
What started as this ...
Which, while actually goes into Sportsworld centre now, an improvement, entirely misses the old cambridge area.
Missing the Freeport Hospital (people have started calling it Grand River - that seems confusing) is unfortunate, that's for sure ... but I only see that the alignment has changed - there was never a stop planned at the hospital, and between the second and third version, the stops seem to be unchanged. If the route is now straighter and shorter, isn't this an improvement?and then to this ..
An even further noodly mess that now misses the Grand River Hospital, goes off to who knows where north of Preston.
The second version looks shorter and straighter than the first. And the third even more so. Doesn't this improve time?^ The irony is that it will take longer to get from downtown Kitchener to Ainslee than the present #200 route.
I don't know what the proposed ION schedule is, but as circuitous as the #200 is/was, it zoomed along the 401 non-stop to get to Cambridge @ Regional #24.The second version looks shorter and straighter than the first. And the third even more so. Doesn't this improve time?
How? The traffic has been horrible there lately during PM rush hour. Though I'm always driving through there, not on the bus - does it have a trick?I don't know what the proposed ION schedule is, but as circuitous as the #200 is/was, it zoomed along the 401 non-stop to get to Cambridge @ Regional #24.
Yeah, timing is everything. Perhaps you haven't noticed that even as you wrote:How? The traffic has been horrible there lately during PM rush hour. Though I'm always driving through there, not on the bus - does it have a trick?
Rush hour is slow almost everywhere.I knew I could get off at Greenwood and catch the first subway train - and I realized it was faster to stay on the 300 - even though it was starting to stop more than it does at 3 AM or 4 AM.
How is the 200 faster than LRT then? You said it was faster - not me!Yeah, timing is everything. Perhaps you haven't noticed that even as you wrote:
Here's what I wrote.How is the 200 faster than LRT then? You said it was faster - not me!
I don't know what the proposed ION schedule is, but as circuitous as the #200 is/was, it zoomed along the 401 non-stop to get to Cambridge @ Regional #24.
It would seem that the #200 would need to be retained for the fastest transit between major centres in the region, and the ION used for local stops.
What you originally wrote was "The irony is that it will take longer to get from downtown Kitchener to Ainslee than the present #200 route."Here's what I wrote.