Transportfan
Senior Member
I wonder why the 1 Highway 7 isn't named Highway 7 East. It would be more obvious that it services just east of Yonge.
I wonder why the 1 Highway 7 isn't named Highway 7 East. It would be more obvious that it services just east of Yonge.
Now the individual systems all fall under the heading of YRT, and there are more interconnections between them.
Which is why it should be called Highway 7 East now.
It's reasonable for people to be be confused with North and South because there's not official boundaries for north and south York Region, Bernard Terminal? What's that?It's already been done before.
98 and 99 used to be called Yonge North and Yonge South. Same went for Bayview South and Bayview North.
Apparently it was too confusing as customers took it to mean going Southbound/Northbound etc.
All routes were simplified and NSEW were removed.
I wouldn't mind if Viva Blue, Purple, Orange (maybe Green, Silver, Yellow) were used as the "major" routes where all the "local" YRT routes funnelled into, similar to TTC Subways and LRT.
Well, Viva Purple will no longer go to York U as West of RHC will be replaced with Viva Orange and will go through Bathurst and Centre toward VMC and Hwy 427 on Highway 7 (no longer going to York U, you must take TYSSE or another route) and there will be a branch of Viva Purple that stays on Hwy 7 after Warden (1/2 of buses).The problem is that they're not much faster than the "local" YRT routes. In some cases, the local routes are actually faster since they don't take detours, like Viva does to York University and Enterprise.
Are the Viva Purple North/Eastbound busses suppose to use the rightmost through lane to turn onto the ROW? It shows that on the newsletter.Today I watched from a parking lot at the corner of Keele and Highway 7, to see how VIVA Purple was handling the turns. Not well.
There was at least one articulated bus with its sign stating "YRT Training Bus" running the route both ways. That made for what seemed a very busy Purple route. Perhaps intentionally, at one point an eastbound bus turned from the northbound right turn lane into the public eastbound lanes. If it was in service, then a few people missed their bus! For the rest of the eastbound buses that I spotted, as they approached the intersection, they travelled on the hash-marked area between the right turn lane and the northbound through lanes. They didn't enter the intersection until the traffic light permitted northbound through traffic. Still, they had a very difficult time negotiating the right turn onto the protected ROW because the concrete delta was never designed to permit right turns like that. At one point, I spotted a westbound 77 bus, in the protected ROW, waiting 30 or 40 feet from the stop line to allow an eastbound Purple to complete its right turn.
Westbound Purple faired little better. Their transit priority traffic lights permitted a left turn about five seconds before the rest of the westbound traffic got their green arrow. But the Purples turning left had to end up in the right-most southbound lane ASAP in order to reach the bus stop safely. That proved a hair-raising move because at the same time there would be a long line of eastbound cars trying to negotiate a right turn to go south and they would be cut off by the bus! Lots of honking horns. Guaranteed to be a high frequency accident zone unless the city installs a no right turn on red regulation sign.
I'll be able to check this in the next couple of days. The newsletter is not detailed enough. It does not show all 5 northbound lanes. In order from left to right, they are 1 left-turn lane, 2 through lanes, 1 lane painted with chevrons (hatch marks) indicating that no traffic should drive there, and 1 right turn lane.Are the Viva Purple North/Eastbound busses suppose to use the rightmost through lane to turn onto the ROW? It shows that on the newsletter.
I'll be able to check this in the next couple of days. The newsletter is not detailed enough. It does not show all 5 northbound lanes. In order from left to right, they are 1 left-turn lane, 2 through lanes, 1 lane painted with chevrons (hatch marks) indicating that no traffic should drive there, and 1 right turn lane.
My hunch was that the eastbound busses were driving on the hatch-marked lane but my vantage point wasn't the best. They could also have been on the right-most through lane. Next time I'm there, I'll take proper note and let you know.
To me, it makes sense that they use the hatch-marked lane because that ensures there's no traffic behind the bus that would possibly crash into the bus as the bus unexpectedly slows down before clearing the intersection.
I will never complain about Viva's signal system for the Highway 404 underpass ever again.
I went to Amsterdam where trams are forced to share the track in both directions (similar to Viva's 404 underpass). Only they didn't have signals and drivers just had to rely on their intuition and communicate with other tram drivers.
LOL On my first day, I saw trams get stuck in these areas not once, but twice. Funny watching tram operators swear up a storm once they get stuck and are forced to deboard everyone. I've got pics, will post later lol.
I saw one westbound bus refuse its left-turn transit priority signal and wait for the next cycle, because there were two full-length semi trucks negotiating a right turn from eastbound Hwy 7 to southbound Keele. So much for bus rapid transit.
Not to mention Viva will no longer run to York University, you'll have to transfer at VMC Subway Station. IMO, not very efficient.This is a temporary arrangement until TYSSE opens--this was never supposed to run, actually. If you'd have preferred, the alternative was for the rapidway to sit 100% unused until the end of the year. I prefer this. Purple buses turning southbound there often had to wait several light cycles, not one. Once TYSSE opens, buses won't be turning off the rapidway to regular lanes here, or anywhere else along its length.