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Want an alternative to a 401 tunnel? How about incredibly reliable GO bus service​

From https://spacing.ca/toronto/2025/05/28/want-an-alternative-to-a-401-tunnel-how-about-reliable-go-bus-service/

Highway 401 needs BRT lanes and BRT-grade service sufficient to persuade drivers to leave their cars behind

Giant hairy-chested capital projects have an uncanny ability to commandeer public attention — the latest choice example, of course, is the Big Doug, about which there has and will be much commentary (including from yours truly John Lorinc).

Necessary, on one hand, because this insane scheme deserves as much light as possible to dissuade decision-makers. Yet all the tunnel chatter takes away from the equally critical debate about alternatives that might reduce the horrendous congestion along Highway 401.

The GTA’s traffic problems are the result of years of lazy planning and wrong-headed transit investment. But one particular failing stands out, which is the fact that we’ve built a lot of hub-and-spoke rapid transit in order to bring people into the core, while neglecting to create east-west transit connections to complete the network.

If you have to get across the top of the city, and a great many people do, your transit choices are extremely limited, and made worse by the fact that with each widening of Highway 401 to accommodate the resulting traffic, the congestion becomes that much worse. The problem, then, is how to break this vicious circle, with its destructive feedback loop? Ford’s highway burger, needless to say, won’t solve that problem, but it will bankrupt the province.

Let me propose a solution hiding in plain view. Instead of spending hundreds of billions on a literal traffic sewer, why not resource GO to invest as heavily as possible in its bus network, massively building out its fleet and service levels and then — here’s where the province comes in — creating bus-only lanes on the 401.

Why hiding in plain view? The TTC, for its many flaws, is uniquely skilled at leveraging its bus service to bring transit riders to subway stops. The commission has long been known in transit circles for the close integration of the two modes, which has gone a considerable distance towards attracting and sustaining ridership in low-density post-war suburbs and compensating for decades of under-investment in rapid transit lines within the City of Toronto.

Want to see busy east-west transit corridors in Toronto? Check out the long-haul trunk routes on Eglinton, Lawrence, Finch and Steeles, which are among the TTC’s work horses.

Institutionally, GO is a kind of inverse — heavy and continued capital investment in its rapid transit service, with only the most modest amount of attention paid to its bus operations, which encompass about 750 vehicles and carry something like 18 million riders per year (by way of comparison, the TTC has 2,100 buses that carry over 200 million passengers annually).

The GO bus division’s share of Metrolinx’s total capital budget is a rounding error, and the agency’s effort to transition to e-buses is barely out of the feasibility study phase.

However, demand for GO bus service is growing. Metrolinx reports that the current ridership is now 1.3 million over 2019 boardings and 3.1 million over 2023 boardings, according to an agency spokesperson. Some of those riders rely on the east-west corridors, including those that run along Highway 407 or traverse portions of the 401, mainly west of Yonge Street. Earlier this spring, the Ontario Ministry of Transport announced it will be adding more bus service, new routes and additional stops, although the destinations — an outlet mall, Canada’s Wonderland — suggest this fix isn’t about improving rush hour service.

Here’s my question: besides actually burying hundreds of billions of dollars under the 401, what else could the Ontario government invest in to really take a run at the congestion on the 400-series highways? The low-hanging fruit, which I’ve written about elsewhere, is zero-rating trucks on the 407 so freight haulers, especially those bypassing the city, use that route for free instead of taking the 18-lane hell across the top.

I’d argue that the next step would be for the province to go way beyond the incremental expansion of the GO bus network and focus on creating absolutely irresistible east-west bus service along the 401 and 407 corridors, which involves adding way more buses so there’s essentially no waiting; offering potential riders substantial loss-leader offers to switch; and then carving out dedicated lanes on those highways. By which I mean actually dedicated, as opposed to the phony HOV lanes on the QEW, where two passengers count as high occupancy.

To the field-of-dreams critics, I’d note that Metrolinx/Queen’s Park is spending vast sums on hail Mary rapid transit projects — not the expansion of the GO Train corridors, which are totally justified, but rather the newer LRTs and the subways out into the remote suburbs. Indeed, creating BRT-grade GO bus service (not just the rights-of-way, as on Highway 7 or in Mississauga) would be far less pricey than any of those schemes, much less the Big Doug, and the only distasteful political sacrifice involves hiving off bus-only lanes on the highways.

It’s worth noting that the city’s own bus rapid transit debate — with dedicated lanes proposed for Dufferin and Bathurst in the face of mewling by a handful of retailers who believe they own the street parking spaces — will only pay off if the TTC significantly up its service levels. Then, and only then, will those routes function essentially as surface rapid transit, linking east-west corridors (the Bloor subway/the Crosstown LRT) into a proper network.

We’ve never really tried this approach to congestion-busting anywhere in Greater Toronto. But what we do know is that properly resourced BRT (i.e., both dedicated lanes and lots of buses) works really well in lots of other congested cities. Why? Because those cities’ transit operators have taken the critical time/convenience variable off the table. We haven’t.

Setting aside all of the debates about transit planning, the most important point here is the superlative-defying opportunity cost associated with the Big Doug, which is ball-parked to cost $120 billion, but will surely end up sucking up twice that amount.

Context? The entire Metrolinx capital budget for the next five years is $45.5 billion — a third or a fifth of the projected tunnel spend. GO Transit’s annual operating shortfall is in the vicinity of $1 billion a year. Think about those numbers relative to the ballparked tunnel estimates. Queen’s Park could — could — say to itself, “we’re going to build a BRT network across the top of the city that will be so convenient and so comfortable that a non-trivial share of the driving public will switch,” and they’d still barely graze the amount required to build Ford’s asphalt sandwich.

Two decades of adding lanes to the 401 has only made it more congested, a perverse but entirely predictable outcome. Perhaps it’s time to try the bus instead.
 

Want an alternative to a 401 tunnel? How about incredibly reliable GO bus service​

From https://spacing.ca/toronto/2025/05/28/want-an-alternative-to-a-401-tunnel-how-about-reliable-go-bus-service/

Highway 401 needs BRT lanes and BRT-grade service sufficient to persuade drivers to leave their cars behind
A single vehicle lane can conservatively serve 2,300 vehicles an hour. At an average occupancy of 1.5 people, that's about 3,500 people an hour. At an average GO bus capacity of ~50-70 people, That's about 1 bus a minute.

Do we really think we will be running a GO bus route across Toronto with 1-minute frequencies? And this tunnel is likely to include more than just one vehicle lane at that..

Also, again, this project is unlikely to cost anything close to $120 billion unless MTO goes full crazy on project scope.

The province has also been clear that it will include a transit component of some sort..
 
A single vehicle lane can conservatively serve 2,300 vehicles an hour. At an average occupancy of 1.5 people, that's about 3,500 people an hour. At an average GO bus capacity of ~50-70 people, That's about 1 bus a minute.

Do we really think we will be running a GO bus route across Toronto with 1-minute frequencies? And this tunnel is likely to include more than just one vehicle lane at that..

Also, again, this project is unlikely to cost anything close to $120 billion unless MTO goes full crazy on project scope.

The province has also been clear that it will include a transit component of some sort..
Don't understand why people decide to live in a house 100 kilometres from their work. Find a place closer to work or find a job closer to home. If I will be changing my house (I'm not), I would be finding one that has schools (all my kids are grown up), shops, medical offices, and recreation no more than 15 minutes casual walking distance from my home.

Or locate near a GO train if one must. Instead of a highway tunnel, build a mid-town GO train line.
1748629848480.png

See this thread https://urbantoronto.ca/forum/threads/go-transit-midtown-corridor.27511/
 
Don't understand why people decide to live in a house 100 kilometres from their work. Find a place closer to work or find a job closer to home. If I will be changing my house (I'm not), I would be finding one that has schools (all my kids are grown up), shops, medical offices, and recreation no more than 15 minutes casual walking distance from my home.

Or locate near a GO train if one must. Instead of a highway tunnel, build a mid-town GO train line.
View attachment 655071
See this thread https://urbantoronto.ca/forum/threads/go-transit-midtown-corridor.27511/
There are a million reasons why people don't live close to work. They got a better job in a new location and can't move because of kids, or family, or need to commute to afford an appropriate living space, move for lifestyle reasons, prefer a certain area, want their kids in a certian school district, etc.

People also make trips for far, far, far more reasons than commuting to work. And once at work, many people make trips *for work*. To go see clients, get to job sites, pick up supplies, deliver products.. the list goes on.
 
The idea of BRT along the 401 is a good one but conversely, it would be a lot more difficult than this writer makes it out to be.

This is not just a regular freeway where you can add lanes to for BRT. In fact, even taking one of these lanes and turning it into a bus-only one would be difficult. The problem is not the lanes but rather the stations. The 401 is a VERY wide road so exactly where would these stations be put? There are so many lanes and wide exits at interchanges as well as the express & non-express lanes that the buses would still have to weave in and out of traffic or have traffic merging in and out of their lanes.

You would have interchanges that are in the middle lanes of the 401 but if the stations are at ground level in the middle of the highway then that would require elevators to get to the road above and require at least 2 more lanes to be added to the width of the 401 to accommodate the station. They could use ramps to bring the buses up to street level but that's a lot of construction and would require large stations and would also mean that, due to being in the middle of the freeway, there could be no stations interchanged with subways, LRT, or GO rail.

It can be done and God knows it would be vastly cheaper and less disruptive than this stupid tunnel idea but it would still require a LOT of money, huge disruptions to the 401 itself, and take many years to build. I'm not saying it's necessarily a bad idea but this notion that it would require little more than painting a lane is truly delusional. The BILLIONS this would cost would be far better spent on the Mid-Town GO corridor.
 
Not sure that there is any current discussion re the Ontarios Goverment’s proposed Bill 5, and the sections speaking to ‘Special Economic Zones’. In essence areas or Projects within Ontario that would be exempt from just about any provincial regulation or requirement that cabinet chooses to exempt the zone or project from - all in the guise of reducing red tape….? Anyways, apparently Ford is mulling over the idea of making his 401 tunnel project such a special economic zone.which is one thing. But could he perhaps do the same for GO 2.0?
 
Full 401 auto tunnel is a bad idea. No objections to adding tunnels in a few pinch points, but an auto tunnel across all of GTA cannot be cost-effective.

That said, GO buses alone will not solve the problem. There are issues with capacity, and issues with connections to local transit (hard to built a GO bus stop at every north-south street that crosses the 401). Even if the buses could stop at every crossing arterial, that would reduce the speed and reduce the appeal of service for those who travel longer distances.

I would look at a rail-based solution, and preferably a solution that integrates the existing Sheppard subway. Sheppard line has a very good connection to Yonge subway; that will be difficult to achieve with a line that stays entirely in the 401 corridor, because the 401 crosses Yonge half-way between 2 Yonge stations.

One option is to extend Sheppard subway in the 401 corridor, to reduce the need of tunneling.

If the full-fledged subway extension is too costly even at the surface, then another option is two lighter rail lines connecting to both termini of the Sheppard subway. For example, Sheppard subway stretches from McCowan to Allen Road. Two lighter rail lines continue east and west from those two hubs, utilizing the 401 corridor.
 
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The idea of BRT along the 401 is a good one but conversely, it would be a lot more difficult than this writer makes it out to be.

This is not just a regular freeway where you can add lanes to for BRT. In fact, even taking one of these lanes and turning it into a bus-only one would be difficult. The problem is not the lanes but rather the stations. The 401 is a VERY wide road so exactly where would these stations be put? There are so many lanes and wide exits at interchanges as well as the express & non-express lanes that the buses would still have to weave in and out of traffic or have traffic merging in and out of their lanes.

You would have interchanges that are in the middle lanes of the 401 but if the stations are at ground level in the middle of the highway then that would require elevators to get to the road above and require at least 2 more lanes to be added to the width of the 401 to accommodate the station. They could use ramps to bring the buses up to street level but that's a lot of construction and would require large stations and would also mean that, due to being in the middle of the freeway, there could be no stations interchanged with subways, LRT, or GO rail.

It can be done and God knows it would be vastly cheaper and less disruptive than this stupid tunnel idea but it would still require a LOT of money, huge disruptions to the 401 itself, and take many years to build. I'm not saying it's necessarily a bad idea but this notion that it would require little more than painting a lane is truly delusional. The BILLIONS this would cost would be far better spent on the Mid-Town GO corridor.
Build a Skytrain like service over the 401median with stations at every major street, which is about 2km apart.Imagine sitting in traffic as one flies by.. You would dream of Ford's tunnel. "If only he built a 10 lane tunnel, I'd be home sooner...."
 
Build a Skytrain like service over the 401median with stations at every major street, which is about 2km apart.Imagine sitting in traffic as one flies by.. You would dream of Ford's tunnel. "If only he built a 10 lane tunnel, I'd be home sooner...."
What median? The 'median' is the width of the concrete barrier. If you eliminate the adjacent shoulders, you have about 6.5 metres.
 
Build a Skytrain like service over the 401median with stations at every major street, which is about 2km apart.Imagine sitting in traffic as one flies by.. You would dream of Ford's tunnel. "If only he built a 10 lane tunnel, I'd be home sooner...."
Why does it need to be on top of the 401?
 
Why does it need to be on top of the 401?
Why not? I mean, yes it could be anywhere, but it is kind of like having to show people what life could be like for them if they could get out of their car. Kind of like when a GO train flies by along the Gardiner while you are crawling.
 
Why not? I mean, yes it could be anywhere, but it is kind of like having to show people what life could be like for them if they could get out of their car. Kind of like when a GO train flies by along the Gardiner while you are crawling.
Seems like a bad reason to build a train line somewhere where it is very pedestrian hostile and difficult to build interchanges with other transit modes.
 

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