dowlingm
Senior Member
If capacity is the issue then the argument should be to halt the LRT at Kennedy and extend the subway via Danforth Road/McCowan (to minimise the costs involved with turning Kennedy station on an angle and allowing the subway a reasonably gentle east/north direction change without expropriating half of the neighbourhood). It's not like the existing SRT provides much catchment, it's mainly point to point between STC and Kennedy, much of it in turn fed by buses from Malvern etc. which could be redirected to the new subway terminus. That would increase loads on BD but that could in turn be dealt with by getting DRL TBMs moving between downtown and Pape/Danforth and continuing to Eglinton/Don Mills.
The LRT is being built as LRT because it is going to be partially at grade. You use different vehicles for grade separated alignments because they are cheaper, not having to worry about side impact. This was something Ford and his advisors failed to grasp when they wanted Eglinton buried but use the same vehicles.
From an industrial policy point of view the main thing is to get an LRV assembly line going. Those LRVs will go to Kitchener, possibly Ottawa and might have a chance at further orders in Alberta currently being supplied from California. Apart from Vancouver nobody in Canada is likely to commission a new or extended ICTS line if for no other reason than that few other Canadian cities get as little snow as they do, a frequent reason for SRT shutdowns.
The LRT is being built as LRT because it is going to be partially at grade. You use different vehicles for grade separated alignments because they are cheaper, not having to worry about side impact. This was something Ford and his advisors failed to grasp when they wanted Eglinton buried but use the same vehicles.
From an industrial policy point of view the main thing is to get an LRV assembly line going. Those LRVs will go to Kitchener, possibly Ottawa and might have a chance at further orders in Alberta currently being supplied from California. Apart from Vancouver nobody in Canada is likely to commission a new or extended ICTS line if for no other reason than that few other Canadian cities get as little snow as they do, a frequent reason for SRT shutdowns.




