Streety McCarface
Senior Member
Interesting that the post above yours show the existing transit map with virtually none following a grid - except for Sheppard. Several can be considered close, I suppose. Montreal and Vancouver also don't follow a grid.
There are some discrepancies, yes, but the idea that the SRT LRT replacement and EELRT should loop together or the Sheppard subway and SSE should loop are extremely dumb. With the EELRT, yes, you have to switch the direction of the line because of the geography of Scarborough (Eglinton leads into Kingston Rd, etc), but in general, it runs in a sort of radial manner in which it follows a path to midtown (or downtown if you're transferring at Kennedy). The proposed SSE (and current SRT) do this as well, since the SSE roughly follows Danforth up to Lawrence and SRT being a different line entirely basically follows the rail corridor. Toronto is not designed for transit loops because its most dense areas are along the waterfront (unlike Tokyo for instance, which can be served by a loop line since its downtown is landlocked). Toronto can have crosstown lines (like the Crosstown, a midtown corridor, or a Sheppard line) to bypass the downtown core like "loop" lines in other cities, but loop lines themselves really make no sense in Toronto, especially in Scarborough, where half the population commutes to other areas of the city.




