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Originally Posted by acottawa
It takes two minutes for the Rapibus to get from Taché to Montcalm now, so I am not sure how you think it would take 15 seconds to traverse the additional 1.88 km, especially since it has a level crossing at Taché and has to get through several hundred metres of one-way bridges (basically the same as encountering a flagman on a two lane highway - not fast)
A more realistic time would probably be closer to 7-8 minutes.
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I don't think it really takes the full 2 minutes to travel the 850m to Taché. Instead I suspect that is just round off error (bus schedules don't include seconds). Priority could be given to buses at Taché or it could be grade separated. As for the one-way bridges, the schedule could optimized arround the one-way bridges to have buses travel in bursts.
Maybe 3 minutes was a bit optimistic, but I thin your 7-8 minutes is pessimistic. 5 minutes is probably closer to the real time.
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If you add 2-3 minutes to transfer, 2-3 minutes for the confederation line trip then you're looking at 11-14 minutes. So at best it is break even, at worse it takes longer. Meanwhile people coming from other sectors of Gatineau will spend much longer (having to detour 2 km to the west, 2 km down
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So lets say they break even, assuming Lyon (the first station) is their destination and there are no traffic delays on the current route. If their destination is closer to another LRT station, further time would be saved. You are also forgetting that the RendezVous LeBreton development will extend downtown further west, closer to Bayview.
As for those from sectors of Gatineu that don't use the Rapibus line or aren't west of the bridge, they could still use the other bridges to go downtown. The objective is to reduce the number of buses that need to go downtown, not to eliminate them altogether.
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And for Ottawa residents from the west will have to spend a few minutes transferring, about 5 minutes to get to Tache, another 5-6 minutes along Taché instead of a 5-6 minute bus ride and Ottawa residents coming from the east will have to add another 5-6 minutes doubling back again.
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Those from the west will be transferring to the 85 to get to Hull anyway, so there won't be any additional transfers for most. It is a bit further west, but with a busway along the rail line from the bridge to Terrasses de la Chaudière, I can't see it being any worse than a bus over the Chaudière bridge.
As for those in the east, they would still take a local bus from Lyon Station to get to Hull and only use this route if they were wanting to go somewhere else in Gatineau.
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So you want Ottawa to spend tens of millions to make things worse for their own residents, make things worse or the same for Gatineau residents, gobble up a bunch of waterfront (and potential TOD land) with a big bus station.
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It needs to be a joint effort between Ottawa and Gatineau. Until Gatineau transitions to LRT, there is no point putting LRT on the POW bridge as you will be just adding even more transfers and fewer would likely end up using it.
The better option would be to abandon the POW bridge and build a new one in a better location, but that would cost hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars.