Relax, guys. It's not the size of the train that matters, it's those 90-mile-an-hour hips.
Quote:
Originally Posted by giallo
The "widdle" subway line does A LOT of heavy-lifting. The amount of density that has formed around it since its completion should not be ignored. It was built for the future, so dismissing it as "not essential" is missing the point. Sure, it wasn't essential in 2010, but it sure is in 2024.
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Well exactly. Translink builds carrots for development. Little of what's been built since 2010 (probably more like 2006) along the Canada Line would have been built there without it.
If Translink had put those resources somewhere else, like under Broadway, that development would have gone there instead.
It shouldn't be controversial to point out that Translink is more interested in feeding a bawling (and ever-growing) brood of lower-mainland towns than in providing the best transit for Vancouver.
(If any of you sincerely prefer the pastiche of urbanity popping up in your suburbs to supporting actual urbanity in Vancouver, that's fine. I'd rather see all the Surrey and Burquitlam stuff concentrated in a stronger city of Vancouver. But this is a matter of taste. I'm not calling any of you "a prick from maybe the Faroe Islands and the Shetland Islands" so there's no need to call me "a fool from perhaps the largest metros in the world.")
The point is, development always follows infrastructure. There's an element of affirming the consequent or historical presentism in arguing that development built
because of infrastructure makes that infrastructure essential.
Don't get me wrong, I'm in favour of basically any proposed transit infrastructure on the grounds that it will provoke changes in development patterns. I think our transit should be designed to maximize this effect.
This is, in part, why I don't take the Canada Line seriously. It should have stops every 800 m through Vancouver--namely at 16th, 33rd, and 59th. Instead, Richmond is getting an infill stop because it's easier to build towers in parking lots and cheaper to build elevated stations.
Will Vancouver ever get infill stops on the Canada Line? I doubt it for the same reason I doubt the West End will get a fixed transit connection before Delta--Translink's motivations.
If it makes any of you feel better, the u4 line in Berlin also runs baby trains. It's a five-stop pony line built 120 years ago, when Schöneberg, then an independent city, wanted a subway connection to Berlin--like Translink, as a carrot to development.
The u4 is kind of extra sad because they actually built 100 m platforms and one of the stations is even this
fancy Prussian thing. But I'm sure it's very important to the people who live along it. It connects at one end to three other ubahn lines and at the other to the sbahn ring. It's also ideally positioned for extension through a gap in coverage in the city centre. The Autobahn moronically (their second-most-favorite way do things after fascistically) built a road tunnel blocking extension southwards.
I still think the U4 is silly.
The Canada Line is obviously pulling more weight than a five-stop pony line. The thing is, it shouldn't look like a five-stop pony line because it shouldn't have been built
below five-stop pony line standards.