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Originally Posted by Uhuniau
The LRT project is only "urban" to the extent that it moves suburban commuters in and out of the downtown core, and incidentally serves a few additional urban stops along the way. The plan overall is very suburban, and there is still no meaningful plan to improve transit in the urban "transect" or whatever this decade's buzzphrase is.
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Agreed. Urban neighbourhoods are only served because they happen to be on the route. If the City could figure out how to teleport suburbanites to downtown, bypassing the rest of the city, they would.
The lack of service for 40 years between Lincoln Fields and Westboro (Dominion being is Westboro), a fairly dense corridor for the era, is proof that they never cared. I'm kind of shocked they added two stations along that stretch for Stage 2. They did avoid dense and low income Montreal Road in the 80s and again with the O-Train. Heck, we even avoided building a station at Jasmine that would have served high density/low income and tons of City services.
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Originally Posted by Marshsparrow
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Per phil, this is just an idea from the Ottawa Board of Trade, not actual money being invested.
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Originally Posted by DTcrawler
Literally every commuter which is who it's predominantly used by. Sure there is utility for urban residents but only by coincidence. If it was truly built for urban residents it would travel through the most densely-developed corridors instead of taking the fastest and cheapest route to the suburbs like down the median of Hwy 174.
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Yup. The ultimate goal is to serve commuters, and add TOD. Certainly not to serve existing urban residents.
With that, we're getting off topic. This thread should be about the Palladium, not the urban vs suburban conversation.