Quote:
Originally Posted by mersar
And if you go back 5 or 6 years, it was 1 of 11 (Portland opened in 2001, Minneapolis opened in 2004, Vancouver & Seattle in 2009). In my view it should be something to be studied for long range, but none of the existing ones have existed long enough to prove themselves yet. Plus most of the reasoning I keep hearing isn't the passengers who are flying in/out, its the 15,000 employees that they think will all magically switch to using the train.
And in the case of Vancouver, the airport authority footed something like $300M of the construction bill from what I recall. So if anything ever goes ahead, I sure hope that the airport foots some of the bill here as well.
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Yeah. Considering the airport employees is getting closer to the conversation that needs to be had. It's a numbers game, and the numbers are too low at this point. I don't know what the critical number is, but my guess is we might be approaching it in another 10-15 years and after some more airport expansion.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ByeByeBaby
Extremely rare is pushing it, unless we're talking about all airports in the world, regardless of whether their city has light rail or not. Here are the mid sized cities in western North America with light rail: - Vancouver - train to airport
- Seattle - train to airport
- Portland - train to airport
- Minneapolis - train to airport
- Phoenix - people mover to train under construction
- Salt Lake City - train to airport under construction
- Denver - train (EMU) to airport under construction
- Edmonton - rural airport
- Sacramento - rural airport; line under construction planned to reach airport eventually
- San Jose - shuttle bus to LRT
- San Diego - shuttle bus to LRT
So that's 7 out of 11 once current construction completes, with half of the remaining having airports a long way from the city. Not so unusual. And, yes, most of these cities are larger than Calgary, but they're not so much larger, especially from the perspective of the level of LRT infrastructure and ridership.
Part of the problem with airport transit is the cost-benefit definition. I've chosen destinations (especially for quick weekends away) because high quality transit at the airport made it easy for me to get downtown. For instance, I went to Seattle last Labour day weekend, and I wouldn't have if there hadn't been the train to the airport. From the transit agency's point of view, I'm just another $5 fare to be weighed against the cost of construction and operation. But from the point of view of the city as a whole (which is the ultimate source of the money for transit), they got an extra tourist spending hundreds of dollars, with the associated tax revenue. Building LRT to the airport brings in people who may have gone to Edmonton or held their conference in Vancouver, or who may have bypassed the city and gone straight to Banff.
I don't think we need LRT to the airport tomorrow, but it should be in the plans. More to the point, our current system of service is laughable. If you can find it in the middle of a parkade, you can choose between two buses; one provides a slow tour past every industrial building between the terminal and Whitehorn, and the other provides occasional direct service to the middle of a parking lot, where you can catch another bus to somewhere you may want to be. Both have the 30 minute headways today's business traveller demands. I think improved service to the airport (along the lines that CT proposed, assuming decent headways and ideally with an improved station and waiting area) will help quiet some of the demands for airport service.
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Good post, and I don't think that your opinion is that different than mine, and I would guess Freeweed's as well.
Basically I would agree with everything you said, and my main gripes are:
1. That airport LRT service (not improved bus, not people mover, but full-blown LRT to the airport) is being ranked, by more people than can be attributed to statistical noise, ahead of lines to the southeast and north central areas of the city. Mayoral candidate Craig Burrows wanted to build LRT to the airport ahead of southeast LRT, and he's not the only one that has proposed this.
2. That every proposal of LRT to the airport hasn't included any mention of where the airport authority would fit into the funding picture. Vancouver built the Canada Line spur to the airport because the YVR airport authority footed the bill for it. I haven't read into it, but I would bet that is the case for most of the airports in your list. If YYC airport is footing the bill for LRT to the airport, I say break ground on it tomorrow.
I'm all for airport LRT, but with conditions that other lines that are needed much more aren't put aside to build the airport line, and that funding scenarios that involve the airport authority are at the very least explored.
Wholly agree on doing what can be done to improve bus service to the airport now though. The route 57/430 combination is abysmal. It will be nice to finally get that express bus from McKnight-Westwinds in a few months and the BRT to/from downtown sometime next year.