Quote:
Originally Posted by miketoronto
Tunnels are not the reason transit expands or does not expand. Political will and funding is.
In my opinion, Edmonton did right building a tunnel downtown.
We have got to stop with cheeping out in North America. We want to be like Europe. Well in Europe the LRT's almost always run underground in the downtown areas.
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You may not yet realize this Mike but money is limited. Wait till you live on your own you will realize it.
The political will is always there for large capital projects. They are always vote winners. Transit especially, that is the reason why politicians always show up to new station openings. Whichever politician announces a downtown LRT tunnel in Calgary will likely see his/her approval ratings shoot up instantly. The problem is the funding is not there because the money is limited.
The 1990s was a rough time, the economy dipped into recession and a lot of projects suffered. Not just transit. The Alberta government had to cut a lot of things to balance the books: Education, Healthcare and even road infrastructure suffered. Eastside McKnight Blvd in Calgary was a single lane country road for until the 2003. Calgary still doesn't have a South hospital and for the longest time NE Calgary was served by one fire house. Many new communities constructed during the 1990s still don't have access to schools.
Had Edmonton planners been wiser they would have realized that the money they received was limited and focused on expanding the suburban network first and then focused on a downtown subway afterwards. The city could have built an extensive transit system and built the tunnel much later as the need developed. As a result Edmonton would have had much higher transit ridership and at the same time Edmonton's downtown would not have remained strong and vibrant.
That is what Calgary did and Calgary reaped the benefits. Thanks to the LRT Calgary's downtown remained vibrant and remained the employment centre of the city. Calgary has very high transit ridership, despite the fact the LRT runs at street level in downtown. Edmonton's downtown by contrast is not nearly as vibrant and it is losing jobs to suburban areas.
Once the West LRT is built, Calgary's next project will likely be the downtown LRT tunnel. Thus Calgary will eventually get the downtown LRT tunnel just like Edmonton. But because they differed the expensive project until it was absolutely necessary, Calgary was able to reap considerable benefits for having an extensive LRT system which outweighs the small benefit of having a short LRT tunnel.
Also about your comment about Europe. Yes Europe gets a lot infrastructure but it comes at a
cost. Reality is hitting Europe hard now, while Canada was wise with its money Europe squandered it. Over the next 10 years, Canada will still be okay and continue to see investments in social programs and infrastructure. Europe by contrast will likely spend a decade where that investment will halt.