[QUOTE=And people generally don't WANT to take transit for non-commuting trips, not enough freedom or flexibility even in perfect circumstances. That isn't a fault of the development, transit or individual behaviour.[/QUOTE]
I'd disagree with this statement, if the LRT actually goes somewhere I want to (downtown, Chinook, carpool meeting points for trips to the mountains, etc) I am inclined to take it because I live within walking distance of a station. The key is frequency and reliability of service. I'd take the LRT over a bus any day, it's a premium level of service (unfortunately you cannot do that to the airport, for example, so you find friends to drive you, or wait 45 minutes on a balmy Dec night for a very late bus-not necessarily typical, but it has happened and has affected my willingness to take buses). When I have to walk more than 10 minutes, ie Foothills hospital, I start thinking about driving.
While the concurrent cost would be a large burden, longer term the cost of continual LRT work is lower overall costs in constant dollars due to availability of experienced labour, equipment, materials, and scale.
I would think a Centre Street alignment would be safer than empty (of people) park and ride lots which would get built in Nose Creek. It would work really well if done properly and the cost benefit sounds like it would be positive. Stations similar to Lions Park, Sunnyside, and Banff Trail.
With a growing population, the existing south-northeast line doesn’t do enough to satisfy the travel needs of people elsewhere in the city. In response, four new lines are in varying stages of planning; unlike the existing lines, they won’t be built to compete with automobiles in travel time, possible only with few stations and isolated tracks. Rather, these new corridors will feature closely-spaced stations located in street medians. Extensions into the far suburbs, while being considered, aren’t the priority. The system’s future will be one that encourages round-the-clock use of trains in dense neighborhoods, not commutes from sprawling communities at peak hours alone. It’s a paradigm change, and if successful, Edmonton’s new system may prove to be a model for transit planning once again.
Quote from:
http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2009/...modern-light-rail-plans-major-expansion/