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Originally Posted by thistleclub
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A great collection of articles - some very familiar themes.
A recent fact sheet from Metro Canada states, "Rapid
Transit is a proven tool to attract new development to support
economic growth and to increase the commercial tax base to
relieve the tax burden on homeowners."
^We've certainly heard that before.
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A recommendation to add dedicated transit lanes in lieu of the proposed elevated transit line:
Bus lanes: As an immediate step, opening bus lanes on King,
Main, the Jolley Cut, James, John, Hughson and around Gore
Park would vastly facilitate the movement of H.S.R. vehicles.
Although bus lanes are especially effective in congested core
areas, their provision along the one-way street sections of the
King-Main route would vastly improve transit service along this
important axis.
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Earlier, in 1969, the Ontario government...picked Krauss-Maffei AG,
a West German heavy transportation vehicle company, as having a
system with the most promise for future development.
Unfortunately, in December of 1974, shortly after the province picked
the mag-lev system and had begun preliminary work on the
project, the West German government which had been funding
Krauss-Maffei's research into mag-lev technology, withdrew its support.
I love the reference to West Germany (haven't heard that in a while) and
'mag-lev' - interesting. Krauss-Maffei AG, incidentally, now specialises in
the manufacturing of tanks, artillery and the like.
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There's also a great map in one of the articles that shows the proposed
route - I'd never seen that before. The line was to run from Mohawk and
Upper James north to Fennel where it would move underground popping
out from the escarpment at James. From there it would continue north on
Hughson to the TH&B where it would loop around downtown via Catharine,
King William, McNab, then back to the TH&B. Fascinating.
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Anyway, what I gleaned from these articles is that UTDC
(Urban Transit Development Corporation) wanted to use Hamilton as a
guinea pig/ springboard for its ICTS system (Intermediate Capacity
Transit System). I wonder what effect it would have had on the city.
Would we have embraced it and continued to invest in it like in Vancouver,
for example? Or would it have been an embarrassment and a failure like
Detroit's system? We'll never know.