Quote:
Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
That carrot was also used to sell the Port Mann Bridge, but somehow over the course of design and construction that capability was (quietly) eliminated. That gives me zero faith in this claim for the tunnel replacement.
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Who cares if it has LRT or not. Not every single bridge on the planet is built with LRT or train tracks. Why? Because most of our transit in the region and in the world is done through these things called busses that drive on these things called roads. You'd also never build a bridge anywhere if that were the requirement. Should the new bridge in Kelowna have been built without LRT? What about the twinning of bridges in Prince George? Should that have LRT?
Some people on these forums are being completely unrealistic about this "there should be LRT on bridges." Why? Name 1 road bridge in Metro Vancouver that has LRT on it today even SkyTrain.
I'll save you the trouble... that's a big
none out of 14 major bridges.
I actually think putting LRT on the bridge is a massive waste of time because you have to engineer the bridge differently and you're forcing yourself into a specific type of transit for the future and ultimately deciding you MUST put trains along that route because if you don't it is a "waste of money." Busses serve South Delta and South Surrey well right now along that corridor and the efforts should be made to not improving transit along HWY99 but rather encouraging people South of Fraser to commute towards Surrey Central and along that route.
You also have an average income along HWY99 of 150,000+ combined so most people that live in South Surrey and South Delta wouldn't adventure onto transit in the first place. I've pointed this out a million times. It is no different than building LRT to West Vancouver. Most people in West Vancouver would never jump on a bus or SkyTrain ever. LRT is a complete waste of time and space along HWY99 imo for at least the next 20 years and while it may be a good idea to build the bridge thinking maybe about the future beyond that, I won't lose sleep if it doesn't happen. I'll be well into my 50s when that happens and quite frankly a lot can happen in 20 years. In 20 years cars will probably not pollute anymore getting us off this obsession with them being products of the devil.
Quite frankly the only reason he is saying the "LRT" buzz word is to quiet up detractors that have a the fixation that all road infrastructure must be built with 50% being transit oriented like any other city (read that as none) in the world does that.
I'm actually glad they decided with the current Port Mann not to include LRT because quite frankly they wouldn't have built it in the next 20 years anyway the speed transit gets constructed in this city. 15 years just to get Evergreen for example. And Surrey is still waiting for an extension 20 years later. Even the Broadway run, a stretch almost everyone agrees on that is in absolute need for train transit is already 7 years into the discussion without a single RFP put out to tender.
Unfortunately it seems a lot of people live in fantasy worlds. There is a huge difference between utopia and what reality actually ends up being.