Quote:
Originally Posted by ILoveHalifax
One's life can be improved because they spend 5 minutes less time getting to where they are going. Not really life changing unless one lives a very simple life. One rides a street car rather than a bus? Not such a big deal.
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A century ago it was exciting to go to NYC and ride the subway but that is not much of an attraction today.
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As Someone123 says, it's not a zero-sum situation—we can have a stadium AND an improved transit system.
But as Counterfactual says, even within the large scope of a municipal budget, there are limitations and priorities have to be made. He was suggesting that IF it came down to it, he'd prefer a transit expansion. As would I.
But anyway, a transit system isn't about hopping on a subway for novelty value, or to have streetcars rather than buses (though the former's capacity is much higher). It's about enabling residents and visitors to move through the city with more flexibility, speed and freedom, without a private car. A better transit system will further urbanize the city.
A quick example of two similar Canadian cities, one with a good (well, relatively speaking transit system) and one with a terrible one: Calgary and Edmonton.
In built form, history, and civic culture, they differ very little. Calgary has a large LRT network throughout the urban core and suburbs, and has aggressively expanded it. As a result, ridership is 250,000 a DAY, in a city of only about 1.2 million. That's huge, and I think to a significant degree the way the network hits key attractions throughout town before converging on downtown has helped drive a lot of commercial development in the urban core than would otherwise be the case. And it's definitely kept a lot of cars off the road and helped lower traffic congestion in a city that is otherwise extremely car-centric. I'm not going to say that Calgary has a great downtown, because it really doesn't (I think Halifax's is better, and has LOADS more potential) but it does have a very high percentage of overall employment in the downtown core, which is something we struggle with. This has definitely been facilitated by the LRT system.
Edmonton, however, has a piddly little LRT network (ironically, theirs was first) and it doesn't serve much of the population at all. Correspondingly, its downtown is dramatically under-developed by comparison with Calgary, it has far less pedestrian traffic and retail, and surrounding neighbourhoods are less populated. Technically, it's probably no more low-density than Calgary, but it feels a lot more spread out and anonymously suburban. And if we want to talk about skyscraper development: not a single high-rise building went up in Edmonton (the capital of ALBERTA) between the late 80s and the mid 2000s.
I don't want to draw hasty conclusions, but I'm positive that Calgary's relatively much better transit system has had nothing but positive effects on the city's development, and I'm sure that Edmonton's development would have been more impressive if it had a better system.