Quote:
Originally Posted by Mininari
So who's had a reversal of opinion on this project... I was pretty strongly for it it when it was first announced, but now that we are watching the resource economy tank, and the business case for this bridge / tunnel removal concept getting crushed... as well as all the other controversy surrounding it (tolls, port expansion, deleted emails, expected traffic armageddon at the Vancouver-Richmond Bridges)... is it really a good idea to spend $3.5Billion(!) on this bridge, some widening (that won't help northbound) and a few interchanges? Seems the original plan to add 2 additional tunnel lanes, and rebuild interchanges would be considerably cheaper and effective in conjunction with the supporting highway network.
The Province is also exploring linking the Sunshine Coast to the GVRD via a highway or bridge. If said bridge were to include a rail link, then new deepwater industrial facilities could be developed at Port Melon (another environmental powderkeg, I know), but it would help alleviate the looming battle between Metro Port Vancouver and the ALR. Its no secret there is a shortage of land in the Lower Mainland, so creating new deepwater port opportunities for the future might be more forward thinking than a massive, expensive bridge that permits some port development in the Fraser (with expensive dredging to maintain).
As much as I'd *love* to drive over a 10-lane GMB, I don't think I can support the business case for it anymore, mainly because I think most of it has evaporated. I do like the idea of linking the Sunshine Coast (sorry cottagers) since it opens a wide expanse of something the whole region is thirsty for... developable land.
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There will be no port on the Sunshine coast. The extra sailing time for ships is just not worth it when they can just build more berths at Deltaport. I mean, there IS a port in Squamish with rail and highway access, and it has never attracted interest from the shipping industry. Then logistically the trucking industry would have to deal with the Second Narrows to get anywhere.
So now you are trying to talk your way out of one bridge over the Fraser and are now talking yourself into an even more expensive bridge over Howe Sound AND replacing the second narrows (and widening all of the Upper levels through to past the Cassiar).
And besides, the business case of the GMB doesn't rely directly on the shipping (boats) industry. Its main functions are transporting commuters, bus lines, tourists, and vehicle freight. All those priorities don't hinge on ships going up the Fraser and aren't going to vanish just because the cyclical resource market is at a low point.
Quote:
Originally Posted by WarrenC12
I think several things are important and inter-related:
1. Regional tolling across the Fraser and Burrard Inlet needs to happen ASAP. That will shape demand into reasonable levels to predict future needs.
2. A new crossing is required to replace the GMT (and Patullo). I don't know which one should be a higher priority TBH.
3. New bridges without nearby commuter or Skytrain rail service should have it built in to the plan, this would apply to the GMT.
I don't see anything larger than 8 lanes being required for the GMT replacement, and I think that 6 would do if rail transit was available on Day 1 of the new bridge or shortly after. Something that links to the Canada line and/or uses the same technology.
This bridge as it looks on paper will be a ridiculous boat anchor of debt. The costs will easily exceed $4B when all is said and done.
Whether it needs to be a bridge or a tunnel is up for debate. I'm no engineer, but if a bridge is significantly more expensive to build, then the Port should be helping to pay for that. If there can be tolls for cars going over it, why not for ships going under?
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1. This bridge and the Pattullo will basically result in a regional tolling strategy. The minister has basically hinted at as much: "no regional bridge plan until after these projects" = yeah, probablly after these projects. Even if they don't implement an intentional regional strategy, it will be a defacto strategy: all but one crossing will be tolled.
But I think they will HAVE to put tolling on the AFB after GMB is built. People already skirt the toll on the PMB by using the Pattullo, and on a good day that adds a lot of time to one's travel. Using the AFB or GMT between 99/91 and Oak street have the exact same travel times outside of peak times. If the AFB were clear of traffic (like it is after 7pm), not a single soul would use the GMT that isn't going to Tsawwassen. Having this bridge pretty much forces the region to adopt regional tolling.
2. They'll both get done around the same time. But IMO the traffic in the GMT is worse today than traffic on the Pattullo. The Pattullo might be in rougher shape physically, but the AFB & GMT combo are at the breaking point in terms of capacity.
And it isn't fair for traffic coming from/going to the ferries or unwitting tourists from the border to have to deal with just a single lane of access in the opposite direction during peak times (the counter-flow is a disaster for those NOT travelling in peak direction).
3. I don't know about rail transit over the bridge. With 10 lanes and center HOV lanes (not shoulder running lanes that get interference from mergers/exiters) buses can travel at over 100km/h. The Canada Line would have to make stops through Richmond, resulting in an average speed of half what the bus would do on the freeway. I'm pretty sure commuters on the buses today would hate to see their commute times actually
increase because of a new bridge.
The other problem is, where would the line go? None of the existing bus lines have ridership warranting Skytrain. The 3 buses to White Rock don't combine for 6000 boardings/weekday. Another 6000 travel through Ladner. I don't know if a $2 billion Skytrain with less than 20,000 travelers on day one (who end up with much longer trips) is worth it. And that's if you can figure out 1 route to satisfy all these people who are using routes that have different origins.
If you can cheaply build light rail tracks next to the freeway and buy trains with a high top speed, then we might be onto something. Like the new Alstom Coradia LINT trains they have in Ottawa now; they can hit 140km/h.
But at least if you build a 10 lane bridge now, you can take 2 of those lanes in the future if transit demand does increase (thus decreasing SOV on the bridge). If you only started with fewer lanes, then we are just spending money to basically recreate the problems we have now, without saving that much money. As is, the tunnel is 3 lanes peak direction, and doesn't work.
But right now the origins and destinations of people travelling through the tunnel are so diverse that I don't know if a single line could be everyone's salvation.
If you wanted to tie in South Surrey to the Skytrain network, you could just extend the Expo line down King George at less cost AND send the line past more density and connect riders to more destinations.