Quote:
Originally Posted by Norman Bates
For the benefit of those who don't remember the original - lost - plan, can someone provide a thumbnail sketch of it?
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Probably the singlemost important image of the as-planned NS LRT is this one depicting how things would operate downtown:
What is (and was) the current bus lane - i.e. the second lane out - would become a
shared BRT and LRT lane. Most of the current bus platforms, which are build-outs of the sidewalk into the erstwhile curb lane, would be pushed back to the sidewalk (as depicted above) and in the blocks that don't have currently have a bus platform they would have placed LRT platforms in the curb lane as build-outs.
This might have all been forgiveable if the general idea was to replace most buses with trains, with only local buses (the #7, #4, etc) on Albert and Slater. But it wasn't: they were only going for a 30% bus reduction and the trains would be limited to 30 m initially (one car long) and 60 m (two cars long) ultimately (compared to the c. 100 m trains we'll be getting with the Confederation Line). Buses would continue to be the major component of the rapid transit system. Very few Ottawans overall, and practically none of the then-existing ridership, would be riding LRT.
Now go back to my first paragraph and think about how those BRT platforms would work: it's crowded as it is with the platforms extended out one lane, but if they were compressed into the sidewalk? We'd have even more platform congestion. Next consider that the LRVs would block all the buses behind them when at a platform. Finally, given the bus queuing we see at BRT platforms (which would only be worsened by the more congested ones of the plan), it's quite likely that bus queues would extend into the shared lane, thus blocking the trains as well. It was a recipe for bus jams.
If all that weren't bad enough, there'd be no easy way to fix it, either. Replacing buses with trains would require longer trains, but the locations of the platforms constrained the effective length to trains two cars long. The only practical way to fix it without a complete rebuild would be to take over the third lane (i.e. on the left side of the train tracks, the one with the green truck in the above image) in the blocks with LRT platforms to build platforms there instead and then get rid of the curbside ones. But you'd then have LRT and its platforms in the middle of the street with lanes on either side, for better or for worse.
The immediately more obvious design - run trains on the left and buses on the right, shown below - was dismissed, apparently due to the whining of the downtown business community losing access (the Capital Hill Hotel (?) comes to mind, their defacto HQ). The idea of running LRT on just one street (with BRT, naturally, on the other) was also dismissed as it would create "complex crossovers" for BRT at one or other end of the corridor. Basically any kind of sane design got rejected due to the problems it would create resulting from trying to accommodate BRT as well, since BRT was planned to keep running as the backbone of the rapid transit network.
Here's a YouTube video of it all downtown:
• Video Link