Quote:
Originally Posted by acottawa
To be fair, this isn't being run like a genteel European tram going 20-30 kph down a cobblestone street. It is being used as a high speed commuter train. It will be fully fenced and fully grade separated. Except for the lack of pollution it won't be much more pleasant for neighbours than the transitway.
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As I was specifically referring to the SJAM segment and integrating it into its surroundings, which could have been at grade were it not for NIMBYism and the NCC's curious obsession with ensuring that a handful of visitors arriving by car have an unspoiled view of the landfilled shoreline, there's little that would have made an at-grade LRT comparable to the Transitway buses currently plying the SJAM. With no curves for rail squeal and no need for points/switches, there wouldn't be any of the usual causes of rail noise. Noise would be negligible; residents backing onto it would notice a train going by only because it would momentarily interrupt the din from the cars on the parkway beyond.
The "need" for grade separation everywhere and always has never been rationalized, especially outside the downtown tunnel: it's just been taken as some kind of assumed given. Since LRT doesn't require grade separation as often as BRT for the same passenger capacity, it's all a little suspect. The buses have managed for 30 years with traffic lights at Dominion and Lincoln Fields; I think we could have managed a couple of pedestrian crossings between Dominion and Cleary without elaborate overpasses or tunnels. One of the consequences is that it makes our LRT builds far more pricey than they need to be, thus we get less network.
That segment, and the Richmond-Byron segment to the west, could have been designed more like the LRT systems in Calgary and Edmonton.
Something like this could have been done along the SJAM, with paths running parallel. Note the fencing, which is understated: it's clear that it's fencing, but it's not the neurotic "we can't trust pedestrians" chainlink fencing that prevails in Ottawa:
And a pedestrian crossing:
This is the sort of arrangement that would have been possible for most of the Richmond-Byron segment (other than an underpass at Woodroffe), taking the foreground street to be Byron: