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Originally Posted by Multi-modal
How was the Letrim Road Open House, anything interesting about the design?
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I didn't know much about it before I went so I was rather shocked by what I saw.
Leitrim Road will be moved considerably southward from east of Albion Road to midway between River Road and Limebank Road.
Between Bank and the end point west of Limebank it will be 4 laned, but mostly without a centre median.
Depending on whether the portion is urban or rural (Greenbelt), there will either be sidewalks and bike tracks or a MUP.
The plan is long-term and is dependant on the airport needing the current Leitrim Road right of way for a future runway. Post 2031.
Roundabouts are planned at River Road and Bowesville Road.
Because it is being move southward, there will be a better road access to the Leitrim Park n Ride.
Leitrim Road between the Trillium Line and Limebank Road will be abandoned. Also a portion east of Albion near the Industrial Park will be abandoned.
The end point of the Leitrim Road diversion in the west is specifically being designed as a T intersection to connect to a possible new Rideau River bridge crossing to Fallowfield from north of Leitrim Road.
There will be a MUP west of the end point to River Road.
The new Leitrim Road route will bisect the planned employment area in Riverside South. I was surprised that the area south of the airport on airport property is being designated also as an employment area. I always thought that development was precluded because it is at the end of the runway and was a protected 'crash zone'.
There are no plans for bus lanes as it was thought that buses in mixed traffic would work well. I personally have questioned how all our plans for arterial roads and arterial road expansion in suburban areas have paid lip service towards transit even in the long-term. Every plan seems to rely on shuttling transit riders to rail instead of building a much more desirable transit grid with transit improvements on most arterial roads. I also questioned one of the planners concerning our current fad of backing all development away from arterials. The direct impact of this was speeding up traffic (to highway speeds) and making transit meander on residential streets. In other words, transit would not be able to take advantage of the new roads to any significant degree. It was strange because at the same time as we back all development away from these roads, the planners are trying to reduce traffic speed.
In the short-term, there will be improvements to the Bank and Leitrim, Bank and Albion intersections. This has to be a concern considering that traffic congestion is already very bad, so unless the intersection improvements do a lot, we can count on continued worsening congestion for a long, long time.
There will be another study soon to extend and widen Earl Armstrong Road from Limebank to Hawthorne Road.
I took pictures of the main plan but I don't know how to post them here. I expect that they will be posted on the city's website.