Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
Keesmat does know better than to think the only important routes deserving of any enhancement are those going to/from downtown. A good, complete transit system needs to be more like a grid than a hub/spoke set up, and a commuter-centric system that assumes everyone is going to/from downtown isn't good enough. Having the highest capacity lines with large catchment areas directing riders to and from the city center certainly helps solve capacity issues since a centralized city will have the highest demand on such routes. But in order for a city to have really good overall transit, a person needs the option to move around the entire city in any direction with reasonable ease. Enhanced, intermediate cost/capacity service can connect other areas of the city so that someone going from say, Victoria Park and Ellesmere to Danforth East could have the option to head directly south on a reasonably fast route rather than choosing between a fast route several km in another direction or a slow, frustrating local bus route.
|
I just don't see Victoria Park being such a big priority if there will be a Pape/Don Mills subway line. I don't see why build a Relief line when it can't draw riders away from neighbouring parallel corridors. Toronto needs to think of the bigger picture, and Toronto needs to start thinking longer term, and that means looking at the Avenues Plan as well.
Yes, Toronto's system is not a hub-and-spoke, it's a grid network. That is why it's confusing that she wants to destroy the grid and truncate existing routes like Jane and Finch West into multiple smaller pieces.
It's sad that even years after the Adam Giambrone left politics, the map he drew still continues to dictate the direction of transit in Toronto. He is apparently such an expert on transit that urban planner Jennifer Keesmaat is reviving Transfer City - Finch West and Jane and Morningside LRTs and all - now with even more for transfers. Just nauseating.
Toronto seriously needs to stop letting politicians be wannabe transit planners. Other cities don't do that. What gets built and where in Toronto needs to be decided based on detailed studies and expert analysis involving many people, not decided entirely based what one politician thinks is the best.