Quote:
Originally Posted by Reecemartin
Livable Downtowns should discourage car use, it amazes me how afraid the people on this forum are of inconveniencing car users.
Look at Toronto with the King Street Pilot and Vancouver with Granville, I can get across King incredibly fast right now on an AT GRADE streetcar and it doesn't even have dedicated lanes! When the focus of building Central Business Districts stops being making it easy for people to drive around and refocuses on improving walkability cycling and transit you see the true benefits. Its also not like the Valley Line is going to impact Jasper Ave. in Edmonton so really I think people are losing it over nothing.
Part of building good downtowns and generally part of building good transit that doesn't cost a fortune (BRT, LRT) is learning how to give these modes the edge so that they can travel faster than cars and so that cars don't slow them down. Things like dedicated lanes, Queue Jumps, and priority signals.
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I don't give a shit about car drivers. I don't own a car. I have never driven a car in my entire life. I am talking about the capacity of the transit system, not just the LRTs but the pedestrian activity to the LRT stations and the buses connecting to them and the drivers parking and riding.
King Street in Toronto is just one of 6 east-west arterial corridors from Queen to Front. That's an average distance of 100m between each of them. You're not going do give the King Street treatment to any major corridor in Edmonton.
There's a major difference between having a streetcar as a secondary line (King, Granville) and building it as the main transit line of an entire metropolitan area. The Yonge and Bloor streetcars were replaced for good reason. I don't think the subways reduced the walkability of Yonge and Bloor and promoted car use. Demonizing grade separated transit as pro-car thing is just ridiculous.
Grade separation or building rail has nothing to do enouraging people to walk and use transit. To go from regular bus to BRT to LRT to subway is all about increasing capacity, nothing more or less. Ottawa has better transit ridership than Calgary. Ottawa is building LRT because it has too many riders, not because of lack of riders.
That's the problem with a lot of cities in the US. They build at-grade LRTs when they should be building BRT. In Canada it's the opposite problem, cities building at-grade LRT when they should be building grade-separated LRT or subway. Eglinton Crosstown is probably the worst example. Subway sections mixed with at-grade sections. Subway trains and riders onto the street.
At-grade LRT makes sense for Hurontario. Unlike Eglinton it doesn't serve Old Toronto, it doesn't touch the Toronto border, it won't act as relief for the Bloor-Danforth line. 2-car trains on day one, not 4-car trains like Edmonton now. At grade LRT makes sense because it is in Mississauga, not Toronto or Edmonton.