Quote:
Originally Posted by swimmer_spe
One could argue that Line 1 in Toronto is a failure due to how congested it is. I would argue that the congestion shows that the Transitways were a success. They were so successful that they needed to be built to higher order transit. Just like how Line 1 needs the DRL, the Transitways need the LRT.
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Maybe I am misunderstanding you (?) but Winnipeg definitely does not have congested
transitways. The important bits of it is actually mixed with regular traffic so it is the actual main roads that the buses share with regular traffic, that's congested. So I don't think that we are talking about the same thing? I'm happy to listen to your clarifications

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Quote:
Originally Posted by esquire
I never said that the planning was great. The corridor was first proposed in 1976 if you can believe that. But to call it a failure we'd have to know that the finished product (such as it is) doesn't deliver and I don't know how anyone can conclude that at this stage. It isn't the mode's fault.
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Dude, construction started in 2008 for phase one (and operational in 2012). Construction for phase 2 has now completed in 2020. And what do you have to show for it? 12 years, 11km, and ~$605.3 million later you got:
- A system the still mixes in traffic to get to the U of M after the Stadium Station
- A system that mixes in Winnipeg's busiest streets to get to the U of W and downtown.
- A system that still doesn't connect the two most popular destinations (U of M and downtown) with a grade separated corridor even though construction on this route has been going on for 12 years for ~11km of infrastructure.
- Dedicated regular road infrastructure with an under pass and a few overpasses.
- Sparse TOD (at best) after 8 years in service.
The one saving grace at this point for Winnipeg's
current BRT system would be if the suburban population suddenly uses the park and rides at Seel and Clarence stations as I sincerely think that Winnipeg's current BRT system isn't efficient or convenient enough to draw people out of their cars. And it would have to be a colossal amount of people using the park and rides
regularly.
I'm not trying to shit on Winnipeg but the current model of its BRT is anything but a success story no matter which way you look at it or how long you want to wait and see. I'm trying my best to not be a complete jackass with this post but you already have 8 years of transit data to work with, and you need to start drawing some conclusions.
I just posted in the Winnipeg forums but I do strongly believe that the BRT system can be saved if it has a proper grade-separated connection to Union Station and Portage/Main. But as of right now, it is proper shite for all of the headache that's gone into it.