Quote:
Originally Posted by ue
I don't know if here or the Ottawa sub is the best place for this question, but I was looking at O-Train maps and future plans, and was curious about something. I understand why the Trillium line was chosen where it was, but really, it hits no major nodes beyond Carleton (though the Dows Lake area is now developing decently). Bank Street is a more natural and obvious choice that would bring far more ridership. Is there any sort of plan to have an LRT (or perhaps a streetcar) run down it, perhaps to turn down Sunnyside Ave to meet with Carleton U?
Overall Ottawa's future transit plans are fairly solid, even arguably more so than some other cities, but this, to me, is a glaring oversight. Perhaps also a line that splits off from the Confederation Line and goes down Montreal Rd through Vanier before meeting back up with it in Gloucester and continuing on to Orleans. Another line could go down Somerset from Bayview to uOttawa. Or perhaps down Carling/Glebe across the canal to St Paul University then up to uOttawa. But that's less important than a Bank St line that connects Centretown and Glebe to Downtown and Carleton. That would have the most bang-for-buck in terms of usefulness and increasing ridership, I'd assume.
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The City of Ottawa's near total focus is on suburban expansion of the O-Train called Stage 3. The City is requesting nearly $5B to extend the Confederation Line to Kanata and Barrhaven.
The only semi-urban "rapid" transit plan is for the $100+ east-west Baseline BRT (median BRT, not fully grade separated like the original Transitway segments) between Bayshore (Line 1) and Heron (S/E Transitway), serving Algonquin (Line 1) and Mooney's Bay (Line 2) in between. The City is hoping for the Federal Government to fund it through a relatively low cost shovel ready transit stimulus package.
The City will also be implementing basic bus lanes within the next 2 years down Carling between Lincoln Fields (Line 1) and Bronson, serving Dow's Lake (Line 2) on its way.
Stage 3, the Baseline BRT and Carling bus lanes will tie-up all transit funding for 15-20 years easily.
The City priority after those projects will probably be the Cumberland Transitway, an east-west link a few kilometers south of the Orléans Stage 2 O-Train extension. I expect that project to be promoted to rail and called Stage 4.
The only two other rail related plans are a Carling streetcar (similar to Eglinton Crosstown's surface sections) and possibly extending Line 2 to Gatineau via the Prince of Wales Bridge (what happens after it crosses has never been discussed). I don't see any of these happening for at least 30.
Bank, Rideau and Montreal are designated "Transit Priority" in the City's TMP, but that's worthless. In fact, the already chronically unreliable transit on Montreal Road in Vanier will only get worse with the street rebuild that sees a lane removed, leaving only three lanes. I don't expect anything to happen with these corridors for 50+ years, if ever despite being the densest corridors in the City. Plenty of fantasy discussion on the Ottawa forum however.
Here's the current "Ultimate" Transportation Master Plan. The Kanata extension (red line on the left) would actually go two stations further south to Hazeldean based on the most recent plans.