Good post, I agree with all or most of this.
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Originally Posted by biguc
As far as Ottawa goes, I actually like that the two lines meet outside of downtown. It's already bolstering a lot of development in the western side of the city, allowing Ottawa to develop a real big-city core, beyond downtown. With time, it should be comparable in expanse and general development pattern--if not intensity--to the core cities of Montreal and Toronto. Vancouver's Broadway subway should have a similar effect in pushing out the boundaries of the city core.
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I agree. I'm not entirely against the existing O-Train routing. It serves downtown, two major malls, the two biggest universities, Tunney's Pasture, the ByWard Market, and the VIA Rail station. It's also likely spurring the development at Dow's Lake. The Confederation Line extension is overall alright. It gives Westboro access... though it would be better if it went down Richmond Rd (same for giving Hintonburg direct access). I'm guessing most who are taking transit and live south of the main street are just taking a bus downtown. Anyways, it also goes to Bayshore and Place d'Orleans.
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But, ue, I agree with you--more transit service should serve the cores of the city. This is why I'm somewhat passionate (as far as these things go) about that tram loop between Ottawa and Hull--it serves the centre of the city agglomeration, and it offers an amazing base from which to build tram lines out through central neighbourhoods, giving better transit service to people who live in existing urban areas.
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Totally agree too. It could be the basis of a sort of streetcar or LRT that has lines that goes down Bank, Elgin, Carling/Glebe, Somerset/Richmond, etc. Although some of these routes could probably benefit from full O-Train service.
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Unfortunately, Canadian cities spent generations painting themselves into the corner by mistaking the slums at the gates for actual city building. Now, they need to get people from a broad area into a very concentrated city. Limiting personal vehicle traffic in the city is important to maintaining quality of life in the city. That means building over-extended suburban rail lines to try to pick off suburban traffic. Once you give the suburbs viable ingress to the city, you could presumably free up road space in the city for better transit. But quick transit to the suburbs is usually accomplished by bypassing city neighbourhoods, and it often comes with a reduction in existing service in those neighbourhoods.
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Yep. Like, if the Confederation Line eastbound to Orleans went via Montreal Road. It'd actually be more direct to Downtown and hit some walkable neighbourhoods, some inner suburbia, and a lot of multi-unit housing, which is all more conducive built environments than the Queensway for building transit ridership. Granted this would bypass uOttawa, the VIA station, St Laurent Centre, and some big box centres (which provide transit service to services that are usually just for automobile drivers as well as creating more demand to redevelop them going forward). Really, both routes should be built as they have merit here.
But really, Canadian cities focusing on trying to get transit to betwixt the core and suburbs to cut down on rush-hour traffic (and you see this as a primary focus in politician speeches regarding new LRT funding, which is one dimensional), just commit to it and build commuter rail. That's in effect what they're doing anyways, but in a half-assed way, where they try and also hit some other spots on the way, but also not too many, as it would make for too much stopping. Reminds me of stroads.
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This is particularly pronounced in Western Canada. The Alberta LRT systems thus far do little for central neighbourhoods. Winnipeg's BRT system is designed to consolidate existing bus routes into concentrated busways to the suburbs--a strategy that has already left her best neighbourhood starved of on-street bus service. Translink is a mother bird feeding a nest of squawking suburbs regurgitated Skytrain, with no plan to connect the city's hulking West End to the metro system.
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Yeah. Edmonton and Calgary's trains don't really go to the core dense neighbourhoods. Edmonton's Boyle-McCauley has the LRT going right through it and not stopping (which reminds me of SF's BART that does this on a far more exaggerated level). Though the new Valley Line will have a stop in Boyle. But Edmonton's Oliver, Westmount, Strathcona, Garneau, Alberta Ave, etc and Calgary's Inglewood, Beltline, Mission, Marda Loop, etc don't have LRT access. Calgary's Bridgeland sort of does, just skirting the southern limits by the river and Memorial Dr. The only one that has true and good direct LRT access in Alberta is Calgary's Kensington.
At least both systems are ok at hitting other major destinations for transit users -- post-secondary institutions and regional malls. This is something American cities often fail at...so it could be worse!
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The best transit is convenient and predictable. The best transit is more transit. In trying to catch up on their transit deficit a lot of well-intentioned planners, enthusiasts, and politicians (who don't know a damn thing about transit) end up fetishizing speed and grade separation in one-size-fits-all solutions, while not committing space available on streets for the most efficient vehicles around.
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Yes, though the opposite problem also persists. In a fetish to create some chic urban walkability, Edmonton's Valley Line uses low floor tech, more stopping, and will be slower (so that there will be zero time savings vs the bus to Mill Woods). This is good and well for the inner, mature neighbourhoods, but this line goes through industrial areas and the sprawling abomination of Mill Woods. This kind of enthusiasm could have been saved for a line down Whyte or 118 Ave.
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There's a lot of low-hanging fruit in existing urban areas to build better transit. Vancouver would be a far more appealing city if it had trams--they can only squeeze so much more water from the stone of crowded B-Lines. Winnipeg was built around trams and has rotted to the core since they removed them. I don't want to construe my entire point as, "Canadian cities should build trams in central areas", but they probably should.
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Absolutely. It's frustrating how the 99 B-Line has persisted for decades as a very crowded bus (carrying the most passengers of any bus line in North America) but lines out to Coquitlam got prioritized. It is, as you say, a low-hanging fruit. Same with a Queen St subway in Toronto. Vancouver should also have some sort of rail (streetcar or light rail, probably not full Skytrain) down Main St, Commercial Dr, 41st Ave, Dunbar/Alma, West 4th, Denman, Davie (seriously how does the West End not have anything beyond buses?), Robson, etc. A Skytrain (at least Canada Line level) should also go down Hastings St until Willingdon in Burnaby, where it can go down and meet up with Metrotown. Connects BCIT, could push Metrotown densification northbound, creates a cross-Burnaby route between the Millennium and Expo lines, and hits walkable neighbourhoods along Hastings.
As for Winnipeg... you echo my thoughts fully. It is amazing how a city that has such a large chunk of its urban fabric clearly designed for streetcars having none of that. Winnipeg Transit is the only transit service in Canada I actively hate. I feel like I could be in Des Moines. Grand main streets like Portage, Main, etc are turned into quasi-highways because the city has neither real freeways nor effective rapid transit. But the old buildings, wide sidewalks, etc show what was. At least with Edmonton or Calgary, a lot of the built form was always more sprawled and suburban, but not Winnipeg. It often makes more sense to bike or just walk if you're in central Winnipeg than rely on nonsensical transit. At least the city has the legacy built form to be more pleasant to walk through for larger stretches than Alberta cities. But yeah, streets like Corydon, Osborne, Sherbrooke/Maryland, Ellice/Sargent, Broadway, Provencher, etc are so obviously designed for streetcars...so just do it.
Don't get me started on the Southwest Transitway.