Quote:
Originally Posted by Good Baklava
I see a third crossing as the solution for when all other practical options have been exhausted including bridge replacements, commuter rail, ferries and new highways.
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It sounds like there have been a few somewhat separate yet partially overlapping questions. One is end of life or maintenance costs on the MacKay versus replacement, another is the notion of having a southern crossing, and a third is total bridge capacity.
I think the southern crossing is somewhat problematic because there's no plausible plan for connecting it up with suitable roads on the peninsula side or carrying that through to the mainland.
If replacing the MacKay makes sense then it probably also makes sense to add a couple extra lanes and the active transportation paths to future proof it and get some more value. There is an interesting question of how that northern area could be made friendlier to mixed traffic and mixed uses on both sides.
I'm not sure it makes sense to hold anything up under the assumption that commuter rail will save the day. It would not serve cross-harbour traffic well and it's been contemplated for decades with nothing to show for the many studies that have been done.
There's another interesting question which is whether or not Halifax is losing out somewhat by underdeveloping the southern part of the metro, causing people to travel farther than they otherwise would, and how that could be remedied. I think this is a problem and it affects all of Mainland South, the deep South End, and the area from around Woodside to Eastern Passage. You can see on a map how Dartmouth is roughly semi-circular with a big chunk missing, and the access between the central part of Dartmouth and bridges and the south is poor.