Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5
Maybe right now is ok, though driving along Kingsway, it really slows to a crawl around Metrotown.
At the rate Metrotown Centre is going, there will be 70 000 people living in area the same size as the West End. That has to have an adverse effect on traffic when the mall blocks off a huge amount of north/south travel. They will have to widen Kingsway and Willingdon to 5 lanes, and have double or even triple left turn lanes. (which I think is physically impossible.
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Sounds more like a problem for people who are driving and passing THROUGH Metrotown rather than who actually live in the area (The 'Downtown Core' area and not the surrounding SFH residential packets, that is).
People who live in Metrotown - assuming they work outside the area like in Downtown Vancouver or other regions - tend not to drive in and out as a daily means of getting around. I mean why would you, when you live within a stone's throw of the second largest Skytrain hub in the non-Downtown area, as well as the most frequented Bus Loop.
Of course, weekends and evening chores that require driving would be problematic, but again, if you live in the area you're more likely to use other routes that are faster with fewer lights (or at least better spread out) - and with no Bus stops - like Imperial and Maywood and even Grange to get back and forth rather than through or on Kingsway itself.
And besides which, even with all these new developments being proposed, with the build-out time it typically takes, it's going to take a while before the Downtown 'core' area will get to the same or similar population density (and concurrent traffic issues) as a West End or even a New West.
Yes, the City will probably be forced to re-asses how some of the traffic routes (like Willingdon) are currently situated to handle increased traffic and they might even make changes in concert with any Translink modifications (like if they add a future Metrotown-Brentwood-Hastings-North Shore expansion line for Skytrain or LRT, for instance)..
Which is why I said this seems more like the equivalent or
'First World problems' for a city to deal with or worry about, over whether there's too many people now (or will be in 40-80 years).
Hopefully, they're planning for it.
P.S. and none of this even factors the mall owners own plans to eventually break up the mall, which if they do carry through with it would conceivably add more north-south arteries (depending on how they do it).
But that's another 80-90 year build-out by their own proposed timeline.