Quote:
Originally Posted by FarmerHaight
The issue with the Langley Skytrain is that having platform screen doors on an above-ground station means a significantly more expensive station than the alternative. With underground stations you already have ventilation and only need to add some doors to the station entrance to seal it off for climate control. Whereas the above-ground stations need completely different roofs to protect the doors and I would guess the reinforcement of the platform edges would also be more difficult.
Plus, with lesser-used stations (I would argue most of the stations between Broadway and Metrotown, and between Metrotown and New West, in addition to the Langley stations) the overcrowding of platforms is less of a concern so the safety benefit is perhaps reduced compared to busier stations.
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I would say I disagree that it is substantially more expensive, especially relative to the costs of building the stations from scratch and it's certainly less expensive to do it initially, rather than to put it off and do it in the future as a retrofit.
It's not like the above ground stations will be fully enclosed either. The screen doors just need to be on the track side and prevent people (and their stuff) from accessing the tracks either intentionally or unintentionally. This means you could still allow for natural ventilation through the materials that comprise the platform screen doors, in addition to the natural ventilation you'd have between the other two open ends of the above ground platform.
Would agree with retrofits to install them at the busy stations first, however it's not like the only stations people intentionally or unintentionally go on the tracks are the busy ones. It should be a standard system wide.
Here's an example of platform screen doors on a non-underground station (with no ventilation required):