Quote:
Originally Posted by Nowhere
I know people here love to imagine $10+ billions subways that will never happen, but I'm trying to look at what could be done to improve transit in the core for a more affordable price tag. So here is my imaginary inner city transitway.
This would involve bus lanes in the median of Holly Acres, Carling, King Edward, St. Patrick and Vanier with transit priority at traffic lights, similar to what is planned on Baseline. The Queen Elizabeth Driveway would be converted to a transitway and cars would be removed entirely, expect for the short section west of Lansdowne where some people live on the parkway.
The stretch of Rideau St. beside the Rideau Centre would be converted to a bus-only transit mall. Bus lanes would be added on Laurier and Elgin beside the city hall and the National Arts Centre to link the Queen Elizabeth Driveway and Rideau.
No way this would ever happen politically however, since the amount of space that would be removed from cars would be a political suicide.
Edit. This would make a loop with the future Baseline transitway as well.

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Instead of making the Baseline/Walkley BRT line turn up on St-Laurent, I would extend it to connect with the Brian-Coburn BRT. This would provide redundancy for Orleans and reduce the rush hour traffic on 2 lines for the users who are not heading downtown.
I would put a tram along the Walkley rail line (Green line on your map) (I don't know how much use it currently has). This would service all of the south of the urban city. Then I would make this line turn up on St-Laurent, but not stop at Innes like you show. This would need to extend at least to St-Laurent allowing for transfer with the current LRT.
Now, after these are implemented, the last underserved area on your map would be Vanier, Overbrook, Manor Park, Carson Grove, Beacon Hill area. Essentially everything North of the 417 East of Rideau River. Maybe instead of having a line along Vanier Parkway I would have one follow Montreal road. Vanier Parkway is already hyper busy currently as it is the only alternative to the Nicholas/King Edward corridor to Quebec. BRT on it would just make it worse for everyone.
For a Montreal Alignment we'd just have to decide where it ends:
- Down on St-Laurent to meet the other St-Laurent Line?
- Down Blair to meet current LRT?
- Or further to Montreal Rd/417 Station?
If we invest in a subway for this alignment, I think the potential for High Density redevelopment is very high and would make it worth the investment. This area has lots of low income families and those would pretty much guaranty public transit usage instead of cars for those who can't afford a car.