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Originally Posted by Aylmer
There's no bus loop or waiting facilities to accommodate it as a transfer point, or even really much bus traffic to the location at all (most buses converge on Blair). And for the bus passengers who may still use the station, it's not an enviable environment for a wait of any length.
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I don't always see the bus loop as a good solution. Often times, is much more efficient to drop off passengers at the door of the rapid transit (RT) station, when the RT has entrances on both sides of the street, like Montreal and Jeanne d'Arc which will be used as secondary transfer stations. I wish they would have kept Lincoln Fields under Carling for that configuration in order to make those transfers more efficient.
As for the environment, I feel like Montreal's bus stops will be superior in protecting passengers from increment weather since it will be fully covered, compared to the very open environments at Blair or Hurdman, where only a few bus shelters are available for thousands of commuters per hour.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Truenorth00
Maybe because I grew up in Toronto using the Scarborough RT, I don't see some of this as a huge deal. I see this Montreal Rd station a lot like McCowan or Midland station in Toronto. Buses won't be terminating here. They'll simply be dropping off riders en route. So no huge bus loop is needed.
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Is Montreal an efficient secondary transfer? It's situated at the edge of the inner-Greenbelt, so could we have a bus route continue east? Very few, if any, people would travel between Beacon Hill and points along St-Joseph in Orleans. Maybe we could have a Blackburn-Blair route going thorough Montreal? I feel like it would only be efficient if Montreal serves as a terminus stations for bus routes coming from Beacon Hill or Blackburn, which would make a bus loop more efficient in this case.
Quote:
Originally Posted by wave46
Future-proof it, sure, but making a better aligned tunnel section in the western segment (following Carling) might've been a better use of money.
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Carling vs Scott-Richmond, my preference was always Scott-Richmond for several reasons. The Richmond corridor has more density today and similar TOD potential. Though Carling has two hospitals along its route (one of which is moving to Trillium), Scott-Richmond has a few destinations such as Westboro and Wellington West. And finally, the route to Carling would have been complicated, requiring 90 degree turns or mass expropriation and the severing of the Tunney's stretch. Scott-Richmond is much more efficient since the RoW is straighter and already exists (Scott Street trench and Byron Tramway Park for the tunnel).
I do agree that Carling should eventually be served by rapid transit. Thanks to its wide RoW, we have plenty of rom to integrate a transit solution.