Quote:
Originally Posted by Dengler Avenue
Traffic used to be light, and cars weren't capable of going very fast (like 140 fast)...? It's not a rhetorical question.
Nice video on Autoroute 20 by the way. Since when does it have HOV lane for that short strip? I haven't been on that highway for so long because I usually use 40 to exit Quebec instead. (Funny enough, except for 2 occasions, whenever I leave Montreal, I head towards Ottawa instead of Toronto.)
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That's true, but it's more than that. In the 1950's engineers didn't understand driver behaviour at all. Things like shoulder width, and clear zones, and sight lines play an enormous factor in how much capacity a given highway is.
In the 1950's they also didn't really understand turbulence, caused by things such as weaving and merging. Superhighways were still such a new concept at that time, that they really didn't understand how drivers were going to adapt to the designs of the day.
In Ontario, to their credit, they did learn fairly quickly. The first design assignment for the twelve lane 401 in Toronto was started in 1959. 1959! While flawed by today's standards. The 401 was a marvel of design for it's vintage.