Quote:
Originally Posted by niwell
The Crosstown is fundamentally different than any of the transit projects undertaken in the cities you have listed. That includes tunneling a relatively short distance under central Ottawa and the tiny station boxes of Vancouver's Canada line. It could be done more quickly, however that would require more money for concurrent construction of various aspects of the project.
Claiming fraud is an extremely weighty claim that I'd expect a professional engineer to be able to back up.
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The Crosstown line is different from the Vancouver skytrain line in that one is value engineered through a tender process and the other is more political.
Canada Line is a private-public partnership. The government went out with an RFP saying we need to run this frequency of trains, this number of passengers, and stations at this points. We don't care about technology, come back to us with a proposal to design, build and operate the solution for the next 20 years. The reason the stations are as small as they are is they don't need to be bigger to handle the volume. There was a requirement to handle some expansion 20 years out so they were designed to be extended once required.
SNC Lavalin (with its partners Hyundai and others) won the bid. That is the reason Canada line has different technology than any of the other lines on the system.