darwink
Senior Member
News: https://calgary.ctvnews.ca/snc-lava...or-calgary-s-green-line-lrt-project-1.6247100
News release: placeholder
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The RFP must have stimulated the local cocaine and prostitution industriesI await Danielle Smith calling it Justin Trudeau’s lrt project now.
Speaking of Shepard, there's an article today in the Herald again questioning the value of the Green Line Stage 1 given its current costs and terminal points with comments from Jim Gray and Neil McKendrick. McKendrick has some harsh words concerning ridership:I like that they put Shepard on it because whose to say where the other end of the line will stop... Haha
McKendrick agrees and adds that not many people will voluntarily get off the Bus Rapid Transit bus they use now — Route 302 — and transfer off of it to ride the rails into downtown.
The City, however, predicts that Phase 1 will serve 65,000 people per day. McKendrick counters those are “pie in the sky” numbers, “not based on any true analysis.”
“That means an additional 48,000 riders per day will start taking the LRT even though the LRT serves no new destinations,” said McKendrick.
“Those ridership projections were developed on the premise that downtown employment-related travel would continue to rise as it had been doing prior to the downturn in 2015,” he explained.
But, if you build it, surely the people will start to use it, especially if they can experience a significant time savings in their commute?
“Not if the line ends at Shepherd,” says McKendrick. The LRT line, he says, is too short to make up for the time lost by transferring.
A Calgary Transit staffer, who said they must remain anonymous for fear of losing their job, agrees. “Nobody in all of Calgary Transit really believes that Phase 1 will attract even one-third of what’s projected — nobody.”
Not something I can back with any sort of statistics, but a lot of people that I know (in general conversation) will consider taking a train but the second you talk about a bus they're hopping in their car. A dedicated transit way would probably fix a lot of that with a reliable schedule and increased frequency, but buses in this city right now have a serious image problem.Speaking of Shepard, there's an article today in the Herald again questioning the value of the Green Line Stage 1 given its current costs and terminal points with comments from Jim Gray and Neil McKendrick. McKendrick has some harsh words concerning ridership:
The article also throws in a statement from supposedly a Calgary Transit staffer:
Corbella: Is the Green Line LRT on the right track? Many say it's past time to pivot on costly rail line
"When you look back when we built the south line, northwest and the northeast lines, the buses that served those corridors were operating nose to tail, jam packed w…calgaryherald.com
People in North America often say that but most of the new LRT lines in the US haven't grown overall transit ridership. In some cases, the cannibalization of bus services (due to needing to pay for the expensive trains) or re-routing them to feed train stations means overall ridership went down even before COVID hit.Not something I can back with any sort of statistics, but a lot of people that I know (in general conversation) will consider taking a train but the second you talk about a bus they're hopping in their car. A dedicated transit way would probably fix a lot of that with a reliable schedule and increased frequency, but buses in this city right now have a serious image problem.
“When you look back when we built the south line, northwest and the northeast lines, the buses that served those corridors were operating nose to tail, jam-packed with people all day long. So the next logical thing to do is to put in LRT, which is a much higher capacity and provides a time advantage,” explains McKendrick.
“That condition doesn’t exist in the southeast. Those buses are some of the poorest ridden services in the city.”
These guys love to beat this drum, every so often someone listens; today that person was Corbella. Best to know your sources (from the article):Speaking of Shepard, there's an article today in the Herald again questioning the value of the Green Line Stage 1 given its current costs and terminal points with comments from Jim Gray and Neil McKendrick. McKendrick has some harsh words concerning ridership:
The article also throws in a statement from supposedly a Calgary Transit staffer:
Corbella: Is the Green Line LRT on the right track? Many say it's past time to pivot on costly rail line
"When you look back when we built the south line, northwest and the northeast lines, the buses that served those corridors were operating nose to tail, jam packed w…calgaryherald.com
Be VERY CAREFUL with this line of thinking. $700 million will seem cheap if it ends up costing $10 billion to make only Eau Claire to Shepard work (just a wild ass guess from me, we have no idea how much until the agreement with the chosen RFP partner is released in about a year I think).Yes, it's not going as far as we'd like south or north, but it was the dragging out of the process that did that. I would argue the green line is by far the most complicated line the city has ever built. It has cost a lot of money, but imagine spending 700M and getting nothing from it.
Yes, it's not going as far as we'd like south or north, but it was the dragging out of the process that did that. I would argue the green line is by far the most complicated line the city has ever built. It has cost a lot of money, but imagine spending 700M and getting nothing from it.
Secondly, I've finally found the person responsible for the current transit system. Hello Neil Mckendrick, I'd like a word about your not so fine work over the past couple decades.