darwink
Senior Member
there were funds to design the connection to the station in inglewood as BRT, no idea the status of that.How is the purple line meant to integrate?
there were funds to design the connection to the station in inglewood as BRT, no idea the status of that.How is the purple line meant to integrate?
RouteAhead documents provide more details about costs and possible ridership increases:Thinking past this... How is the purple line meant to integrate? Is it meant to join the Green Line at Crossroads? From day 1 I think the Purple Line ridership with be huge even just from where the BRT runs today.
I think this is referring to the Max Purple busway, which was designed to eventually accommodate LRT.Is the purple line the airport spur line?
And it looks even worse as the original projections were ambitious and not based on even line drawings.The difference is that in BC and Ontario the governments are swallowing the increased costs and going with the same project. Here in Calgary we cut back to stay within previous budgets
Why not both?Recently the Surrey-Langley Skytrain extension increased by 50% in cost ($4 to $6 billion). And the Ontario Line new subway in Toronto increased by 43% to $27.2 billion. The Green Line cost escalations are just part of a trend across Canada (and beyond?), not bad management.
I don't think this is true. We did cut back the line to the bare minimum, but we also increased the share the city is paying. Originally we had $4.5 billion set aside, $1.5 billion from each level of government. This new first phase is around $6 billion now.The difference is that in BC and Ontario the governments are swallowing the increased costs and going with the same project. Here in Calgary we cut back to stay within previous budgets
As was the intent by the UCPSo basically the TLDR is that the 2021 provincial review is what messed this entire project up?
There's plenty of blame to go around, but I don't think the claim that the UCP review resulted in a 2-year delay holds up to scrutiny. Calgary Council only approved the new plan in June 2020, the UCP approved it in July 2021. But at that same time, the Green Line board was being setup and the new CEO didn't get hired until August 2021 (the previous managing director left in September 2020). I see no evidence that the Green Line was anywhere ready for construction in 2021 or 2022. As it was, even when the constructor was selected in April 2023, they requested another 16 months for design work.So basically the TLDR is that the 2021 provincial review is what messed this entire project up?
He went on to say the province is willing to contract with an independent third party to supply the province and city with an alternative costed proposal to integrate the Green Line with the Red and Blue Lines running along downtown 7th Avenue and to a future Grand Central Station in the east end entertainment district, to be anchored by a new events centre.