Select Company Escorts

Doug Ford proposes tunneling under the 401 to create an underground freeway to relieve 401 congestion

xmontrealer

Well-known member
May 23, 2005
9,916
7,230
113
Premier Doug Ford is proposing a 55 kilometer tunnel under the existing 401, to extend at least from Mississauga to Scarborough, to be used as a freeway and reduce the above ground 401 congestion.

Cost and time required to build to be studied.

When some reporters and politicians dared to ask why this should turn out better than the over proposed time and budget, and still not working projects such as the Eglinton Crosstown, he replied that he hates their negativity and that "the proof is in the pudding".

Well, if the Eglinton Crosstown is the "pudding" it's way too expensive, pretty nasty tasting, and still not ready to eat...
 

JeanGary Diablo

Well-known member
Aug 5, 2017
1,470
1,892
113
The best way is alleviate traffic problems is to invest in superior passenger rail systems -- and fat chance of that getting done any time soon, no matter which party is leading.

Building more highways and widening existing roads does little to curb traffic problems -- it will work short-term, but in the end, they just result in new sets of traffic problems.

I spent a few years living in England in my 20s. What a treat that was never needing a car and taking the train anywhere I wanted to go.
 

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
74,523
80,891
113
The best way is alleviate traffic problems is to invest in superior passenger rail systems -- and fat chance of that getting done any time soon, no matter which party is leading.

Building more highways and widening existing roads does little to curb traffic problems -- it will work short-term, but in the end, they just result in new sets of traffic problems.

I spent a few years living in England in my 20s. What a treat that was never needing a car and taking the train anywhere I wanted to go.
But more compact, more intensely peopled cities, right?

I lived in London. The closest thing to a burb you ever got was something that sort of looked like Leaside - a main street with a half-mile of residential on either side. London has no wide, multi-lane grid pattern streets. And London has many more subway routes and surface rail routes than any North American city. You could get from Croydon (far south of London) to the Centre of Town in 15 minutes by rail. If you took a car - and nobody ever would - that's an hour along narrow, blocked, winding, 1-lane surface roads from one little London neighbourhood to another.

You could put as many rail and R/T systems in Toronto as you want, you'd never get the coverage that you get with London or Paris - because Toronto is built after 1960 and is mainly burbs, like LA.

Here's what you should do with Toronto. First of all, STOP BUILDING CONDOS DOWNTOWN!!!!!! Downtown is inaccessible to most GTA-ers and is over-dense. Spread development into Richmond Hill, Markham and Vaughan where the road net can handle it.

Then, you actually CAN keep building and widening roads to keep up with population growth.

Second, de-toll the 407. You can void that dumb contract with an act of the legislature. Once that highway is de-tolled, people will use it.

Third, move amenities like the EX into the burbs and build a rail / RT link to them. And put LOTS of parking around the RT / light rail systems.
 

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
74,523
80,891
113
All nonsense! He’s gonna eat up our money and do nothing or probably even if does get started, it ain’t completing for 10 years and he might just die till then
He's not going to do it. It's silly-ass bullshit.

A fucking tunnel?!?!?!?.... Put a couple of extra lanes either way and keep adding.
 

jimidean2011

Well-known member
Sep 1, 2011
1,486
1,220
113
Not a bad idea on the surface, however the cost is insane for trucks. You're talking almost $2 per km + fees

They should have never sold the 407 to begin with, now their hands are tied
Right!?! The solution to the traffic problems is about 20km north of the 401 and it's call the 407. With both highways available traffic would be reasonable. Our politicians are absolutely fucked in the head.
 

NotADcotor

His most imperial galactic atheistic majesty.
Mar 8, 2017
6,879
4,613
113
The solution is Monorail!

Nah, Toronto is not at that level, it's more of a Ogdenville, Brockway, and North Haverbrook thing.
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: tml and HEYHEY

maurice93

Well-known member
Mar 29, 2006
5,902
860
113
Second, de-toll the 407. You can void that dumb contract with an act of the legislature. Once that highway is de-tolled, people will use it.
The 407 contract is pretty iron clad over the term of the lease (I believe its 100 years). It can't be easily voided unfortunately. All the highway operators have to do is meet minimum traffic targets, build extra lines when traffic hits certain levels, and then they are allowed to gouge accordingly.

I suppose the province can buy the 407 operators out of the lease / buy back the highway.. that would cost an astronomical figure.
The 407 contract agreed to by Harris is probably the worse contract (financial and in terms of foresight for municipal needs) ever signed for the citizens of Toronto and Ontario. Also be wary of politicians who push "common sense" as part of their agenda.
 

jimidean2011

Well-known member
Sep 1, 2011
1,486
1,220
113
It can't be easily voided unfortunately
Where there's a will there's a way.

I suppose the province can buy the 407 operators out of the lease / buy back the highway.. that would cost an astronomical figure.
Would it be more expensive than the currently proposed tunnel? :ROFLMAO:
 
  • Like
Reactions: xmontrealer

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
88,500
20,875
113
But more compact, more intensely peopled cities, right?

I lived in London. The closest thing to a burb you ever got was something that sort of looked like Leaside - a main street with a half-mile of residential on either side. London has no wide, multi-lane grid pattern streets. And London has many more subway routes and surface rail routes than any North American city. You could get from Croydon (far south of London) to the Centre of Town in 15 minutes by rail. If you took a car - and nobody ever would - that's an hour along narrow, blocked, winding, 1-lane surface roads from one little London neighbourhood to another.

You could put as many rail and R/T systems in Toronto as you want, you'd never get the coverage that you get with London or Paris - because Toronto is built after 1960 and is mainly burbs, like LA.

Here's what you should do with Toronto. First of all, STOP BUILDING CONDOS DOWNTOWN!!!!!! Downtown is inaccessible to most GTA-ers and is over-dense. Spread development into Richmond Hill, Markham and Vaughan where the road net can handle it.

Then, you actually CAN keep building and widening roads to keep up with population growth.

Second, de-toll the 407. You can void that dumb contract with an act of the legislature. Once that highway is de-tolled, people will use it.

Third, move amenities like the EX into the burbs and build a rail / RT link to them. And put LOTS of parking around the RT / light rail systems.
Hilarious.

You note that you need population density to support subways then argue against it in toronto.
Instead you want condos out in the burbs where there will never be enough density for subways unless you pave over housing developments.
 

xmontrealer

Well-known member
May 23, 2005
9,916
7,230
113
But hey, by the time they might be ready to put the tunnel borers in the ground under the 401, the Metrolinx Eglinton Crosstown might be up and running.

And then Doug could possibly be able convince Phil Verster, the head and coordinator extraordinaire of Metrolinx and the Eglinton project, to oversee the 401 project (if he offers Phil enough money, of course...) :geek:
 

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
74,523
80,891
113
The 407 contract is pretty iron clad over the term of the lease (I believe its 100 years). It can't be easily voided unfortunately. All the highway operators have to do is meet minimum traffic targets, build extra lines when traffic hits certain levels, and then they are allowed to gouge accordingly.

I suppose the province can buy the 407 operators out of the lease / buy back the highway.. that would cost an astronomical figure.
The 407 contract agreed to by Harris is probably the worse contract (financial and in terms of foresight for municipal needs) ever signed for the citizens of Toronto and Ontario. Also be wary of politicians who push "common sense" as part of their agenda.
IIRC contracts can be voided with an act of the legislature. "Will of the People", etc.

It would be interesting to check into that.
 

Mr Deeds

Muff Diver Extraordinaire
Mar 10, 2013
6,244
3,356
113
Here
Looking at from a particularly selfish point of view, anything that Douggy does now won't be finished until long after a lot of us are dead so don't care
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,085
1,889
113
Ghawar
If the emission reduction target of zero emission by 2050 can
be achieved incrementally I don't see highway congestion to be
an issue. Enforcement of a yearly emission reduction like 3% to
4% should reduce traffic to a small fraction of what it is today by
2050 as only the affluent minority can afford EV ownership.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Canada’s plan to reach Net-Zero
The Canadian Net-Zero Emissions Accountability Act, which became law in June 2021, enshrines in legislation Canada’s commitment to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. The Act ensures transparency and accountability as the government works to deliver to its targets. The Act requires public participation and independent advice to guide the Government of Canada’s efforts.


 

Skoob

Well-known member
Jun 1, 2022
5,933
2,897
113
The best way is alleviate traffic problems is to invest in superior passenger rail systems -- and fat chance of that getting done any time soon, no matter which party is leading.

Building more highways and widening existing roads does little to curb traffic problems -- it will work short-term, but in the end, they just result in new sets of traffic problems.

I spent a few years living in England in my 20s. What a treat that was never needing a car and taking the train anywhere I wanted to go.
European cities are comprised differently and shouldn't be compared to Toronto as far as applying similar solutions.
Last time our councilors visited European cities for ideas they came back with bike lanes and fucked up traffic even more.
 
Toronto Escorts