Welcome Guest!
In order to take advantage of all the great features that Waterloo Region Connected has to offer, including participating in the lively discussions below, you're going to have to register. The good news is that it'll take less than a minute and you can get started enjoying Waterloo Region's best online community right away.
or Create an Account




Thread Rating:
  • 15 Vote(s) - 3.93 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
ION - Waterloo Region's Light Rail Transit
Quote:Maybe some of the station choices will become clearer as they release the plans for the bus network that'll have to be updated for this all to work.
I believe that GRT is going to be routing their buses in spite of the LRT stop placement. From what I've heard (hearsay, mind you) GRT was not really at the table for the stop placement discussion.
Reply


(09-16-2015, 02:56 PM)GtwoK Wrote: With KW Hydro "Relocating the existing pole lines" between Union and Green, does that mean they will be burying the hydro wires? The construction updates claim they are installing "ductwork" starting today. I would imagine that if they were simply moving the poles, it would have been done at the beginning of all the utility work, like it was on Charles and most other sections.

Somewhere around there, closer to Union, if you look closely to a telephone pole on Park, you'll see a sign that says "Circuit Limit" which I believe means that that may be the boundary between Waterloo North Hydro and Kitchener Wilmot Hydro.

(09-21-2015, 11:36 AM)zanate Wrote: And it's a great stop for me, as a member of KW Granite. Smile Though I expect eventually development pressures will eat up that land, it sounds like the Granite club intends to stay there for at least 7 years, maybe more.

The gravel parking lot at Seagram plus the KW Granite club are part of Waterloo Park.  The 2009 Master Plan has a few concepts in mind for that area.  The existing (soon to be smaller) parking lot is envisioned to be an ecological/educational area. The gravel lot (currently leased to UW I believe) will be formal gardens.  The Rink in the Park parking will be retained.  As it was published in 2009, The Waterloo Park Master Plan acknowledged the coming LRT, but could not factor in a final LRT station location and associated pedestrian traffic flow.
Reply
       
Reply
(09-21-2015, 02:05 PM)Markster Wrote:
Quote:... From what I've heard (hearsay, mind you) GRT was not really at the table for the stop placement discussion.

If that is true, it is pretty disappointing. Is ION going to be a seperate entity or will it be under the GRT umbrella? I thought it was all going to be GRT so the coordination of transit would be seamless and we wouldn't be anointing new bureaucratic emperors.
_____________________________________
I used to be the mayor of sim city. I know what I am talking about.
Reply
GRT wasn't (and shouldn't have) been involved in stop placement selection. That should have been (and was, to the best of my knowledge) left up to engineers and planners who have the data and knowledge on where best to place the stops. GRT should (and may) also listen to those same planners for their routing. Yes there should be integration between ion and GRT, but GRT should not dictate where the stops are.
Reply
Why not? Isn't operating a mass transit system for decades in a community worth some credibility? The engineers used an existing industrial rail corridor for the Waterloo section of the LRT I suspect for cost savings and placed stops where they could rather than where they should.
_____________________________________
I used to be the mayor of sim city. I know what I am talking about.
Reply
I like where the R&T stop is, myself, potentially. There's room to make some kind of awesome station like Westminster's new one around Denver ( http://www.ci.westminster.co.us/CityGove...nArea.aspx ), and all the area right around the station being undeveloped on Wes Graham is a good thing as it could be designed around the station. Phillip street is pretty redefinable as well at the moment. If you make Wes Graham connect through to Phillip, and then the new connection on the other side to Laurelwood, then buses on Columbia could turn onto Phillip, connect at the station and head right through Laurelwood to Erbsville road - a useful route and a proper connector at the station.

Lots of possibility to redesign here, and I keep hoping (naively?) something like this is going to happen here.
Reply


(09-21-2015, 07:08 PM)Canard Wrote: GRT wasn't (and shouldn't have) been involved in stop placement selection.  That should have been (and was, to the best of my knowledge) left up to engineers and planners who have the data and knowledge on where best to place the stops.  GRT should (and may) also listen to those same planners for their routing.  Yes there should be integration between ion and GRT, but GRT should not dictate where the stops are.

Talking to GRT would have been useful to figure out how that integration would work, and what tradeoffs a given choice of station would have. My understanding is that those conversations didn't happen.

(09-21-2015, 08:16 PM)Drake Wrote: The engineers used an existing industrial rail corridor for the Waterloo section of the LRT I suspect for cost savings and placed stops where they could rather than where they should.

Cost was a factor for the choice of route, but the stop placement around the universities has nothing to do with cost and everything to do with politics.

That said, ultimately, some amount of politics was needed in order to get enough stakeholders to be willing to support the project for it to happen.
Reply
Do the stop plans not predate the almost-demise of BlackBerry? That's what I figured - that stop was placed there to service the (at the time) growing BlackBerry campus.

Then the Universities did their dance to get the next two stops where they are, BlackBerry runs away to the Northfield Tech Park, and the inertia to get everyone back to the table to do it properly with the changed parameters is too great.
Reply
So based on these drawings:

[Image: bfQzUgv.png]

the portion of Madison Ave S thats SOUTH of Charles should be getting reworked, correct? Anyone have more details on this? Is the one-way ramp being converted into a trail / sidewalk, or is the retaining wall being rebuilt so that the land is flat on top and that there is no access from Charles?
Reply
Curbs and rails in front of GRH.

[Image: 72C9VrD.jpg]

[Image: AbC2Z8u.jpg]
Reply
(09-21-2015, 08:31 PM)notmyfriends Wrote:  If you make Wes Graham connect through to Phillip, and then the new connection on the other side to Laurelwood, then buses on Columbia could turn onto Phillip, connect at the station and head right through Laurelwood to Erbsville road - a useful route and a proper connector at the station.  

I like this. I don't know if the connection to Phillip could happen, but I like it. There is a long-term plan somewhere to connect to Laurelwood, isn't there?
Reply
(09-22-2015, 09:40 AM)zanate Wrote: Curbs and rails in front of GRH.

It's nice to see progress.
Reply


There has been tons of progress. I think what you mean is it's nice to see the "rebuilding" phase start. Smile So much of the work so far has been the deconstruction and "fixing existing infrastructure" phase.
Reply
Based on the recent pics I've seen of King Street in front of GRH, I'm assuming there will be bike lanes on King?
Reply
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »



Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 69 Guest(s)

About Waterloo Region Connected

Launched in August 2014, Waterloo Region Connected is an online community that brings together all the things that make Waterloo Region great. Waterloo Region Connected provides user-driven content fueled by a lively discussion forum covering topics like urban development, transportation projects, heritage issues, businesses and other issues of interest to those in Kitchener, Waterloo, Cambridge and the four Townships - North Dumfries, Wellesley, Wilmot, and Woolwich.

              User Links