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ION - Waterloo Region's Light Rail Transit
(12-21-2020, 02:39 PM)Bytor Wrote:
(12-21-2020, 07:28 AM)KevinT Wrote: I daydream about this every time I ride through that section. What a wasted opportunity...

That would have been a bad route, IMO. Think of the work necessary to get accessible stairs and a ramp down to the bottom of the corridor for a station there. Also, the nearest track at the bottom is a bit more than 90m from the current station platform, straight line distance, so a switchback ramp and stairs at AODA maximum grade would potentially double that distance. That would add a couple minutes to get to the station for healthy people, more for people with mobility issues, and thus reduce the catchment area on the other side of Courtland Ave., not to mention how it makes transferring to and from busses less convenient, too.

And the station would have been closer to the buildings at Fallowfield, and Homer Watson.

As for "the work necessary"...this is the same work that's needed at every single grade separated station everywhere in the world.

I will be the first one to argue for ground level stations, they do provide better integration into the pedestrian realm, but in this instance, you're looking at a savings of 4-6 minutes travel time, plus a better street level realm (the current Courtland route is utter trash--partly because of the LRT routing), plus a trade off of better connections to some places, and worse connections to other places, seems like a very strong win.

Also, I question some of your numbers, the track in question is only 74 meters from the current station access (remember, street level design is trash), and the bridge pier is only 65 meters. And even if AODA ramps required a switchback (which they don't have, too, they could be accessed by elevator instead) most grade separated stations also have stairs which can be much shorter.  So you're really looking at a 65-70 meter further walk, plus stairs, and again, that's added to the Courtland side, but subtracted from the Fallowfield side.
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A station in the middle of a rail yard would be a lovely place to wait for a train.
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(12-21-2020, 08:46 PM)neonjoe Wrote: A station in the middle of a rail yard would be a lovely place to wait for a train.

It would not be in the middle. It would be at the side and in that regard not really any different from the existing Block Line station, which is at the side of (“in the middle of”) a busy 4 lane road.
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(12-21-2020, 08:46 PM)neonjoe Wrote: A station in the middle of a rail yard would be a lovely place to wait for a train.

You prefer 25 feet above a rail yard beside two massive five lane highways.

Honestly, I’ve waited at a station abutting a rail yard before, it really isn’t unpleasant at all.
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Near miss today with a pedestrian and an Ion. Pedestrian was running against the red light, cross several lanes of traffic then right in front of the Ion. If something had happened, I at least have a dash cam that would have been great evidence.

Unsure why so many have a death wish.
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(12-22-2020, 06:55 PM)jeffster Wrote: Near miss today with a pedestrian and an Ion. Pedestrian was running against the red light, cross several lanes of traffic then right in front of the Ion. If something had happened, I at least have a dash cam that would have been great evidence.

Unsure why so many have a death wish.

Nobody (who isn't suicidal) has a death wish...but many people do have appointments and other things that they need to get too, and other things that are occupying their minds.

This is obviously the same for drivers, no driver (well, very few) intend to hit and injure people. They are just human and have other things going on.  The difference is when a driver screws up, it's often someone else who dies. This is why I wish to hold drivers to a higher standard, even though they have all the same things going on in their lives.

That being said, I watch the train out my window, near misses are an hourly occurrence or so, even within the limited vantage point I have.
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Photo 
(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: And the station would have been closer to the buildings at Fallowfield, and Homer Watson.

Fallowfield is not going to work like you think.

[Image: Walking-distances-from-Block-Line-Statio...ernate.png]

The tower nearest Block Line is still a 7 minute walk to the nearest corner, putting the furthest tower a 10 minute walk away, and that's assuming there are reasonable entrances on the backsides of them. The near edge Fallowfield is a and 8-9 minute walk, and the intersection of Fallowfield and Joshua is a 10-11 minute walk, effectively beyond the catchment area.

By making people trek up and down these stairs or ramps for access to this alternate station, that distance to the nearest tower becomes an 8 minute walk to that nearest tower, or a 9-10 minute just to get to the near edge of Fallowfield Dr and 11-12 minutes to Joshua, definitely outside the catchment area. You would not be adding anybody from Fallowfield to the catchment area that is not already in it.

Homer Watson is currently a 11 minute walk from the Station, so it isn't even inside the catchment area to begin with, and the alternate station location will similarly make it further away by walking distance

So all you are doing by putting the station down in the little valley beside the track making the trek longer for everybody within the current station catchment area without expanding the catchment area to any new residents or employers.

You've made the station less useful to everybody who lives or works near by, reducing the effective catchment area, all for making the total end-to-end trip time a couple minutes shorter.

(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: As for "the work necessary"...this is the same work that's needed at every single grade separated station everywhere in the world.

It is still extra work here, regardless of whether it's been done elsewhere or not. And extra work costs extra money. In this case for a demonstrable decrease in station utility. Spend more to make it worse.

(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: I will be the first one to argue for ground level stations, they do provide better integration into the pedestrian realm, but in this instance, you're looking at a savings of 4-6 minutes travel time, plus a better street level realm (the current Courtland route is utter trash--partly because of the LRT routing), plus a trade off of better connections to some places, and worse connections to other places, seems like a very strong win.

As the map shows, you don't actually get better placement for anybody when you look at the actual distance a pedestrian would have to walk.

(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: Also, I question some of your numbers, the track in question is only 74 meters from the current station access (remember, street level design is trash), and the bridge pier is only 65 meters. And even if AODA ramps required a switchback (which they don't have, too, they could be accessed by elevator instead) most grade separated stations also have stairs which can be much shorter.  So you're really looking at a 65-70 meter further walk, plus stairs, and again, that's added to the Courtland side, but subtracted from the Fallowfield side.

Again, see attached map.
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This is all speculative, but if they were doing a grade-separated station below Block Line, surely they'd just do stairs and elevators directly from the bridge?
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(12-23-2020, 08:21 PM)jamincan Wrote: This is all speculative, but if they were doing a grade-separated station below Block Line, surely they'd just do stairs and elevators directly from the bridge?

That certainly would be my assumption, depending on how the grade worked out.
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It would be very strange having the only grade separated station on the line be in such a (currently) underdeveloped area. If they were going to similar expense to put in others I could understand, but then you have the budget increasing even more, which at the time would have killed the project.

I do have to wonder if a more gentle access to the rail corridor behind Graybar, rather than going along Hayward, would have made the curves less severe.
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I’m guessing that keeping it by the road maximized the developable land available for projects like Vierra Village etc. A diagonal sliver limits what can be built, although it’s been vacant forever.
I’m really of the opinion that rail regulations and ownership of those yards probably limited the choices here.
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(12-24-2020, 08:27 AM)neonjoe Wrote: I’m guessing that keeping it by the road maximized the developable land available for projects like Vierra Village etc. A diagonal sliver limits what can be built, although it’s been vacant forever.
I’m really of the opinion that rail regulations and ownership of those yards probably limited the choices here.

I have zero doubt that cost was the main driver here. They probably had the right of way to squeeze it in along Courtland. In my opinion it would have been worth the cost to do it right, but obviously I have not done the business case for that.
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(12-23-2020, 06:53 PM)Bytor Wrote: Fallowfield is not going to work like you think.

--snip--

Again, see attached map.

Really good summary. I had a hard time visualizing how this would have worked had it been down in the yards, but it would have been a hot mess either way, and not pedestrian friendly at all. My issue that I saw, apart from having to navigate a lot of stair, is that it would not have had a visual presence from the street, which would have made it a security risk for Ion users. Not that you can't be mugged at any of the current stops, but at least you have somewhere to go, and you can be seen.
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(12-27-2020, 07:18 PM)jeffster Wrote:
(12-23-2020, 06:53 PM)Bytor Wrote: Fallowfield is not going to work like you think.

--snip--

Again, see attached map.

Really good summary. I had a hard time visualizing how this would have worked had it been down in the yards, but it would have been a hot mess either way, and not pedestrian friendly at all. My issue that I saw, apart from having to navigate a lot of stair, is that it would not have had a visual presence from the street, which would have made it a security risk for Ion users. Not that you can't be mugged at any of the current stops, but at least you have somewhere to go, and you can be seen.

I guess that's why no subway station in the world is a success....

Honestly, this is ridiculous, grade separated stations are expensive, but in no way impossible or difficult to do well. Obviously also possible to do poorly, as are at grade stations, the station at Block Line being an excellent example (it's terrible as is, utterly idiotic), and ironic that you bring up social safety given that the alignment on Block Line has probably the most dangerous situation in the city.

It's bizarre to be having this discussion, one venue over you'll find people explaining how at grade transit is always garbage. I've not taken the extreme view in either direction, instead basing my opinion on context. This bridge is already grade separated, the context leads to a grade separated station, nothing else.
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(12-23-2020, 06:53 PM)Bytor Wrote:
(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: And the station would have been closer to the buildings at Fallowfield, and Homer Watson.

Fallowfield is not going to work like you think.

[Image: Walking-distances-from-Block-Line-Statio...ernate.png]

The tower nearest Block Line is still a 7 minute walk to the nearest corner, putting the furthest tower a 10 minute walk away, and that's assuming there are reasonable entrances on the backsides of them. The near edge Fallowfield is a and 8-9 minute walk, and the intersection of Fallowfield and Joshua is a 10-11 minute walk, effectively beyond the catchment area.

By making people trek up and down these stairs or ramps for access to this alternate station, that distance to the nearest tower becomes an 8 minute walk to that nearest tower, or a 9-10 minute just to get to the near edge of Fallowfield Dr and 11-12 minutes to Joshua, definitely outside the catchment area. You would not be adding anybody from Fallowfield to the catchment area that is not already in it.

Homer Watson is currently a 11 minute walk from the Station, so it isn't even inside the catchment area to begin with, and the alternate station location will similarly make it further away by walking distance

So all you are doing by putting the station down in the little valley beside the track making the trek longer for everybody within the current station catchment area without expanding the catchment area to any new residents or employers.

You've made the station less useful to everybody who lives or works near by, reducing the effective catchment area, all for making the total end-to-end trip time a couple minutes shorter.

(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: As for "the work necessary"...this is the same work that's needed at every single grade separated station everywhere in the world.

It is still extra work here, regardless of whether it's been done elsewhere or not. And extra work costs extra money. In this case for a demonstrable decrease in station utility. Spend more to make it worse.

(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: I will be the first one to argue for ground level stations, they do provide better integration into the pedestrian realm, but in this instance, you're looking at a savings of 4-6 minutes travel time, plus a better street level realm (the current Courtland route is utter trash--partly because of the LRT routing), plus a trade off of better connections to some places, and worse connections to other places, seems like a very strong win.

As the map shows, you don't actually get better placement for anybody when you look at the actual distance a pedestrian would have to walk.

(12-21-2020, 05:54 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: Also, I question some of your numbers, the track in question is only 74 meters from the current station access (remember, street level design is trash), and the bridge pier is only 65 meters. And even if AODA ramps required a switchback (which they don't have, too, they could be accessed by elevator instead) most grade separated stations also have stairs which can be much shorter.  So you're really looking at a 65-70 meter further walk, plus stairs, and again, that's added to the Courtland side, but subtracted from the Fallowfield side.

Again, see attached map.

Your attached map is contrived and bizarre...your stairs are double or triple the length needed, and there is no reason for the station access to be at Courtland, it would be accessed directly from Block Line obviously. I have no idea why you would suggest this arrangement, it really would be bizarre.

Also:

"In this case for a demonstrable decrease in station utility. Spend more to make it worse."

I have been very clear about what the benefits are...we'd be seeing a 3-5 minute decrease in transit times. That's up to a 10% improvement on the entire line, and for shorter trips we are looking at a huge improvement. 

This station does not exist in isolation.
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