Kosy123
Senior Member
How much of this unseasonably warm weather has been helping construction so far? I’m not as knowledgeable on the effects of that, but I’m guessing the fact it’s going to be quite decent out helps with progress?
I’d say quite a lot. The summer was also very good for construction with little rain. Marigold has been able to continue drainage work for an extra month, and pour the concrete deck for the SPR bridge well into November.How much of this unseasonably warm weather has been helping construction so far? I’m not as knowledgeable on the effects of that, but I’m guessing the fact it’s going to be quite decent out helps with progress?
Sure, but I don’t think anybody is sitting for a minute at Muttart thinking “awe if this train would’ve kept going I could eventually have a little bit more accumulated free time over the span of my entire life.” Yeah if you sum it all up, it’s a lot of time, but most people don’t think about anything that way. Why are people so dead set on making this train ever so slightly faster while making huge sacrifices to do it?Yes, I was looking at this from the opposite perspective: 2 minutes for every passenger, on every train, every day, for 30 years adds up to a lot of lost time. Weigh that against the couple hundred Cloverdale residents who were more concerned about losing 'their' river valley crossing than the actual LRT...
In particular, this is honestly the most terrible take I've read all day amongst the many other problematic ones I see above. Y'all can justify big elevated SkyTrain-like guideway segments but will not justify crossing gates due to some apparent visual aesthetic. Make it make sense?Crossing arms are expensive, intrusive and beat the purpose of integrating the line with less impact on the landscape, while adding no real benefit.
Not having crossing arms is a hill I'm willing to die on.
Think what you want, but as far as I'm aware the insistence on designing every single surface portion of the Valley Line to be run like a tramway is hurting and not helping. It is costing you speed, reliability, ridership, fare revenue, and the long-term viability of sustaining the transit system when ridership drops. The Valley Line south of Davies Station is clearly designed and built as a railway and should be run as one. It also runs in a part of the city (and at a distance from the city centre) that potential riders of the line, especially those coming in from other connecting transit, would almost certainly value the highest speed that the infrastructure will allow.I also hate the idea. The Valley Line isn't rapid transit, and that's okay. I'm glad it was built the way it was, because I think central neighbourhoods will do more with it than sprawling neighbourhoods would do with rapid transit.
I really don't like this idea. Yeah, land use sucks whatever, but a station is a station, especially one that isn't too close to another one. People who walk up to it (people do live within walking distance!) should be able to expect that trains will regularly stop there.Another possibility is to review stops (specifically Muttart) that are supposed to have minimal usage, and make it a seasonal / event-only stop. Otherwise it gets skipped.
I’m seeing a decent chunk of those short term trips in Bonnie Doon and Avonmore when I go on the train tbh.I could see the Valley Line being popular in short-range segments.
(1) Mill Woods - Millbourne Station
(2) Avonmore - Streathearn Station
(3) Quarters - 107 Street
(4) 112 Street - 124 Street
(5) 134 Street - 156 Street
(6) Misericordia - Lewis Estates
I don't think the average person would have the patience to wait for a bus for a local trip, but the LRT woluld give more options. Someone downtown could head to the Brewery District for lunch. Or someone in Oliver could head to the dentist downtown.
Been a killer fall for construction, that's for sure.I’d say quite a lot. The summer was also very good for construction with little rain. Marigold has been able to continue drainage work for an extra month, and pour the concrete deck for the SPR bridge well into November.
How much of this unseasonably warm weather has been helping construction so far? I’m not as knowledgeable on the effects of that, but I’m guessing the fact it’s going to be quite decent out helps with progress?
Uhhh okay?.This is about maximizing your billion+ dollar investment, and personally, I would be happy to write to ministers (and organize others to do the same) about withholding future transit funding from Edmonton projects if this is the way you're going to continue planning them.
Yes, this is a threat.
There are plenty of other cities in Canada in transit crisis (including mine) that need infrastructure money now..
Totally. I live 2 blocks from the glenwood/Sherwood stop and plan to use is a lot for:I’m seeing a decent chunk of those short term trips in Bonnie Doon and Avonmore when I go on the train tbh.
The Oliver/Downtown trips when VLW opens is something that’ll be extremely popular as well, and I think it’s going to be an underestimated trip generator as Oliver and DT increases in density.
Lol...If you really think like this...I honestly have no words. I think you are taking this WAY too seriously and need to take a break from any urbanist media and movement for the sake of your mental health if you actually reacted like this. It almost feels like you are getting radicalized by less than ideal urbanism perpetuated by urbanist media from NJB, Strong Towns etc (Not saying they are incorrect, but they are only showing one perspective and don't exactly represent the whole paradigm of urbanism). Threatening to cut projects because of less than ideal transit solely due to your own opinion is insane behaviour and crossing the line.This is about maximizing your billion+ dollar investment, and personally, I would be happy to write to ministers (and organize others to do the same) about withholding future transit funding from Edmonton projects if this is the way you're going to continue planning them.
Yes, this is a threat.
There are plenty of other cities in Canada in transit crisis (including mine) that need infrastructure money now.
You came here, read ONE day of posts and puts everyone on the same basket.In particular, this is honestly the most terrible take I've read all day amongst the many other problematic ones I see above. Y'all can justify big elevated SkyTrain-like guideway segments but will not justify crossing gates due to some apparent visual aesthetic. Make it make sense?
Boohoo, I'm scared.This is about maximizing your billion+ dollar investment, and personally, I would be happy to write to ministers (and organize others to do the same) about withholding future transit funding from Edmonton projects if this is the way you're going to continue planning them.
Yes, this is a threat.
To be fair, the majority of workers are subcontractors. And I’m not sure if the 2020 numbers are completely fair, seeing as though Transed most likely worked far more hours than any other contractor in Alberta in 2020. They barely shut down for covid. So I’m not sure if that number is completely fair.Wow.
---
A CBC investigation into the safety record of TransEd, the consortium that built the $1.8-billion Valley Line Southeast LRT found that injury rates for project workers spiked to more than five times the industry average in 2020. While TransEd has not released its project-wide records publicly, it provided CBC with limited data showing 283 near miss incidents, 350 first aid incidents, 93 medical treatment cases, 14 lost workday cases, and 15 public safety incidents. In a statement, TransEd spokesperson Dallas Lindskoog said records “indicate that TransEd partner companies and all the subcontractors that work for them ... exceed OHS averages and industry norms.” Workplace safety expert Christopher Coles said “a lack of transparency when it comes to health and safety statistics is concerning.”
-Taproot
Wow is right! Those are fantastic safety numbers! Only 14 lost work days? Crazy!Wow.
---
A CBC investigation into the safety record of TransEd, the consortium that built the $1.8-billion Valley Line Southeast LRT found that injury rates for project workers spiked to more than five times the industry average in 2020. While TransEd has not released its project-wide records publicly, it provided CBC with limited data showing 283 near miss incidents, 350 first aid incidents, 93 medical treatment cases, 14 lost workday cases, and 15 public safety incidents. In a statement, TransEd spokesperson Dallas Lindskoog said records “indicate that TransEd partner companies and all the subcontractors that work for them ... exceed OHS averages and industry norms.” Workplace safety expert Christopher Coles said “a lack of transparency when it comes to health and safety statistics is concerning.”
-Taproot