Queens Quay East Light Rail Line
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East Bayfront LRT is a proposed Toronto streetcar line that would serve the East Bayfront and Port Lands areas in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It would run from Union station under Bay Street and along Queens Quay and Cherry Street to a new Polson Loop near the intersection of Cherry and Polson Streets in the Port Lands. It would complement the existing
509 Harbourfront 509 Harbourfront is a Toronto streetcar route in Ontario, Canada, operated by the Toronto Transit Commission and connecting Union Station with Exhibition Loop. History 1990–2012 The 509 Harbourfront began service in 1990 as the "604 Harbourf ...
service which connects Union Station to Queens Quay west of Bay Street. Longer term plans are to extend the East Bayfront line from Cherry and Commissioners Streets to the proposed East Harbour station along the planned Ontario Line. The Waterfront East LRT Extension is a City of Toronto project to develop the East Bayfront LRT. The project involves both Waterfront Toronto and the Toronto Transit Commission. The proposed line is part of the Waterfront Transit Network which also includes the
Waterfront West LRT The Waterfront West LRT (WWLRT) is a proposed streetcar line in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The WWLRT is currently part of a City project called the Waterfront Transit Reset which also includes the East Bayfront LRT. The WWLRT was initially propose ...
. Design for the project is scheduled to start in 2022. The design work is 30 percent funded and would require City Council approval for further funding and completion. If City Council approves the design, construction would start in 2025, and the line would fully open in 2031.


Route

The proposed line would start at the underground loop at Union Station and proceed underground in the existing streetcar tunnel under Bay Street to Queens Quay. The line would then turn east and emerge from the tunnel on Queens Quay just west of Yonge Street. The line would continue east to a relocated Cherry Street, where it would turn south to a new Polson Loop near the intersection of Cherry and Polson Streets. Tracks along Queens Quay and Cherry Street would be in a dedicated right-of-way. As part of the project, the underground streetcar stations at Union Station and Queens Quay would be expanded. At Union Station, the existing streetcar platform at the head of the loop would be replaced by four new platforms, more specifically two platforms along each side of the loop's neck under Bay Street. Also along the neck, there would be two bypass tracks and switchwork so that any streetcar entering the station or leaving a platform could bypass any other streetcar waiting at a platform. Queens Quay station would be expanded so that platforms could hold two streetcars in each direction instead of just one per direction. On the south side of Queens Quay station, there would be a double-track wye junction to replace the existing curve. From Queens Quay station, southbound streetcars would be able to branch either east or west along Queens Quay. Streetcars could also continue along Queens Quay, bypassing Queens Quay station. A new tunnel portal would be constructed on Queens Quay near Yonge Street, with planners preferring a location on the west side of Yonge Street. Both the eastbound and westbound tracks would be in a dedicated right-of-way along the south side of Queens Quay so as to reduce the need for rail vehicles to stop for road traffic as there are fewer street intersections on the south side of Queens Quay than on its north side. Waterfront Toronto is constructing
Villiers Island Villiers Island is a area in Toronto's Port Lands being converted to an island. The project is a part of Port Lands Flood Protection Project by Waterfront Toronto. To prevent flooding from the Don River, a channel is being created to extend th ...
in the Port Lands by creating a new channel for the Don River south from the Keating Channel then turning west to run between Commissioners Street and the Ship Channel into Toronto Harbour. The island will be redeveloped from industrial to mixed commercial and residential use. Streetcar service for the island is planned on reserved right-of-ways which may initially be used by buses. The streetcar right-of-way would be on the east side of a relocated Cherry Street. , the plan is to implement the new line in two stages. The first stage would be to build the line along Cherry Street and Queens Quay East and connect the tracks to those on Queens Quay West at Bay Street. Streetcars would run from the new Polson Loop to possibly
Exhibition Loop Exhibition Loop is the terminus for the 509 Harbourfront and 511 Bathurst streetcar routes, the 174 Ontario Place-Exhibition, and the 307 Blue Night Bathurst bus routes. Exhibition Loop serves Exhibition Place, Coca-Cola Coliseum, BMO Field and ...
. The streetcar tunnel under Bay Street would then be closed to enlarge the Union Station loop and Queens Quay station. When the tunnel reopens, streetcars would run from Union Station to Polson Loop.


Cost

In 2015, the estimated cost to build the East Bayfront LRT from Union Station to Small Street was $520million. The breakdown is as follows: * Building a new eastbound passenger platform at Union Station: $112million * Extension of Bay Street tunnel to Freeland Street: $156million * Surface infrastructure: $66million * Rolling stock: $36million * Queens Quay revitalization: $150million By June 2019, the estimated cost of the line had grown to $700million. The above costs do not reflect design changes to Queens Quay station or the planned extension of the line from Parliament Street to Polson Street, changes which were proposed in 2021.


Challenges

The underground streetcar loop at Union Station does not have the capacity to accommodate the extra light rail vehicles needed to service the new line. Thus, a new eastbound platform must be added. A sewer at Queens Quay and Bay Street will make it difficult to build an eastern portal to bring the tracks to the surface. One of the issues which has delayed progress of constructing the line is the proposed redevelopment of the waterfront properties between Jarvis Street and Parliament Street, which lie south of Queens Quay. The plans called for two access streets, which would cross the proposed light rail line at signalized intersections. However, the developer has designed a third street into the plan, likely due to the expected traffic volumes from the development, which would require an additional signalized intersection with the light rail line. Some councillors have stated this would negatively affect service along the proposed route, possibly adding as much as an extra three minutes travel to a line that would only require ten minutes to traverse.


Demand

George Brown College's campus in the East Bayfront has opened and there are development plans for several apartment and condominium complexes on Queens Quay East and, in future years, in the West Don Lands. Thus, there will be roughly 20,000 residential units in the area, plus 8,000 jobs and 3,500 students. According to transit advocate Steve Munro, developers in the area, particularly for commercial properties, are concerned that without good transit, a better connection to the core area than the Sherbourne and Bay buses, developments are not marketable. A project called the Waterfront Transit Reset was set up to study possible streetcar system upgrades along the waterfront from Long Branch to Leslie Street. That study included the East Bayfront. A WTR report dated November 13, 2017, stated that: :While three bus routes currently serve the area, adding higher-quality, higher-capacity streetcar service is an urgent priority for the TTC, the City, and Waterfront Toronto. Projected peak demand in 2041 on this section is approximately 2400 people per hour, and serving this very high level of demand requires high-quality streetcar service in a dedicated right of way. In January 2019, the Waterfront BIA (a neighbourhood business group) estimates a $1.2billion loss of productivity and a $20billion loss of federal, provincial and local tax revenue if the opening of the East Bayfront LRT were delayed from 2025 to 2045. The BIA hopes that the line will open by 2025 which according to the BIA would stimulate commercial and residential development providing 135,000 new jobs and housing 67,000 residents along the proposed line.


Alternatives to streetcar operation

The City of Toronto considered a bus service running in the former streetcar's dedicated right-of-way. The challenge for such a service to the eastern waterfront is the connection at Union Station for transferring passengers. There is limited sidewalk space for both pedestrians and transit stops along Bay Street. Buses would have to compete with other traffic through the Bay Street underpass and mixed traffic south to Queens Quay. The City also considered replacing the streetcar track in the tunnel under Bay Street between Union Station and Queen's Quay with a driverless people-mover system; this option also included changing the streetcar routing so it only ran along Queen's Quay. In April 2019, staff recommended continuing streetcar operation under Bay Street to Union Station, along with extending platforms and adding extra tracks along the Union Station streetcar loop.


History

On April 5, 2006, the first Public Forum for the Environmental Assessment for the Eastern Waterfront transit proposals was held. In February 2012, Emily Jackson of the ''
Toronto Star The ''Toronto Star'' is a Canadian English-language broadsheet daily newspaper. The newspaper is the country's largest daily newspaper by circulation. It is owned by Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of Torstar Corporation and part ...
'' reported that budget over-runs on the Queens Quay West line had not left enough funds to start the Queens Quay East line. On August 29, 2014, ''
The Globe and Mail ''The Globe and Mail'' is a Canadian newspaper printed in five cities in western and central Canada. With a weekly readership of approximately 2 million in 2015, it is Canada's most widely read newspaper on weekdays and Saturdays, although it ...
'' reported that senior
City of Toronto Toronto ( ; or ) is the capital city of the Provinces and territories of Canada, Canadian province of Ontario. With a recorded population of 2,794,356 in 2021, it is the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, most pop ...
officials had gone over the head of City Council, and made an appeal for funding for the line right to more senior levels of government. TTC General Manager Andy Byford and City Manager Joe Pennachetti had made their proposal to their opposite numbers in the Provincial bureaucracy. According to ''The Globe and Mail'', they had not yet approached provincial and federal politicians. In September 2015, the TTC Budget Committee passed the following motion regarding the Capital Budget: :Request TTC staff, working with the City of Toronto manager, and Waterfront Toronto, to prioritize the East Bayfront LRT project, and to report back to the TTC's Budget Committee on how to expedite the work, starting with the planning and engineering work. In May 2016, condominium developers expressed concern about a lack of activity on the East Bayfront LRT project. Sam Crignano, president of Cityzen, a developer with three projects along the eastern waterfront, said that having two or three bus lines in the area won't be enough to handle the future influx of new residents and employees. Niall Haggart, executive vice-president of the Daniels Corp., urged action on the LRT project. Daniels has started a $700-million mixed-use development which will add about 7,300 people to the area by day and 2,500 at night. The ''
Toronto Star The ''Toronto Star'' is a Canadian English-language broadsheet daily newspaper. The newspaper is the country's largest daily newspaper by circulation. It is owned by Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of Torstar Corporation and part ...
'' reported that the project had been stalled because of a lack of funding and piecemeal transportation planning. A report about the Waterfront Transit Reset project dated November 13, 2017, stated that: "The City, Waterfront Toronto, and the TTC would carry out the approved plans for a new streetcar line along Queens Quay East
o Parliament Street O, or o, is the fifteenth Letter (alphabet), letter and the fourth vowel letter in the Latin alphabet, used in the English alphabet, modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in ...
/nowiki> in the East Bayfront area." Since the provincial election of June 2018, when there was a change in government, the province has made no promise to fund the Easy Bayfront LRT. In January 2019, the provincial Ministry of Transportation said it had not received a formal request for funding from the City; thus, the province remains uncommitted. In June 2019,
Sidewalk Labs Sidewalk Labs is an urban planning and infrastructure subsidiary of Google. Its stated goal is to improve urban infrastructure through technological solutions, and tackle issues such as cost of living, efficient transportation and energy usage. ...
offered $100 million in "credit support" to build a portion of the East Bayfront LRT between Cherry Street and Broadview Avenue, which would pass through its proposed development in Toronto's Portland area. The estimated cost of that portion of the line was $406 million and would be in addition to the $700 million estimated cost to build the line from Union Station to Small Street. On June 17, 2020, the TTC Board approved spending $15,000,000 over three years on design work for the expansion of streetcar platforms at and stations as well for a new tunnel and portal for the East Bayfront line. The TTC was also considering connecting the line to Distillery Loop. At a virtual public meeting held on June 21, 2021, it was announced that in phase 1, the LRT line would terminate in the Port Lands at a new Polson Loop near Cherry and Polson Streets. A new loop at Parliament Street was rejected as a terminus because of crowding by existing buildings. Distillery Loop was rejected because of construction of the Ontario Line and because grading problems would require a temporary loop elsewhere. A Polson Loop would also support development in the Port Lands, while a Parliament Loop or Distillery Loop would not.


Future expansion

In a later phase, there could be a branch running east from Cherry Street along
Commissioners Street The Port Lands (also known as Portlands) of Toronto, Ontario, Canada are an industrial and recreational neighbourhood located about 5 kilometres south-east of downtown, located on the former Don River delta and most of Ashbridge's Bay. Approx ...
that, halfway to
Leslie Street Leslie may refer to: * Leslie (name), a name and list of people with the given name or surname, including fictional characters Families * Clan Leslie, a Scottish clan with the motto "grip fast" * Leslie (Russian nobility), a Russian noble famil ...
, would turn north to the planned East Harbour station, with connections to
GO Transit GO Transit is a regional public transit system serving the Greater Golden Horseshoe region of Ontario, Canada. With its hub at Union Station in Toronto, GO Transit's green-and-white trains and buses serve a population of more than seven millio ...
trains, the planned Ontario Line and a possible southerly extension of the streetcar line along Broadview Avenue. A November 2017 report about the Waterfront Transit Reset project stated that projected demand east to Leslie Street (150 people per hour in 2041) was too low to justify streetcar service further east.


See also

*
Waterfront West LRT The Waterfront West LRT (WWLRT) is a proposed streetcar line in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The WWLRT is currently part of a City project called the Waterfront Transit Reset which also includes the East Bayfront LRT. The WWLRT was initially propose ...
* Toronto streetcar system


References


External links


Waterfront East LRT Extension
ity of Toronto project page {{TTC Toronto streetcar system Proposed public transport in the Greater Toronto Area 4 ft 10⅞ in gauge railways