King St

King St. plans still leave room for cars: Keenan

None of the proposals for improving transit flow on King St. involve excluding cars.

Anyone who was gearing up for a fight over a car-free King St. can stand down.

The Starlet was given an advance look at the long-awaited proposals under consideration for the pilot project.

When the options are publicly introduced at a meeting Monday night, all will include space on the road for automobiles. Perhaps controversially, none of the proposals will include bike lanes. Two of the three proposals give more space to pedestrians and public field improvements such as seating or patios. And all are intended, very first and foremost, to “budge people” by providing priority on the road to streetcars, according to Toronto general manager of transportation Barbara Gray and chief planner Jennifer Keesmaat.

“Transit very first is the framework around which we’re going to lead this decision,” Gray says.

“The objective is to create a transit priority corridor. The objective isn’t to create a car-free corridor,’” Keesmaat says. “It’s about being transformational, improving streetcar operations, and innovative placemaking.”

City staff members will present three options to the public for consideration a meeting at Metro Hall on Monday evening at 6:30, the begin of a public consultation process during which proposals will be evaluated and refined over the next few months. A final recommendation will be voted on by city council in July, and if approved, will launch on the street for a pilot project period this fall.

The pilot area runs along the downtown length of King St. from Bathurst in the west to Parliament or Jarvis in the east — an area selected because it is where streetcars encounter the most delay right now, and because it offers many “parallel routes” as options for cars and cyclists to travel on.

Of the three options, Keesmaat says, “Two I think we would argue do a very, very good job, and we’re going to be recommending. The third is a less ambitious option,” put forward in case the “public appetite” for switch proves lower than the project’s designers hope.

The very first option recommended by planning and transportation staff is labelled “Alternating Loops.” It would permit a single lane of one-way car traffic, to facilitate local access to driveways and deliveries, but with the direction alternating each block, preventing through traffic. Cars and trucks would also be prohibited from making left turns. The two centre lanes would be reserved for streetcars only. And the sidewalk on one side of the street would extend out to cover one existing lane, featuring customized “public field” improvements (seating, marketplace tables, patios or spectacle spaces, for example) for each block.

The 2nd recommended option is called “Transit Promenade.” This would see the sidewalk extended into the road on both sides for public area improvements, while permitting local, right-turn-only car access in both directions — cars would be prohibited to drive straight through at intersections, forcing right turns at the end of each block. Cars would share the streetcar lanes except at the edges of blocks, where they would stir into right-turn lanes. This option permits somewhat more room for creative pedestrian spaces while still limiting obstructions of streetcars from left turns and traffic volume, but could, the presentation notes say, still cause transit delays due to the collective use of the streetcar lanes.

The third option, less enthusiastically introduced by Keesmaat and Gray, is “Separated Lanes” which offers no enlargement of public field pedestrian space. Instead, it dedicates the centre lanes to streetcars, and gives the remaining one lane in each direction to car and truck traffic, forbidding left turns and stopping, but permitting through traffic. Staff notes suggest this option would still facilitate quicker streetcar movement while suggesting no switch in “public life” elements. Keesmaat notes this option may also wind up more frustrating for motorists who expect to be able to drive through along the street, but get held up for deliveries, cab pickups, or fender benders in the only lane available to them.

In all three cases, the TTC will be running fresh, larger streetcars for the duration of the pilot in order to permit for more reliable service and more passengers, and transportation services will be providing streetcars priority at traffic lights.

Detailed statistics about the switches in streetcar spectacle, business and pedestrian volume, and traffic volumes in the larger area around the pilot site will be tracked to measure success or failure.

Councillor Joe Cressy, who represents one of the main downtown spreads the pilot will cover, is enthusiastic about the launch. “The fact is, King St. is congested today, and it is going to get worse. Unless we rethink our streets, we will fail.” He says he believes there’s pretty broad acknowledgement from the public, from local businesses and from politicians that the current way the street operates is frustrating for motorists, transit users and pedestrians and that the pilot project is a test of a potential way out of it.

“Speed is significant,” he says of the fall launch. “When pilots fail, it’s because we treat them as a permanent switch,” he says, investigate and designing and debating them in endless detail before beginning. “We have to be quick, adjustable and pliable.”

Today, the five hundred four King streetcar line is the TTC’s third-most travelled route — carrying more passengers each day than the Sheppard subway line, and more than the Scarborough RT — despite being notoriously slow and unreliable during rush hour. Many (including me) have suggested that even while the city debates multi-billion-dollar, decades-long transit construction projects, speeding up the operation of the five hundred four could provide a cheap way to ease pressure on the overcrowded Yonge subway line by providing reliable alternate routes into the downtown core.

“This is a quick win, it’s low-hanging fruit that can significantly improve quality of life in the financial district and in one of the fastest-growing areas of the country,” Keesmaat says. “We’re signalling that we’re not stuck in our ways, that we can adapt, that we can mature how we use our infrastructure. It’s a indeed titillating step.”

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