Bombardier Recommended for Low Floor Streetcar Order (Updated)

Updated April 25, 9:30 am.  I have added material from the media briefing and the staff report that I did not have time to incorporate in the original article.  The additional material is appended below after the break. 

On April 24, the TTC announced that Bombardier has won the competition for an order for 204 new low floor streetcars for Toronto.  The staff recommendation will go to the Commission itself for approval on Monday, April 27.

Both Bombardier and Siemens bid on this tender, and the proposals from both vendors were considered to be compliant both on technical and financial grounds.  Therefore the question came down to cost and with Siemens’ bid over 50% higher than Bombardier’s, there was no question about the winner.

The vehicles will be a modified version of the Flexity car with three powered two-axle trucks and five car sections.  Bombardier has not yet updated their site with information about the vehicles (as of 2:00 pm EDT April 24).  An illustration of the proposed car is in the Toronto Star’s article posted earlier today.

Although not guaranteed, this contract places Bombardier at the front of the line for supplying cars to the much larger Transit City system, especially if that builds out to anything near its full extent.  The contract includes provision for add-on orders, but the TTC will be negotiating their price separately as the Transit City cars will have significant differences affecting their cost:

  • Transit City will be built to specifications that allow off-the-shelf cars to operate on it — no tight curves or steep grades.
  • The TC cars will be double-ended and double-sided.
  • The TC cars will likely have only two powered trucks rather than three.

Subject to funding, a process still under negotiation with the Federal and Provincial governments, the first prototypes would arrive in Toronto in mid-to-late 2011 for non-revenue testing.  Production deliveries would start in 2012 and stretch out to 2018 by which time the last of the existing CLRV and ALRV fleets would have been retired.  A new carhouse, likely in the Port Lands, will be required to house this fleet while the older cars would run from Russell and Roncesvalles.

Postscript:  I cannot help mentioning that the illustration of the new car shows a vehicle facing westbound on Queen at Bay signed “Neville”.

Updated April 25:

Bombardier has a website nominally showcasing the Toronto cars, but this is left over from a previous marketing campaign and does not show the Toronto design.  However, there’s a nice photo gallery.

Pricing

The total recommended $1.286-billion cost of the order for 204 LRVs comprises several items:

  • The base price of $993-million (Canadian dollars, 2009) including all taxes.
  • Escalation provision of $145-million based on a formula described in the staff report.  In brief, this allows costs to rise at 85% of the rate of inflation as measured by various standard indices.  The allowance here is priced on the assumption of a prevailing 3.5% per year over ten years.
  • Foreign currency adjustment provision of $17-million.  This will be a one-time adjustment based on prevailing currency rates at the date the contract is finalized.  If the Canadian dollar appreciates in the interim, this will be to the TTC’s favour.
  • Spare parts at $14-million.
  • “Specified options” — add-ons to the cars requested for pricing by the TTC but not included in the base configuration — $67-million.  These items were not listed, and we don’t know which of these might be included in the final version.
  • Potential contract changes — $50-million.  Nothing specific is proposed at this time, but this is a 5% provision relative to the base price.

There will be a $56.9-million offset to the total price due to the GST rebate payable to  municipal agencies.  This value may rise depending on the terms of the proposed harmonization of Ontario’s sales tax with the federal GST.

The question of per-car cost relative to industry norms came up a few times.  Direct comparisons are tricky because of local conditions (special options, size of order), but the TTC stated that this contact fell in roughly in the 75th percentile of car costs.  In other words, about 3/4 of the orders currently are lower while 1/4 are higher.  This position will likely change for the Transit City fleet (see below) which is not a special configuration.

Configuration

Compared with a “standard” Flexity model, the car has:

  • A reconfigured front section with the single door relocated behind the truck 
  • The second and fourth sections have one double door each rather than two doors

These changes are triggered both by the car length and the truck placement necessary to provide proper dynamics.  All trucks are powered to handle the grades on the Toronto system including situations where a disabled car needs to be pushed uphill (for example out of an underground station where the approach ramps are between 6% and 8% grades.

The cars will have 62 seats, comparable to an ALRV but spread over a longer vehicle.  Specs for the existing and future fleets are:

  • CLRV:  15.4m long, 130 crush load, 74 service design load
  • ALRV:  22.3m long, 205 crush load, 108 service design load
  • Flexity:  28.2m long, 260 crush load

I believe that TTC engineering is overstating the capacity of these cars by analogy to the ALRVs shown above.  Note the difference in ratios between the design loads (used by Service Planning) and the crush loads (used by engineering to calculate the maximum axle load of the cars).  My guess is that a service design load of 150 would be in the likely range given the car’s size.  However, all door loading may, by improving passenger distribution, allow the TTC to achieve a higher design load without sacrificing rider comfort.  We shall see once the cars are on the street.

In his remarks, Chair Adam Giambrone pointed out that with the expected demand on this fleet, the TTC would get back to the level of streetcar ridership seen in 1928.  This is a bit of a stretch considering that the 1928 was much, much larger than the capacity of the Flexity “city” fleet.  I suspect he has included some or all of the Transit City capacity and demand in that statement.

The TTC claims that they will not double the existing headways, but will take a balance between capacity, demand and the attractiveness of service.  This will require close monitoring to ensure that the destruction of ridership seen on Queen thanks to headway widening and poor service management is not replicated system-wide.

Funding

The TTC does not have committed funding yet from Queen’s Park or Ottawa, but they are in active discussions with both levels of government regarding this.  There will likely be an up front payment at contract signing (common in transit equipment orders, and the balance will be spread over the deliveries in 2011-2018.  This means that the total subsidy from any government will stretch out through many budget years and election cycles.

Toronto and the TTC have made it clear to both governments that funding for this new car order is the “number one ask” for stimulus fund.  However, projects that will receive Federal stimulus spending are supposed to be completed within two years, a requirement that challenges provincial and municipal governments across Canada for projects far less complex than an LRV purchase.  Which envelope, if any, Ottawa uses to fund this project remains to be seen.  Changing the rules for the stimulus program would open up complaints of special treatment for a large Toronto project, and it would push “stimulus” spending well beyond the fiscal periods when it is supposed to generate employment.

The bids are valid until June 27, 2009, and the contract will not be awarded without funding guarantees in place.  This process often can be tedious as each government waits to see whether someone else will bring more money to the table, or what offsets might be available in other projects.  The TTC needs to have a “Plan B” in place is some, but not all, of the funding is announced by June 27.  This could involve placing a partial order with more to follow once the funding is worked out.

Funding is already in place for some of the Transit City fleet as well as for the small additions needed to operate the eastern waterfront services.  This money and those projects cannot go anywhere without a base order of cars for the existing system.

Canadian Content

The bid called for a minimum of 25% Canadian content, but the degree to which this might be exceeded was not included in the requirement.  Therefore, we don’t know if the actual values are higher for either bidder.

The TTC plans to negotiate with Bombardier to study increasing the percentage.  If this has a cost implication, the funding agencies will have to decide whether they want to pump more money into the order to increase the local benefits.

Delivery and Commissioning

The first three prototypes will arrive in mid to late 2011 (the date depends on who you talk to).  This is roughly a year later than originally planned due to the delays in concluding the tender process.

The prototypes will be extensively tested in non-revenue operation, mainly at night, to ensure that they can operate on the Toronto track geometry.  Production deliveries will begin in 2012 stretching to 2018.  During that time, the CLRV and ALRV fleets would be gradually retired although, clearly, the rate of retirement can be adjusted to match the ongoing demand for streetcar service much as the PCC fleet backstopped the new CLRV fleet three decades ago.

The original rebuilding plan for the CLRVs would have included replacement of the electronics among other subsystems, but the cost of this work could not be recovered over a long enough time, given the need for the system to be accessible by 2021.  Therefore, buying new cars is cost-effective.  Under different circumstances, a mixed fleet might have lasted longer.

A few cars from the existing fleet will be retained for historical purposes, but I doubt they will engender the same warm, fuzzy feelings of the PCCs or Peter Witts.  They will also be devilishly hard to maintain given that their control systems use expensive, hard-to-source technology once the cars reach “heritage” status.

A new carhouse is planned for the Port Lands on a site yet to be selected, and it will be connected to the existing system via Leslie Street from Queen.  This fits in with the overall plan for eastern waterfront transit service, but does not make the new carhouse conditional on completion of the western access via Cherry and Queen’s Quay.  The budget for the new carhouse is $345-million.

Roncesvalles and Russell will remain active for the CLRV and ALRV fleets.  Modifying them to handle Flexity cars would improse a requirement to bring old buildings up to modern codes, and this would have to occur concurrently with day-to-day operations.  The maintenance requirements for Flexities are completely different because of their low-floor configuration, and the longer cars would affect track layouts in some parts of the existing yards.  The eventual fate of the old carhouses is unknown, although there is probably a case for building a yard on the Roncesvalles site to handle west end operations.  Any decision on this is years away.

There is no specific plan yet for assiging new cars to existing routes.  One could argue that they should go first to routes with exclusive rights-of-way like St. Clair, Spadina and Harbourfront, and mixed operation of new and old fleets could produce serious problems with uneven loading and inconsistent fare collection procedures.  However, an argument can also be made for very busy routes like King where streetcar congestion is becoming a real problem and a barrier to running more service even if we have the cars.

The TTC and the City must also address transit priority issues on the mixed traffic routes.  This issue has dragged on for years with little action.  Ridership growth is hampered by poor and unreliable service, and part of that arises from missing or inconsistently applied “priority” signals on transit routes.

Fare Collection

Implementation of the Flexity fleet requires the TTC to move fully to proof-of-payment for its streetcar system.  Moreover, the option of paying a fare to the operator will vanish, and some substitute must be found.

At this point, the TTC seems to be hedging its bets on smart cards due to the high projected cost of implementing Presto! system-wide.  One option mooted by Chief General Manager Gary Webster was to use fareboxes within the car that would issue receipts for tickets, tokens and cash.  This sounds like a recipe for confusion, not to mention the inevitable mechanical problems and complaints this will generate from passengers who are unable to pay a fare.

The TTC will also have to get serious about roving fare inspections at all hours of service.

Transit City Fleet

Within a year, the TTC must place its first order for Transit City equipment in order that it will be available for start of service on Sheppard in 2012 and Finch a year later.  The contract provides an option for additional cars, but these will be more or less “off the shelf” designs because Transit City will be engineered to match the capabilities and constraints of industry-standard vehicles.  They will likely have only two of three trucks powered, and will not be required to handle tight curves like the “legacy” network’s fleet.

The Waterfront West line, should it ever be built, will not be able to use Transit City cars because it will operate over a great deal of existing trackage.

The TTC will negotiate with Bombardier for a price on such cars, but if they cannot secure acceptable terms, then the order could go to tender.  Whether anyone else will bid is another question, but that’s the plan.

Intriguingly, everyone at the media briefing spoke of Eglinton as part of the Transit City LRT network and it is clear that the TTC expects to build it that way, not as a so-called extension of the Scarborough RT.  At this point, nothing has been announced on either the Eglinton or “RT” line’s technology.

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95 Responses to Bombardier Recommended for Low Floor Streetcar Order (Updated)

  1. Matt G says:

    You mention potential length constraints at Queens Quay Station. What IS the platform length there? Was the station built with a contingency for the eventuality of longer vehicles?

    Steve: The problem will arise if the TTC tries to run two-car trains on any of the waterfront services. A single car fits, but not two. I do not believe that there is any contingency as you can see from the alignment change almost immediately north of the station.

    Also, what do foresee happening re queuing at Spadina Stn? Will a 510 wait in the tunnel while one sits on the platform?

    Steve: It is possible to make more platform space, but I can’t see two cars on the platform at once unless they position with a loading car partly beyond the platform (remember that the first door is well back of the front of the car). Still, it will be tight.

  2. Karl Junkin says:

    I’d like to reiterate something already addressed by Mark Dowling, who correctly pointed out that we have 185 vehicles actually in revenue-service on the rails of our streetcar network at peak. Yet we have 248 to work with. What are the other 63 vehicles doing?

    The reality is that the CLRVs are already 30 years old, and the ALRVs are 25 years old, and the fleet has a spare ratio of 33%! This is hideous. 63 is actually 25% of the fleet, so one can conclude that some of the vehicles are running in less-than-acceptable condition in revenue-service at peak periods. I’ve noticed buses starting to stand in for streetcars on both the 501 and the 505, because there are not enough streetcars to service the lines due to vehicles breaking down. I saw one ALRV last week sitting at Richmond and Yonge, with a heavy truck of the TTC’s right behind it there to respond to whatever the problem was (I noticed it had dropped tons of sand). These things break down, and as I understand it, they break down quite regularly.

    The new fleet will have a spare ratio of around 10%. 185 x 0.1 = 19, and 19 + 185 = 204. Magic!

    204 does work, sort of (new lines aren’t accounted for, and we still have a shortfall with St.Clair, but otherwise). Having 248 vehicles in the current fleet doesn’t do us any good when that fleet is decrepit.

  3. Ed says:

    Steve writes:

    “In his remarks, Chair Adam Giambrone pointed out that with the expected demand on this fleet, the TTC would get back to the level of streetcar ridership seen in 1928.”

    As _TTC ’28_ was written to illustrate the most extensive operations of the traction fleet, should we be looking forward to _TTC ’18_ from John Bromley? (_TTC 2028_ seems a little too far away.)

    Also,

    “Steve: The problem is intersection geometry. Where two four-lane streets meet at 90 degrees, there is only so much room to fit a right-hand curve, and the system is full of such locations.”

    In Buenos Aires I saw track that, to turn left, first went off to the right to get enough of a radius. Away from the ceremonial-style streets, Buenos Aires’ barrio streets are about the width of an inner-Toronto residential street.

    Steve: That may be, but we would still have to completely rebuilt the intersections to handle that geometry. It ain’t going to happen.

  4. Andrew says:

    regarding the current condition of our CLRVs and SLRVs: just ask any operator. Or eavesdrop on a conversation between two operators when one takes over from the last. So many of these things break down so often.

  5. Greg King says:

    You forgot one other US part legacy, part new system of New Orleans which uses 5’2 1/2″ gauge.

    I was having a close look at the artist’s rendition of the new cars again with respect to the door position and something someone else mentioned (I think you Steve) that no drawings have been forth coming. If you look closely at the windows over the front truck, the bottom of the window does not come all the way to the bottom of the black area (like the rear windows of the low floor buses only this bit is much less) this. Coupled with the door location and the lack of drawing makes me wonder if they are indeed going for a rotating truck at the ends and the 100% actually means all entrances. I hope this is correct as it would be much better for Toronto than trying to get rigid trucks around 11 metre radius curves. I know that area is very small (the depth of the area between the window and the bottom of the line) but most new cars that are 70% have only a very small step over the truck, especially the Bombardier cars we have in Adelaide.

    Cheers
    greg

  6. TTC Passenger says:

    Steve says:

    The contract provides an option for additional cars, but these will be more or less “off the shelf” designs because Transit City will be engineered to match the capabilities and constraints of industry-standard vehicles. They will likely have only two of three trucks powered, and will not be required to handle tight curves like the “legacy” network’s fleet.

    TTC Passenger says:

    Two out of three trucks powered has me a bit concerned with respect to the implications it would have for acceleration and braking rates (keep in mind, dynamic braking’s not available on unpowered axles). This won’t be a huge issue of the Transit City lines have widely spaced stops but if they’re tightly spaced, the impact on schedules and average speed could become significant. These were the factors that led London Underground to decide to have all the axles in the 92 stock and later tube trains motorized.

    Steve says:

    Steve: Yes, trolley poles, albeit with longer shoes to get more contact and hence greater power draw from the overhead. Rebuilding the entire system for pantographs is simply not going to happen in the short term.

    TTC Passenger says:

    Huh? I kept beating that to death in the comments here suggesting that it’d be possible to examine the pole and shoe assembly and modify it to get the electric current handling rating up high enough for the new cars. Everybody was adamant that trolley poles couldn’t be modified like I suggested and therefore pantographs would be used on the new cars with the necessary changes to the overhead wire. How’d the impossible suddenly become so possible?

    Steve: This has been the plan for a few years.

    Steve says:

    A few cars from the existing fleet will be retained for historical purposes, but I doubt they will engender the same warm, fuzzy feelings of the PCCs or Peter Witts. They will also be devilishly hard to maintain given that their control systems use expensive, hard-to-source technology once the cars reach “heritage” status.

    TTC Passenger says:

    Extremely hard to source. For example, say the TTC decides to keep 10 historic CLRVs. Taking into account the car that’s been scrapped, that leaves 185 parts units. Strip’em before they go to the scrappers and you’ve got tons of parts. That doesn’t even include the inventory that’s not installed on cars.

    As an aside to the technical issues, the CLRVs and ALRVs may not give you any warm and fuzzy feelings but that doesn’t invalidate the fact that, like it or not, they have been a part of the city for 30 years (CLRVs, less for ALRVs) and counting, but I’m sure there are people out there who immediately think of those cars when you say the word ‘streetcar’, who weren’t around when PCC and Peter Witt cars were commonplace due to either age or geographical location.

    Steve: There may be 185 sets of equipment off scrapped cars, but that doesn’t mean that they will work. By the time the last cars retire, there will be is no inventory of uninstalled parts because they’ve been patching things together for years.

    I didn’t say we won’t keep the CLRVs, but they will not have for me the same allure as the PCC fleet. The PCCs were well-designed cars that ran for years all over North America and had offshoots in Europe. The CLRVs were well-described as the Edsels of the streetcar, and they almost destroyed the Toronto system even though, short term, they saved it.

  7. Now I found one thing to disagree with you on. To be quite honest with you I actually do find the present cars to have at some nostalgia to them although I must admit that it still doesn’t exactly come up to that of a PCC but, hey, it’s still there nonetheless. Nobody knows better then I do that the things have, sad to say, their share of shortcomings but you just simply can’t knock their eye appeal. I just hope that the TTC doesn’t find itself with with something that isn’t much better than what it has now.

  8. Wogster says:

    In regards to the roads with 4 lanes crossing at 90 degrees, and limited space for turns, is this a Toronto only problem? I would think that many cities Toronto’s size would have this problem, so how do other cities deal with it? You would also think sharp turns would be a bigger problem in Europe where streets are commonly very narrow.

    Steve: Two issues here. One is that pro-transit Eurpean cities can build or rebuild routes and road space to suit their new cars with more freedom than in Toronto. Also, cities with radial networks tend to have far fewer lines crossing and therefore fewer intersections to deal with.

  9. Wotan says:

    Steve:

    Why do you say that the CLRV almost destroyed the Toronto system?

    Steve: They were needlessly heavy, designed for 70mph suburban operation in the mistaken belief by UTDC that this was the type of car needed for the international market. The wheels originally installed on them destroyed the pavement because they were not as resiliant as the old PCC wheels which are mechanically similar to those now used on the CLRV/ALRV fleet. The electronics were unreliable leading to frequent breakdowns and a higher spare ratio requirement than on earlier fleets.

    If the TTC had set out to damage the reputation of streetcars deliberately, they did a great job in buying these cars. Yes, they saved the system from complete shutdown, but they helped to worsen the mode’s reputation in the process.

  10. Nick J Boragina says:

    Steve, how long can the ALRV’s and CLRV’s last? The Spadina and QQ stations might be problems, but if we use CLRVs and ALRVs while the new cars come in (they wont all be in until 2018) does that not give us enough time to update these stations?

    Steve: The old fleets are expected to be along for about 10 years (at least part of them), but the problems at stations are structural and space isn’t always available to make platforms longer.

  11. Leo Petr says:

    I grew up with the CLRVs, so they hold a lot of sentimental value for me.

  12. M. Briganti says:

    It’s really ironic that you dislike the CLRVs — no other model, past or present, can achieve that kind of smooth ride. I remember my first ride on one of them, and I walked away with the feeling that the car was floating on air.

    Why you prefer those earthquake rattle boxes called PCCs is beyond me, but I guess it’s all nostalgia because that’s what you grew up with. The CLRV and ALRVs are far superior than any PCC and when people see how bumpy the new cars will be they’ll miss our current fleet.

  13. Steve: Yes, trolley poles, albeit with longer shoes to get more contact and hence greater power draw from the overhead. Rebuilding the entire system for pantographs is simply not going to happen in the short term.

    Is there any benefit to have the trolley poles on the legacy fleet (now we can use this phrase again) reconfigured with the longer shoe so they can pick up more power?

    For example, if the “Legacy fleet” (that term again) cars are rebuilt and require more electronics, needing air conditioning, etc.

    Steve: No. The power draw is at peak for acceleration and grade climbing. The new cars are larger and heavier, and therefore need more power.

    Steve: One particular hope I have is that, like the bus displays, we will get route names back on the streetcars.

    I hope they can do that as well – a simple gesture but a nice one. When I first moved to Mississauga (along Dundas st) I noticed that their “Route 1″ bus schedules also had the name “The Dundas Line” printed.

    It was a little thing but a nice thing.

    Oh, and a posting on the new streetcars has been made to TRANSIT’s website in Malaysia – http://transitmy.org/2009/04/27/new-trams-for-toronto/

    Cheers, Moaz Yusuf Ahmad

    Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Cheers, Moaz

  14. Trevor wrote: “The Bombardier cars frown downward, whereas the Siemens cars look up. It’s a small thing, perhaps, but these cars will be representing our city, not just the TTC. Do we want to be known as a city that is constantly frowning?

    Perhaps the TTC or Bombardier could hire some designers before the final cars are assembled.”

    Moaz: Considering the variety of designs used for the Flexity, I am sure that there is something iconic that can be incorporated into the Toronto design. Do you prefer the Dustbuster (Porto, Milan), the robot (Brussels, Palerme, Geneva), the robot with the chin (Eskisehir, Linz, Lodz, Graz) or my personal iconic favourite, the “Star Wars Medi-bot” (Marseilles).

    Cheers, Moaz

  15. Wotan wrote, “I have never understood how the TTC could even think that they could match current headways with less vehicles.”

    The simple answer is: with more doors and a new fare collection system. We’ll have to wait and see if this actually makes a difference, but I suspect that the all-too-common ‘farting around’ factor does just as much, if not more, to screw up operation than mixed traffic does.

  16. Nicholas Fitzpatrick says:

    Let’s be honest – with twice the capacity, some of the routes won’t need as many vehicles. Spadina in particular comes to mind, where they have over 20 vehicles providing a 2-minute service – but reality is that they all cluster up. With 5 doors to enter the vehicle rather than 1, and no clustering, I’m sure an every 3-minute service would suffice. And if the average speed can be increased (with less clustering, and boarding time) then there should be less vehicles necessary at peak.

    Steve: 4 doors, not 5, but the idea still holds. I am willing to bet that on a 3 minute headway there will still be bunching.

    And really it’s only AM peak that is the issue here, PM peak requires 5% less vehicles.

    And if King was fixed (ala Queen’s Quay), how many less cars would be necessary; there are currently 45 cars comitted to the AM Peak service on a 4-minute service yet by mid-morning, it only has 25 cars providing the same service level.

    Steve: No, King operates a 2-minute headway inbound from Dundas West for nearly an hour provided by trippers that come out in between the basic 4-minute headway. That’s why there are so many cars. It is not, for the most part, due to differences in running time. AM peak times are driven almost entirely by loading delays, not by traffic congestion. Faster, all door, POP loading will save a lot of time and make better use of the vehicles’ capacity.

  17. “the longer expected lifespan of a new car (at least a factor of 2, probably more including potential for rebuilding)”

    How long did they expect the PCCs to last? They did end up lasting 30 years, not including how long they ran in their city of origin. More then a few still run to this day.

    How long do you expect the new cars to last? Hopefully they’ll meet the 40 years that the CLRVs are going to have to last, but I doubt they are going to be a mainstay for 60 years.

    “If the TTC had set out to damage the reputation of streetcars deliberately, they did a great job in buying these cars.”

    It could have been worse. They could have bought Boeing LRVs which where built around the same time as the CLRVs.

  18. Kristian says:

    How often do you think I’ll get by-passed at a stop if I stand further back to do a POP entry at a secondary door? Sometimes the drivers don’t even stop when you’re waiting at the pole with the sign. And not that I’m much of a supporter of parking spaces, but how many spots will have to be removed across the entire system to make way for the new cars’ loading arrangement?

  19. Tom West says:

    “The option of paying a fare to the operator will vanish”
    So, visitors to the city, keen on using public transit to get around, will hop on board, cash in hand… and find they have to get off, buy a ticket somewhere else (where?) and then get on.

    TTC cannot seriously be planning on this… can they?

    Steve: Just like all the other cities that don’t provide onboard fare collection or sale. The tourists will learn.

  20. Leo Gonzalez says:

    The low profile of the Flexity really makes me wonder how it will fare during a typical Toronto snowstorm. I guess that will be one of the many non-revenue tests they will be conducting in 2011.

  21. CLRV4037 says:

    Part of the problem with dwell times at the stops are due to the speed at which the doors open and close. As an operator in bus, the the old GMs, and Flyers with dual stream exists using treadle mats where the doors pop open then “clunk, clunk, clunk, psshht” the bus is roaring and off it goes. With the newer Low Floor Flyers, and the Orion 7s, the doors slowly open, stay open, and slowly close. The amount of time spent at each stop has increased despite people already having alighted from the bus.

    The same has happened in streetcar, where you could pop the doors open in a PCC while it was still rolling to a stop, you had to wait until they were fully closed before the you had power, but the extra few seconds saved with the doors opening early made a difference. The CLRVs and ALRVs must come to a complete stop before the doors open, but they are still quick to close. I am concerned with the new cars with giant slide glide doors taking aeons to open and close at every stop.

    The new cars are going to have to either bi-folding doors like the front doors of the current fleet, or the slide glides are going to have to be very fast at opening and closing, otherwise there will be too much time spend at each stop.

    Part of the problem is the TTC’s insistence of having a streetcar stop every 12 feet, maybe if we removed some of these and had super-stops much like what has happening in St. Kilda Melbourne now, service speed could increase.

  22. Bob In North Toronto says:

    As a follow up to ” Moal Yusef Ahmad’s ” comment on April 27 at 4:33 am.

    The present conceptual design is not that bad. I was was expecting worse.

    I was actually hoping for something that could compete with the NICE or LYON designs. The French trams look the best. Do not expect to see those types of streetcars in Toronto.

  23. Darwin, you ain’t kidding about the Boeing LRVs. What I can’t believe is that Manchester, UK was crazy enough to buy a tiny number of them from San Francisco. Whomever made that decision to buy them in Manchester must have had SUCKER written all over him! Well, regarding the new TTC cars, if they go with Bombardier with the TC cars, what else will be different about those cars besides the fact that they will be bi-directional with doors on both sides and pantographs?

  24. John Bromley says:

    Note to CLRV4037

    European plug doors work very well and are not slow. Be thankful that the car we’ll get does not have the large single doors such as on the now-obsolete design for Strasbourg and Milan. They take forever, and Bombardier was not quick to learn this as the Milan cars were delivered several years after those in Strasbourg. Imagine, too, how slow those are when a last-minute boarder or alighting passenger stops the door when halfway closed and the safety mechanism opens it again. I’ve seen two minute stops with no traffic signal as doors open..and close part way…and open..and close partway…and (well, you get the picture).

    The Toronto car is very similar to those in Brussels, Graz, Linz, Innsbruck, Geneva and several other places. All have performed well when I’ve been on them, and I noticed no door issues.

    The Bombardier-provided artist conception, such as it was, appears also to have a single leaf door at the rear. Hard to tell, but there appears to be a protruding step plate at the back. We’d all better hope that door exists on the final design, there are few enough doors in the front and middle. If it isn’t there, the rearmost of the five units will be virtually useless, just like the rear of the current fleet.

    The interiors that I’ve seen APPEAR to be based on the narrow Brussels car, I think it’s 2400mm wide. Ours SHOULD have a wider aisle in view of the fact that they’ll be nearly 2.6 meters in width (8′ 6″ roughly).

  25. Beltliner says:

    Quick question I’d like to post to you and to the board, Steve, for the sake of discussion:

    A quick glance at the budget numbers suggests that the CLRV overhaul project now under way works out to just north of $320K per vehicle to hold them together until Toronto’s new trams come into service through 2018. If, just for fun, someone were to propose a more comprehensive refit of a CLRV–one involving a conversion of the vehicle to standard gauge, the replacement of trolley poles with pantographs, and a more comprehensive restoration of the vehicles’ bodywork and control systems to keep the vehicles on rails for, let’s speculate, 15 to 20 years–with an eye to exporting the vehicles to North American cities operating light rail systems with catenary traction power systems already in wide use, would anyone posting here have a rough-carpentry dollar figure per vehicle on what this refit might cost?

    Steve: The only cities that could use such cars are those with exclusively high-platform loading. This would be a very small market. We already know that the TTC’s estimate for roughly the same thing was over $1-million per car, and a good chunk of that was the need for replacement electronics.

  26. Karl Junkin says:

    I find it curious how we’re not complaining about the T-1 subway doors being slow to close, or open for that matter.

  27. Jared says:

    Two Things
    A) Does The low floor allow for level street curb access for those with mobility issues … (spacing between curb edge, sliding doors and Tram floor)? What about all the stations? Will the tracks be sunk down the last few inches for level boarding?

    Steve: Yes and no in that order. The intent is for floors to be roughly at the same height as station platforms.

    B) Looking through Bombardier website, really enjoying the PRIMOVE Catenary-Free Technology. Is this something that could be considered in the upcoming TC or in future legacy track replacements? Over head wires are as much an intrusion as billboards.

    Steve: No. Overhead systems would have to remain in place until the last of the CLRVs and ALRVs were retired, and there would be no point in having a completely duplicate system for power distribution, especially one that would require complete reconstruction of the trackbeds. The last time I was at Dundas Square, I noticed the billboards a lot more than the overhead power supply for the streetcars.

    This technology is intended for a niche market where the extra expense of putting the power supply underground is offset by the special character (historic buildings and views) of the neighbourhood traversed by the trams. Transit City lines do not operate in such neighbourhoods.

  28. Tom West says:

    Steve: “Just like all the other cities that don’t provide onboard fare collection or sale. The tourists will learn.”

    The crucial difference is that those systems have stations – i.e., there a relatively small number of clearly defiend places where you board and alight, all of which have ticket machines. However, Toronto’s streetcars stop all over the place (with less indicatation than for a bus…). This means either TTC will have to provide ticket machines at every intersection (with all the associated costs), or have people wondering where to buy tickets.

    Steve: The TTC is well aware that fare collection and ticketing strategies need to be revised. The biggest problem will be the turf war between a “make do for now” incremental scheme the TTC is likely to favour and Queen’s Park’s Presto smartcard system. Even those smartcards will need a way to be purchased and loaded with “cash” value, and that’s a challenge the Presto project must face if their medium is to become the only method of paying fares throughout the GTA.

    These are not just TTC problems, although it’s popular to bash the TTC because they are the first system out the gate with a truly widespread implementation of proof-of-payment on a large system with many casual riders.

  29. David Magda says:

    Another option for tourist payments would be to sell pre-paid cards at convenience stores and such (or even offered by hotels as service to their guests).

    While smart cards are probably the way to go in the future, there isn’t much information on how Presto is implemented on the back-end. Given the goings-on in other transit systems, the transit authorities better examine things closely:

    http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2008/10/09/smartcard-security.html
    http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0819/p01s01-usgn.html
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MBTA_v._Anderson
    http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/03/london_tube_sma.html

    New York’s MetroCard seems fairly resilient to fraud:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MetroCard_(New_York_City)

    Steve: Proof-of-payment schemes long predate smart card technology. It’s important that the TTC (and the GTA) not be browbeaten into technology for its own sake, but have a system that can actually work and be convenient for all concerned.

  30. Karl Junkin says:

    Suggesting that all systems with on-board fare validation use a system that has ticket machines at all stops is inaccurate. Gothenburg, Sweden as an example, they have kiosks at larger stops with multiple intersecting routes (which are more like convenience stores run by the transit agency, think of a Gateway Newstands selling tickets), but otherwise, it is up to the rider to purchase tickets from somewhere like a convenience store before boarding. The TTC already commonly deals with convenience stores (and other types of places, like schools) along or near its routes as authorized ticket agencies. Putting automated vending machines at every surface stop is a ridiculous waste of infrastructure investment when we have convenience stores at or near most intersections anyway (maybe not so much in the core where real estate gets pricey, but other than that). Convenience stores are our ticket-vending infrastructure in this case. A map on the shelter pointing to the nearest ticket vendor is all we’d need for the majority of stops. The only thing we need to define is what the acceptable distance should be from the stop.

    Viva needs to have fare vending machines at every stop because convenience stores are practically an alien concept in the 905. Transit City could see some parts of its network suffer from similar problems.

  31. Further to Karl’s comments, the comment about Viva is not quite right. True, convenience stores are sparse in the 905, but the Vivastations are needed for either paying cash fare or using tickets already purchased elsewhere.

    An onboard vending unit is not a far-fetched idea for the legacy network. Melbourne uses these for the purchase of single fares (good for 2 hours, rounded up to the next hour). See http://lrt.daxack.ca/Melbourne/hires018.jpg for a photo. Other choices of fare media are available from just about every convenience store and newsstand.

    Onboard fare purchasing is also available on the PreMetro LRT in Buenos Aires. See http://lrt.daxack.ca/Buenos%20Aires/hires015.jpg for a photo of this. Single fare there is just $0.60 (CAD$0.24) or $0.90 with a transfer to the subway (CAD$0.36). I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for the TTC to copy their fare practice, though! ;-)

  32. Robert Lubinski says:

    M. Briganti said: “Why you prefer those earthquake rattle boxes called PCCs is beyond me” … obviously you missed out on the heyday of the Witt cars, which were unaffectionately known as “bone shakers” compared to the PCCs. I grew up riding PCCs and on good track they are nearly as smooth a ride as the CLRVs. While PCCs gave you whiplash in stop and go traffic, CLRVs can be just as bad when the spin/ slide sensor is malfunctioning, so let’s call it even.

    It’s the last 25 years of track in poor condition (which we’ve finally almost fixed) that have led to bumpy and bouncy rides on all types of cars. We have to hope that the track maintenance regime doesn’t let the conditions slip back to the way things were in the 90s, or the new cars will become “earthquake rattle boxes” as well. The upkeep of track has to go hand in hand with the new fleet or else its life will be shortened.

    Steve: My current favourite piece of unmaintained track is on Queen at Mutual, a short stretch that somehow was missed in various rebuilding programs, where it sounds like you’re going over special work even though Mutual Loop was removed before I started riding streetcars.

  33. Say, Steve, you were saying that all the PCCs the TTC bought were standard gauge. You were right with ONE exception; the ones from Cincinnati were broad gauge, not standard.

  34. John Bromley says:

    Many European systems have fare vending machines & cancellers (where necessary, for multi-use tickets) onboard the trams themselves. Much cheaper to buy a machine or two (max) for each car than put them at stops. Nothing wrong with self-service, it’s been around since the 1960s overseas.

    Most European buses in tram cities do not have fare-issuing machines, just the trams. There are exceptions, so please don’t fill Steve’s blog with long lists to prove me wrong.

  35. George Bell says:

    If I remember correctly…Melbourne has ticket vending machines on the train itself….if you are a weekly/monthly/yearly card holder you don’t need to swipe. The only time you need to swipe is if you have a “per ride” or “per hour” card which can be bought on the tram and swiped. At busy stops you can buy/swipe/get your card before you get on the vehicle, this saves loading time, but it also means the tram can start moving and everyone still hasn’t paid…which saves a lot of time….

    If someone asks to see your card, it better be a monthly pass or have been swiped in the last little while…they also add the additional option of having your pass only valid in a specific zone, which means that if I have a monthly pass for zone A, and need to go to zone B, I can just buy a two hour pass for zone B on my card…this would be good for Toronto where most people only need two areas most of the time (say oakville->toronto), but if they need to go to markham, they can buy a two hour extension…

    They have other friendly options for tourists (valid only for routes areas with major tourist destinations), as well as seniors/students, sunday passes, early bird passes (imagine it was cheaper to get to work if you left an hour early, employers would love it), even passes for companion health care workers…

    In Toronto most locals would have a card and cary it around with them even if they were an occasional user. The tourists usually start out at major transit hubs (Union, Airport) or hotels which would have cards, or from other tourist destinations (ie. leave the car for the day) which would also have larger machines. The onboard machines would get refilled during layovers, if necessary (and could inform operators if they were getting low on cards).

  36. Rob M says:

    The tourists will be fine as long as the TTC does a good job of detailing just what the systems for payment are. And this has to be more than the poor attempts that they make now.

    I had ridden buses in smaller towns long before I came to Toronto in the mid 90′s. Once I was here I was puzzled by how people were just climbing on the back doors of buses at some subway stations and I also was puzzled about how I managed to get on the subway without ever paying a fare. (because I naively walked in where I shouldn’t have)

    Only when I got home to my hot 37th Street room (it was July) and unfolded the map was I finally able to figure out what they must mean. There was a very faint pink colour on some stations and not on others and I eventually was able to figure out what this pink meant, not without turning the map over and over a few times.

    Alright, so I rambled here – but the occasional rider and especially the tourist may not have a clue what P.O.P. means. It’s all familiar to the regulars, but there are enough “irregulars” on the system to warrant a few paragraphs (not just point-form lingo that looks like they paid by the word) on every map at every station, and even the paper ones that you may still be able to get, not to mention on the website itself.

    There’s nothing worse than being baffled by the system. You have money and you get a ride. Anything more complicated than that needs to be explained and everyone will get it.

  37. Mark Dowling says:

    This tender has been handled poorly from a political point of view. Baird and Smitherman have basically said they have not agreed to fund these cars. Smitherman, blowhard that he is told the Notional Pest “Oh the city have said they’re going to do the contract with Bombardier. And in the next breath I heard we were paying for it. So that was a bit challenging” – and I suppose it’s a bit brave to tell the people of your riding you’re not willing to help fund streetcars that run through your own riding.

    Steve: It is totally disingenuous for anyone in Ottawa or Queen’s Park to pretend that they have not been asked to fund these cars. The order has been in the TTC’s plans for a few years, and there have been many discussions about how to pay for it. If there was not going to be an agreement to fund, then both levels of government had plenty of time to say “no, don’t ask” and scotch the deal along with everything dependent on it.

    Let’s be clear on a few things.

    1. Regional development is NOT a responsibility of the City of Toronto. It is not Admiral Giambrone’s job to have a good news story when he stumps for candidates in Thunder Bay in future elections. Canadian content should be secured on the commitment of funds by senior governments and not the other way round. I’m not arguing against CanCon, but unless it’s 416Con the benefits accrue to other levels of government so they should be the ones covering the price premium that entails. Indeed, we should be demanding that Ontario provide financial assistance for the new line itself just as they were offering millions to Sergio Marchionne to build Alfa Romeo sports cars a few months back.

    2. Transit City should be, clearly, a secondary project to the downtown cars. Why? Because buses aren’t going to be AODA non-compliant and/or scrapped in a few years. The notion that we go to buses on the 501 while digging a tunnel under Eglinton is unacceptable.

    3. We’re being used, and we should be fighting back. When it came to the TC announcement, there were no caveats that it wasn’t shovel ready – unless they meant TTC was going to build an LRT on Finch West with no cars running on it?

    4. Those of us who warned that this tender would be trojan-horsed into a TC order, irrespective of the possibility that a different manufacturer’s car would be superior or most cost-effective ON TC LINES are being proved correct. Nobody has yet shown to my satisfaction what the advantage of giving BBD preferred status is, or even that Thunder Bay will be able to produce 600 cars in the timeframe required. I would argue that even within the TC order, we might see a common loading/track gauge but differing cars on Eglinton and former SRT compared to the other lines. The economy of scale argument is seriously diluted by the sheer numbers of cars we are contemplating. One can imagine a line of thinking in TTC that because Bombardier deserve the TC order because they took on the tougher assignment in the downtown cars. That should not be how it works when you’re spending other people’s money.

  38. george Bell says:

    Just wondering what the options are if we don’t get the other 66% of funding? Is there a potential to go ahead with the order anyway and either take out a loan, or implement other revenue streams to help pay for the last two thirds? How much is due prior to delivery? Would the third cover the initial buy, and then we have 2 or 3 years to figure out where the other funds are coming from? I’m wondering if this is a good time for Toronto to start charging a fee to those driving in from the 905?

  39. Laurie Gordon says:

    We have about 8 years before the last cars are delivered. Eight years to raise about $800 million. That’s about $100 million/year, or $33 per year per Torontonian. I think we can afford that, even if the senior levels don’t ante up!

  40. Dave R in the Beach says:

    I don’t see having vending machines at each stop as that expensive. I’d note that there are already city-owned vending machines on both sides of long stretches of many transit routes – on every block. These take cash and credit cards and print out coded, time sensitive tickets.

    Steve: They would have to be reworked to vend transit fares as well as parking receipts, but your comment is a sound one. Making it happen, however, should be an interesting exercise in interagency co-operation between the TTC and the Parking Authority.

  41. Mark Gold says:

    John Barber of the Globe & Mail has a good column today on the disingenuous Smitherman. It is ridiculous for him to claim the province knew nothing of the TTC need for new LRT cars.

    Steve: Please see my separate post on this issue. It includes a link to John Barber’s article.

  42. Robert Lubinski’s comments on Peter Witt and PCC riding qualities brought back a childhood memory. I used to think any PCC ride was rough until one summer evening when my parents, brother and I took a ride on that Belt Line Tour Tram which used the Witts. One ride on a Witt caused me never to complain about a PCC ride on the TTC being rough again! If there’s anything I can’t fault the CLRVs and the ALRVs on it’s the the riding quality.

    Steve: You will get a chance to check out a PCC on Harbourfront starting tomorrow.

  43. Kristian says:

    If the PCCs (or at least one) are going to be out in ‘regular’ service, does that mean they’ve had the GPS and stop announcement systems installed? If not then I would think the operator would be required by current policies to announce every stop. I won’t be able to get down there to check it out anytime soon so perhaps someone can find out.

  44. Robert Wightman says:

    TTC Passenger says:

    “Two out of three trucks powered has me a bit concerned with respect to the implications it would have for acceleration and braking rates (keep in mind, dynamic braking’s not available on unpowered axles). This won’t be a huge issue of the Transit City lines have widely spaced stops but if they’re tightly spaced, the impact on schedules and average speed could become significant. These were the factors that led London Underground to decide to have all the axles in the 92 stock and later tube trains motorized.”

    The Acceleration/deceleration rate for 4 out of 6 axle’s being powered is 2/3’s of ¼ of g or 5.3 ft/s/s or 1.6 m/s/s which is above that which a human finds comfortable. I have ridden many vehicles with only 2 powered trucks out of 3 and they can knock you off your feet with acceleration. The problem comes when you enter the constant power curve versus the constant accelerating force portion. If you want to go to a high enough speed then having all axles powered is an advantage but for the speeds that the legacy or the TC cars reach there should be no problem. Did London have 2/3 of their axles powered or were they running true trailers? If you want to get up to 80 mph like GO then it is helpful to have all axles powered.

    TTC Passenger says:

    “Huh? I kept beating that to death in the comments here suggesting that it’d be possible to examine the pole and shoe assembly and modify it to get the electric current handling rating up high enough for the new cars. Everybody was adamant that trolley poles couldn’t be modified like I suggested and therefore pantographs would be used on the new cars with the necessary changes to the overhead wire. How’d the impossible suddenly become so possible?”

    There were many electric locomotives that had upwards of a 1000 hp being powered by a single trolley pole. This is 100 year old technology here; it has been done before.

    Fare Collection:

    I have ridden many tram lines and other modes of public transport in over 30 cities in the world that speak at least 10 different languages. Now I speak English relatively well, French comme ci comme ca, German, Dutch, Norwegian, Flemish, Danish, Swedish, Spanish, Israeli, Greek, Egyptian, Thai, Cantonese, Urdu and Punjabi less well. However in all cities it was easy to figure out how to pay the fare and where to buy it. Usually it was done at the hotel, a place that most tourists are familiar with. Also more people speak English passably than other languages so the odds are that they will be able to if they are in Toronto. If they can’t then the odds are better in Toronto that they can find someone who speaks their language than elsewhere. I doubt that many tourists will make their initial ride on a Toronto Street Car at the corner of Queen Street and Munro Park. They will probably ask the concierge at their hotel how to ride or the friend or relative with whom they are staying. I think that you are making a mountain out of a proverbial molehill.

    Steve: Munro Park is almost at the east end of the Queen line, and has no relationship with my family, as far as I know.

    Legacy PCC’s:

    I remember on the last Friday before Labour Day in 1965 standing by Russell Division around 3:00 p.m. when the Ex was running full tilt and there were races at Greenwood. The Inspector said to an operator “I wish there was another car available; I need to send out a race track tripper.”

    The operator said: “The Witt is available.” And 2766 made two full trips from McCaul to Woodbine as a race track tripper, and no one who rode it made any comment about it being different, except for the two little old ladies who liked the fact that it had an extra fold down step in the front and thought that it must be a new design. I wonder how many people will notice that the PCC is different.

  45. Gordon Keith says:

    I have been examining the specs for the low floor bogies (Wheel sets) and they do not appear to have track brake systems. The dynamic braking appears to be an improvement on current technology, but appears to depend on the power storage of Mi-Trak. In addition to dynamic brakes they appear to use hydraulic brakes.

    Are there any additional specs avalilable at this time?

    Steve: Only whatever is on Bombardier’s website.

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