On Friday, Waterfront Toronto announced a plan to relocate the Gardiner Expressway from Jarvis to the DVP into a surface road parallel to the rail corridor. For reasons that are unclear, the Environmental Assessment for this project will take four years — even longer that the infinitely tedious transit EAs for simple lines like Cherry Street through which many of us have suffered.
(The issues about how long or short an EA should be are complex in their own right and I won’t dwell on them here.)
In brief, the scheme replaces the elevated road with an at-grade eight-lane divided street, with University Avenue cited as the prototype. The new road would be north of the existing expressway structure allowing all of the land south of the rail corridor to be reconfigured and redeveloped.
Traffic projections indicate a slight rise in travel times for trips through this area. Not unexpectedly, the motoring lobby already predicts at least doom and gloom, if not fire and brimstone for good measure. I have no sympathy for them at all.
The eastern part of the Gardiner is lightly used. Even during the AM peak, the traffic flowing south on the DVP past my apartment (just north of Bloor) is rarely bumper-to-bumper because so many cars leave the road further north. Jammed traffic means there has been an accident, not that there is no capacity. Northbound backlogs on the DVP are inevitably caused by accidents much further north, by early closings downtown on long weekends, and by the end of major sporting events. The queue rarely reaches to Dundas Street. Lowering the capacity west of the Don will have little effect on overall travel times because the main areas of congestion lie elsewhere.
The new configuration will simplify the work on rearranging roads at the Don Mouth where a knot formed by Lake Shore, Cherry, Parliament, and Queen’s Quay (not to mention the Gardiner) is a very pedestrian-hostile environment. Moreover, with the new “Waterfront Boulevard” being a street, not an expressway, connections with local roads will not require ramp structures, only traffic lights.
Why we have to wait eight years for this wonderful new arrangement is a mystery, but I am sure that many consultants will retire, or at least buy a nice house in the country, on this project.
Mixed in with Friday’s announcement are two other items of more than passing interest.
The York Street Ramp
Although we don’t have any details, there is a plan to realign the York Street off ramp, the corkscrew that occupies much of the northeast corner of Queen’s Quay and York. When I can find out what exactly is involved, I will publish details here.
The neighbourhood groups along Queen’s Quay have been pushing for this for some time, but until we know the details, we won’t see whether all we get is a larger parkette but also a new off-ramp fouling up some other intersection.
The Front Street Extension
This road is now about as dead as it can be without the requisite wooden stake through its heart. Even Councillor Joe Pantalone, long an advocate for this road, says it is something for another generation, according to media reports. Meanwhile, former Councillor Dominelli, a landowner in the Liberty Village area long reputed to be pushing for the FSE, has actually stated he just wants a local road, thank you, so that he can get on with his redevelopment.
Considering how long many people have tried to get just that proposal on the table and been rebuffed at every turn, this is a very strange development. Finally, we can get on with properly designing and building roads to serve the community from Bathurst to Dufferin, rather than an off-ramp to the expressway serving commuters from Burlington.
In deference to his long battles on this front [you can groan here], I propose that the new road be called Hamish Boulevard.