TTC Plans Major Maintenance Work on Line 1

Regular users of the Spadina branch of Line 1 YUS will know that speed restrictions have been common in the open cut section of the line between Eglinton West and the north end of Wilson Yard. They appear on the map of reduced speed zones, vanish, and reappear a few weeks later.

Part of the problem is the temporary nature of some repairs, and partly due to underlying problems in the track support system. There are similar problems elsewhere on Line 1, and some of these go back years. A major issue in mounting a repair campaign is that closing a subway line for an extended period is a major upheaval especially over an extended distance or on a busy day.

A major project from June 1-8 will address:

  • Southbound Yorkdale to Wilson: Concrete slab repair to ensure long-term structural integrity, requiring two full days for concrete to cure.
  • Northbound Yorkdale to Wilson and Glencairn to Lawrence West: Installation of new rail.
  • Northbound Dupont to St Clair West: Replacement of track hardware

These areas correspond to some of the remaining RSZs on the current map.

In order to achieve this work, the Spadina branch between St. George and Sheppard West Stations will close early, at 11:59pm, Monday, June 1 to Thursday, June 4. On Friday evening, June 5-6, this section will not close until 12:30am to accommodate an event at the Rogers Stadium.

From Sunday, June 7 at 12:30am to Monday, June 8 at 6:00am, there will be no service over this section. A partial closure will continue through Monday until 6:00am on Tuesday, June 9 with single track operation on the northbound rail between Wilson and Lawrence West Stations. This will necessarily not be at the usual subway frequency.

Shuttle buses will run, but riders are encouraged to use the Yonge branch of the subway via bus and LRT services on Sheppard, Wilson, Lawrence and Eglinton.

This type of major repair is long overdue, and the proliferation of RSZs was a testament to the level of TTC maintenance for many years. This has been compounded recently by availability and reliability issues with the subway work car fleet. A proposal to rebuild Line 1 south of Eglinton Station goes back to the Byford era, but it has always been regarded as impossible due to the volume of riders there and the extent of the work involved.

What we do not know is whether there are additional major works yet to be announced, when and where they would occur. TTC owes it to riders to give a sense of what they actually plan, painful though some of this work may be.

The TTC’s move to a larger scale project is welcome, but is this is a temporary surge to remove as many problem areas as possible for the World Cup period, or will we see a continued effort to deal with and permanently repair track infrastructure problems as they occur. Riders next winter who are not football tourists are entitled to the same level of effort as our summer visitors.

3 thoughts on “TTC Plans Major Maintenance Work on Line 1

  1. The solution to these type of very large maintenance tasks is just to announce them way in advance…we should be able to announce these 2-3 years out in some cases…and then stick to the plan and force folks like the blue jays and rogers to work around it, rather than vice versa….

    Obviously not all projects can be done like this, especially if things get worse quickly…

    But seriously, we’ve known about this since the Byford era…so just pick a month…tell everyone it’s going to be out of commission that month…and then get it done…and open early and surprise everyone with how quick you did the really hard thing…

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  2. The TTC (and city) should make sure there are sufficient workers available needed to actually do the work quickly and accurately. In Europe and Asia, we see hundreds of people doing transit construction, even if it means overtime and extra people.

    Here, we have to use the minimum number of workers and to avoid overtime, to save money. Why did the Gardiner Expressway get extra workers for its reconstruction, even though the automobile will transport less people than public transit?

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  3. Soooo … I know that lack of maintenance killed Line 3 … but why are lines 5 and 6 not on this map? I’m sure there hasn’t been enough time for the “PPP” track to deteriorate to the point of needing RSZs on 5 and 6 but there aren’t any noted on Line 4 either … so it’s not just a map of lines with slow orders … so where are 5 and 6?

    Steve: TTC is not responsible for Lines 5 and 6 infrastructure, ergo they are not tracking slow zones. Also, with the cocked up speed profiles and signal pseudo-priority, we would need to distinguish between operational (TTC) and infrastructure (Metrolinx) problems.

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