Scarborough RT (TTC)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Scarborough RT)
Jump to: navigation, search
Scarborough RT
An RT train leaving Lawrence East station.
Info
Type Rapid transit
System Toronto subway and RT
Locale Toronto, Ontario
Terminals Kennedy
McCowan
No. of stations 6
Daily ridership 42,390 (avg. weekday) [1]
Operation
Opened March 22, 1985
Operator(s) Toronto Transit Commission
Rolling stock ICTS Mark I
Technical
Line length 6.4 km (4.2 mi)
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in)
Electrification Third rail, Linear induction

The Scarborough RT (sometimes shortened to SRT or RT) is a rapid transit line in the Scarborough district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Rather than the long subway trains used by the Toronto Transit Commission’s three other rapid-transit lines, it uses the shorter Bombardier Advanced Rapid Transit (ICTS) Mark I vehicles powered by linear induction motors. They are essentially the same as the original fleet of the Vancouver SkyTrain and that of the Detroit People Mover, although unlike these other operators, the TTC has opted to run them semi-automatically with a driver on board to accede to union pressure that the trains be crewed.

The line has six stations and is 6.4 km (4.2 miles) in length. It is operated by the Toronto Transit Commission and administered as part of its subway system, although the Scarborough RT differs technologically from the city’s other three lines in a number of respects. RT simply stands for "rapid transit", as the name "subway" seemed inappropriate for a line with only a small section underground. Internally, the TTC uses the name "rapid transit" to refer to all four lines. The term is sometimes used for streetcar lines as well. The line’s tracks are of standard gauge, unlike those of the rest of Toronto’s streetcar and subway lines).

The line is internally referred to as Route 3 (formerly route 603), but this number is not used by the public or shown on TTC maps and signs.

Late at night when the Scarborough RT is not operating, the 302 Danforth Rd-McCowan Blue Night bus serves the same area. The 302 originates at Danforth and Warden, where it connects with the 300 Bloor-Danforth that travels to the west. From Warden, the 302 travels east along Danforth to McCowan, then north along McCowan to Steeles. With the exception of McCowan RT station, it does not pass near any of the subway or RT stations, though other night bus services pass near stations. Bus service is extended on Sundays because the subway and RT start at 9:00 a.m. instead the usual 6:00 a.m. start.

Toronto subway/RT
Yonge-University-Spadina
Bloor-Danforth
Scarborough RT
Sheppard

Contents


Logo of the Scarborough RT.
Logo of the Scarborough RT.
The abandoned loop at Kennedy Station, now a dead-end tail track.
The abandoned loop at Kennedy Station, now a dead-end tail track.
The original streetcar platform can be seen at Kennedy Station
The original streetcar platform can be seen at Kennedy Station
The abandoned loop at Kennedy Station, now a dead-end tail track.
The abandoned loop at Kennedy Station, now a dead-end tail track.
The RT on its elevated tracks between Scarborough Centre and McCowan
The RT on its elevated tracks between Scarborough Centre and McCowan

In the early 1980s, the TTC had proposed to extend the Bloor-Danforth line using streetcars operating in a private right-of-way, but the ICTS system was used instead because the Province of Ontario agreed to pay a large portion of the costs. This change was made after construction had commenced. At Kennedy Station, there are clues revealing that it was originally built for streetcar operation, it is possible to see old low-level streetcar platforms protruding under the current high-level platforms, and Kennedy station originally had a loop to turn streetcars. This proved too sharp for safe operation of SRT cars, and the loop was abandoned for regular usage and replaced by a crossover. Ontario wanted to develop and promote its new technology, which was originally designed for an urban GO Transit service known as GO ALRT. Changes to federal railway regulations had made the new system unnecessary for GO, and so the government hoped to sell it to other transit services in order to recoup its investment.

It was developed by the Urban Transportation Development Corporation (UTDC), then an Ontario Crown corporation but now a division of Bombardier. The business proposal initially bore little fruit – a proposed pilot project in Hamilton was cancelled after meeting widespread public opposition, and the technology was used initially only by the Scarborough RT, Vancouver’s SkyTrain, and the Detroit People Mover. With expansion of the SkyTrain and sales to Ankara, Kuala Lumpur, New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport, and now Seoul, a newer version, sold under the name "ART" (advanced rapid transit), has become a success for Bombardier (see Bombardier Advanced Rapid Transit).

One unusual feature of the ICTS cars is that they are driven by linear induction motors: instead of using conventional motors to turn the wheels, they push themselves along the route using magnets and a distinctive metal plate that runs down the centre of the tracks. This system requires very few moving parts, and therefore leads to lower maintenance costs.

When the car motor is accelerating, it actually lifts the car off the track an extremely small distance. This micro-lifting prevents the truck wheels from making a solid electrical contact with the track. Instead of using the conventional method where motive power is supplied by a single third rail, with return current traveling through the running rails, a separate positive and negative power rail are provided on one side of the track. With respect to the accelerating trucks and the micro-lifting, the truck wheels have a somewhat larger flange than normal in order to keep the car inline on the track during the micro-lifting.

The trains are also able to be operated exclusively by computers, doing away with the need for a human operator. The public, however, was not ready for driverless trains when the Scarborough RT opened, particularly in light of frequent software glitches early in its operation, so operators were retained (other systems, including Vancouver’s, take full advantage of automated operation). The Scarborough RT trains have only one operator, unlike TTC subway trains which carry both a guard, who operates the train’s doors, and an operator, who drives. In practice, the Scarborough RT trains drive themselves; the operator monitors their operations and controls the doors. The transit workers' union has firmly opposed driverless trains.[1]

The Scarborough RT opened in March 1985. Only three years after it opened, the TTC had to renovate its south-western terminus at Kennedy station, because the looped turnaround track, originally designed for streetcars under the earlier plan and not needed for the bi-directional ICTS trains, was causing derailments; it was replaced with a single terminal track.

Largely because of the relatively high cost of the ICTS technology for the service it provides, the line has seen no extensions since it opened. Many transit advocates believe that it would have been wiser either to build it using streetcars, as was originally planned, to allow for lower costs and more flexibility in route options, or to simply extend the underground Bloor-Danforth line further into Scarborough (for more details, see The future below).


Scarborough RT
leer leer STR uKDSa
McCowan Yard
leer leer STR uHST-ELEV
McCowan
leer leer STR uHST-ELEV
Scarborough Centre
leer leer STR uHST-ELEV
Midland
leer uSTRrg UKRZo uSTRrf
leer uHST STR leer
Ellesmere
leer uHST STR leer
Lawrence East
utCPICAla uCPICAme CPICAr leer
Kennedy TTC & Kennedy GO
utSTR exHLUECKE eABZlg leer
utSTRrf leer STR leer
Bloor-Danforth line
A map of the Scarborough line.

The line follows a roughly L-shaped route: first northward from Kennedy Station, parallelling the Canadian National Railway tracks, between Kennedy Road and Midland Avenue, 4 km to Ellesmere Road; then eastward between Ellesmere and Progress Avenue, through Scarborough Town Centre to McCowan Road. The Scarborough RT’s ICTS trains, which are not shared with any of the TTC’s other lines, have their own small yard east of McCowan station. This yard is large enough to store the existing fleet, but would have to be expanded or replaced if the TTC were to expand the line’s capacity by buying new trains. Basic maintenance is performed in this yard, but for more major work, the cars are taken to the subway’s Greenwood yards, which must be done by truck because differences in track gauge make it impossible for the Scarborough RT’s track to be connected with the rest of the subway and streetcar systems.

The north-south section of the route, where it follows the CN tracks, is at ground level; the shorter east-west section (except for the ground-level yard) is elevated, as is the Kennedy terminus. The line dives briefly underground just north of Ellesmere station to cross under the CN tracks.

All stations, whether by transfer or fare-paid terminal, connect to surface TTC bus routes. Other connections are noted below.

Two stations, Kennedy and Scarborough Centre are wheelchair accessible.

For a list of stations on this line and their major connections and details, see: List of Toronto Transit Commission stations.

There have been proposals to add a station at Brimley Road due to the increased number of residential developments in the area of Brimley Road and Ellesmere Road.

There were at one point plans for the Scarborough RT to be extended further east, with stations at Bellamy Road, Markham Road, Milner Avenue, and Sheppard Avenue East, but they had largely been abandoned, primarily because of the high costs of the ICTS technology [2].

Although the Scarborough RT line is heavily used, its future is uncertain, as its aging fleet has never been expanded since it opened, and consists entirely of ICTS Mark I trains, which are no longer produced.

In November 2005, an information meeting was held as part of an official study on the prospects of this line. [3]

Some possible solutions include:

  • converting the line to a separated streetcar line, using either new or refurbished vehicles;
  • extending the Bloor-Danforth line (either along the current Scarborough RT route or along a different alignment directly to Scarborough Centre), and then closing the Scarborough RT;
  • buying Bombardier’s ART Mark II vehicles, the successors to the ICTS technology;
  • paying Bombardier to re-start the production of ICTS Mark I trains; or
  • purchasing used ICTS Mark I trains from Vancouver’s SkyTrain network.

Most of these options have difficulties associated with them. In order to run ART Mark II trains, the line would require expensive upgrades, as they are longer than the ICTS Mark I units and would have difficulty negotiating the current track’s curves at a reasonable speed. One possible option is the Mark II-a, which are essentially shorter versions of the Mark II vehicles. Paying Bombardier to produce Mark II-a trains would be expensive, however, as they would be of unique design. On top of all these problems, the only place attached to the line where trains can be stored is McCowan Yard, which is nearly full even with the current fleet. However when the people of Scarborough were offered an extension of the SRT, it was planned that a new yard would be built east of McCowan.

Extending the Bloor-Danforth line would be even more expensive, but as the bulk of the Scarborough RT’s passengers are travelling between Scarborough Centre and Kennedy, where they change to the Bloor-Danforth line, it would eliminate a transfer for large numbers of people; it could also be built without closing the current line until the new one was ready for service. Additionally, the closure of the standard-gauge Scarborough RT would save having to maintain two separate fleets of trains and work vehicles for Toronto’s rapid-transit network (the subway uses a non-standard gauge), and allow the entire network to be operated as one system. That being said, having two separate routes leaves open the option of extending the subway line eastward along Eglinton Avenue towards Guildwood and Rouge Hill, with possible connections to GO Transit’s Lakeshore East trains at Guildwood or Rouge Hill stations (although there are no current plans for such an extension).

The view outside of Lawrence East Station, as of August 2007.
The view outside of Lawrence East Station, as of August 2007.

The simplest option would be to replace the ICTS trains with streetcars, and run the Scarborough RT as the separated streetcar line it was originally intended to be. Because of the line’s standard-gauge track, third-rail power supply and high boarding platforms, it would not make sense to use the same low-floor fleet the TTC plan to buy for their regular streetcar network, but there are many suitable high-floor vehicles on the market, and the replacement of the current streetcars on the regular lines will render surplus a large number of refurbished CLRV and ALRV streetcars, which could be rebuilt for use on the Scarborough RT. This would not require the abandonment of any existing stations, but would not do anything to eliminate the transfer at Kennedy or the need for an additional fleet.

Scarborough-area city councillors campaigned to replace the line with a tunnelled extension of the Bloor-Danforth subway, claiming they could gain more ridership than the proposed Spadina line extension to York University. [4] In August 2006 however, the TTC released a report, concluding that updating the RT's trains to Mark II vehicles is the most beneficial option. [5]

On June 15, 2007, the Ontario government had released MoveOntario 2020, a plan that would fund 52 different transit projects throughout Toronto and Hamilton for the cost of $17.5 billion, including the Scarborough RT extension to Sheppard Avenue, which would meet the proposed Sheppard East LRT line, also to be funded by MoveOntario 2020.

  1. ^ Bruser, David (2006-11-17). TTC eyes driverless subway. Toronto Star. Retrieved on 2007-12-08.

Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.