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I'm not particularly thrilled by the predominance of the aerial infrastructure. I would have much rather seen a trenched system, but i'm positive the geologic/volcanic/seismic conditions of Hawaii had engineers scared to do anything below ground level. They made a college try at beautifying the concrete aeriel structure, but I find it quite hideous. It looks like something you'd see in the developing SE Asia and I'm not convinced it will at all age well. But that being said, to many who have never visited, many areas of Oahu aren't particularly pretty at ground level, so maybe it's not as much a negative aesthetic impact.
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32 km of grade separated metro for 10 billion is that bad...
That is just over 300 million a KM. The new 17km elevated Expo Line extension into Langley will be around 170 million per KM. (Metro Vancouver) So not that bad for the US I guess. I would also say that the closest comparison for the Honolulu project in NA would be Skytrain in Vancouver. |
I think you can add “Section 3” of the Los Angeles Purple Line to the list, as LA Metro has finally given the Notice to Proceed to the tunneling contractor on January 15, 2019, after months of delays from the federal government:
http://bit.ly/2WMz4Gz Quote:
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REM is about 40% at-grade and runs in a highway median (A10), alongside another one (A40) and on an existing rail ROW (Deux-Montagnes line). Apart from one station (South Shore Terminal), the project is built near currently populated areas and employment centers, with several TOD opportunities. It's also much less expensive than HART (this can be attributed to several factors including an existing tunnel through the Mount Royal) with a $6.4B pricetag for 67km and 26 stations. |
Honolulu's issue is that it's an El Paso or Birmingham AL-sized urbanized area with the transit needs of a Seattle. They should have a Metro and it should be roughly along this corridor (though with fewer western stops and more eastern ones). But because it's a small city and because US infrastructure is way more expensive than it should be, they can't really afford it.
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Maybe your construction corporations are too greedy for real. That being said, in my country, the workforce has been underpaid, which ain't right either. Causing another frustration, and serious social issues. I guess there's something right in the middle, between you guys and us. |
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Honolulu also has the issue that theyre so isolated. That makes everything more expensive because it has to be shipped in. The price of some food items in their supermarkets are pretty shocking.
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Denver's 11-mile G line will open 4/26: http://www3.rtd-denver.com/elbert/ne...x.cfm?id=11689
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Wow! 9,000 passengers per day. That is incredibly low for higher order transit.
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Denver's G line moved to complete.
Other openings to look forward to this spring or summer:
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^ Waterloo’s LRT will open on June 21st, as announced yesterday.
Ottawa’s is apparently expected to open either right before or shortly after Canada Day (July 1st). Ontario will go from 1 to 3 urban rail networks within a span of a few weeks. |
An excavator is on site and the property has been fenced off for the maintenance facility for the Finch West LRT in Toronto - it appears that construction has quietly begun.
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Construction has been underway on the Southwest LRT line in the Twin Cities. Rails are scheduled to be delivered in the next week along the line. https://metrocouncil.org/Transportat...PDATE-(2).aspx |
OK thanks. Minneapolis SW line added to the construction list.
Denver & Phoenix have opening in about a week. |
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