Quote:
Originally Posted by Migrant_Coconut
In other words, Metro Vancouver was apparently pretty lucky to get even the Canada Line we have now, much less an “optimal” one that really belongs in the fantasy thread. Like it or not, a plan that originated in the Thirties meant the RAV was effectively locked into some variant of below-grade the moment TransLink gave up on Arbutus; Bombardier’s competing bid for a trench all the way down Cambie would likely’ve been even worse.
And again, inflation: $100m in 2019 is ~$77m in 2004. Unless all the platforms could be lengthened for less than $5m apiece (which barely covers the design budget), it wasn't happening.
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This IS a fantasy thread...
And yeah, I agree we were lucky to get the Canada as it is now. It's ok for the current needs, even though I have gripes with it.
The Expo was also cost-cut quite a bit as well, for what it's worth.
Also, the Millennium's tight (ie. slow) curve around Home Depot at Gilmore is ridiculous, stupid, and obvious penny-pinching.
Bombardier didn't want to follow a trench the entire way from 16th to Marine.
It was south of 49th only.
Either way, it may not be such a bad idea, since you'd be able to 'cover' the tunnel later eventually, and thus cut the immediate construction costs down.
This
may have been the cheapest option of all, considering that the 49th Ave trench + boring proposal was apparently around the same price as the Hyundai proposal.
https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/showthread.php?t=150289
Let's just ignore that we're creating a giant trench in Cambie south of 16th for an indeterminate period of time, though.
That was probably too much for anybody involved at the time to take.
Anyways, we did cut through the Cambie Median to go elevated up to Marine- and the use of heritage designation by NIMBYs overall to protect things of iffy heritage importance is a pretty common occurrence.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_N1Y9qRkjo
If all else fails, you could have narrowed Cambie to 4 lanes (+ bus bays and left-turn lanes) to widen the median to compensate for the lost area, or narrow the parking lanes by 0.5m (I don't think this is necessary, but still).
Also, preserving the heritage boulevard medians as much as they have been has kind of been a pyrrhic victory IMO- they would have made nice areas to put protected bike/walking trails on- certainly better than the painted bike lanes we have now.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dleung
One would think minimizing the Richmond segment would open up dollars for less cutbacks elsewhere.
We certainly could've done without the two extra stations on Sea Island - all it gave us in return was the hideous outlet mall. YVR better had covered 100% the cost of those, AND the hit on project NPV for the extra 2 minutes travel time to downtown.
Also, how much could they have possibly saved by not banking the track around QE park? The turn radii are comically small and add at least a minute to travel time. I'm not in favor of ripping up nice areas of town for elevated guideway, but that's where it would've been worth it to lose a few trees in the median to get the proper alignment.
Overall it looks like this $2 billion project would've been offered twice as much value if it had been a $2.5 billion project. A classic story of diminishing returns on cost-cutting
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Well, they almost
didn't build the Richmond Section.
An extra $0.5B would allow for stations on 16th, 33rd, 57th, and Capstan at minimum, and that would allow for a bunch of extra east-west Vancouver bus lines, as well as future-proofing for future developments on the Broadway Corridor.