Over capacity: TTC's Yonge line close to bursting during rush hour

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  • Опубликовано: 22 мар 2012
  • Read more at news.nationalpost.com/2012/03/...
    Mayor Rob Ford loves subways. That's easy for him to say: he doesn't ride the Yonge line during crush hour. Ridership on the TTC's Yonge-University-Spadina line has climbed from 583,000 people per weekday in 2000 to 711,000 riders in 2010. Andy Byford, new chief executive at the TTC, warned reporters Friday that the Yonge subway line is full.

Комментарии • 118

  • @yomamasapeach
    @yomamasapeach 10 лет назад +25

    The DRL shouldn't really be a discussion, because currently, the Yonge line is chocking with riders while city council sits on their ass.

  • @doyle1900
    @doyle1900 10 лет назад +37

    That supervisor is from trinidad and tobago... that accent!!!

    • @SnowElf_96
      @SnowElf_96 5 лет назад

      And no one can understand him lmao. Literally useless job

  • @cookedapple
    @cookedapple 8 лет назад +23

    Anyone else find the music really catchy :) I love the wee tone, the door chime with the announcement tune thingy!

    • @TheHaibao123
      @TheHaibao123 8 лет назад +3

      i found it quite annoying

    • @jonathancheng5650
      @jonathancheng5650 7 лет назад +4

      emmakiwi oh yeah it feels like a dubstep dance music with the subway chime.

    • @Jordanninja09
      @Jordanninja09 4 года назад

      Yes

    • @Wald4267
      @Wald4267 3 года назад +2

      Emma I never get sick of the old chimes they bring me back a lot

    • @TomAlctel
      @TomAlctel 3 года назад

      0:24

  • @HappyYoda
    @HappyYoda 6 лет назад +5

    I love how he says the customer is unaware. No brother, its not being unaware, it's just being plain stupid.

  • @CipherFiveZero
    @CipherFiveZero 8 лет назад +29

    Honestly I think the Relief Line from Downtown to Danforth is what should have been built 15-20 years ago and not that "Stubway" on Sheppard Ave.

    • @Token_Nerd
      @Token_Nerd 4 года назад +8

      Without the stubway on Sheppard (and the NYC station), you probably still wouldn't need the Relief line yet. Sheppard brought at least 20K riders (for a total of 40K trips along the corridor) to the corridor, North York Centre station brought in another 25K. Most of the rides used at these stations are taken by peak hour commuters. It's why Sheppard gets crush loaded during the peak hours, but is almost ghost-like all other times. So, all in all, at least 32K peak hour commuters (65K daily rides on the Yonge line) were added to the Yonge line with these two projects alone. Distributing those through the 3-hour rush hour window, you're looking at an additional 10K PPH in the peak direction during rush hour. Without those two projects, ridership on the Yonge line would likely have still been low enough to justify not doing anything.
      The main problem was that when they built Sheppard (and North York Centre), they didn't build the Relief line directly after, meaning that ridership grew exponentially in North York, while capacity stagnated downtown. Now, 17 years later, since capacity is limited at Bloor and St. George, no one wants to use the subway more in North York (because trains are often full at Sheppard), and no one wants to take the subway from Scarborough or East York, because Bloor-Yonge is far too crowded to be viable for use.

  • @alexanderip1003
    @alexanderip1003 8 лет назад +10

    i think it's about time we needed the platform edge doors

  • @gadzooks429
    @gadzooks429 5 лет назад +4

    its like playing sim city, observing bot citizens from screens

  • @Syllacrostics
    @Syllacrostics 7 лет назад +17

    the platforms in the TTC subways seem so undersized for the amount of traffic they get. i would be afraid of being shoved onto the tracks

    • @EPIK_yt
      @EPIK_yt 7 лет назад

      k smith well Ellington to union was built in 1954 when Toronto population was reaching 890 000 population

    • @EPIK_yt
      @EPIK_yt 7 лет назад

      k smith now in 2016 it's 2.85 million

    • @Syllacrostics
      @Syllacrostics 7 лет назад

      I know. I'm just saying it's unfortunate city/transit planners weren't able to upgrade the transit infrastructure as the city grew. Are the platforms along the new Line 1 extension wider?

    • @EPIK_yt
      @EPIK_yt 7 лет назад

      k smith another thing is some stations are so close to each other and get less traffic like rosedale it's right beside bloor-Yonge just walk 100 metres lol it's same with st George and spadina station

    • @Baseshocks
      @Baseshocks 7 лет назад +1

      K smith - i know your comment is old but to add, Toronto is the only transit system in North America that did not get provincial support for if i remember right over a decade.
      All the fares and city taxes went to just keep the thing going while Toronto got taxed hard Provincially and Federally hard.
      Finally they took notice after too fucking long and things are being done... slowly.

  • @sportsmaster1364
    @sportsmaster1364 7 лет назад +9

    Here in Edmonton, our LRT (which runs underground through Downtown and the University of Alberta, much like the subway) features only centre platforms, which are much better suited to accommodate large crowds. We also have only five-car-long platforms, which makes the platform seem shorter to people, and entices them to spread out more.

  • @CanadaMMA
    @CanadaMMA 8 лет назад +7

    Transit in the GTA is in a perfect storm. It's run badly, it's underfunded, and a lot of the stations are really poorly designed when it comes to dealing with increases in riders. It's also dealing with major problems outside of its control, like the bombardier fiasco. Although the TTC should have taken action against them much sooner than this.

  • @LordOfFreedom
    @LordOfFreedom 12 лет назад +3

    So that explains those empty trains that sometimes pass by and don't stop... Interesting

  • @yegventures
    @yegventures 11 лет назад +2

    Edmonton's LRT system is like this too. A lot of the station designs have had entrances and exits at the same place across the system.

  • @alongfortheride84
    @alongfortheride84 6 лет назад +8

    Riiiiight, so its the passengers' fault that almost every inter-change station dumps everyone at ONE end of the platform AND that in the past 5 years, nobody in the city has thought that maybe subway stations designed in the 1950's could need an update or redesign by now....right; the passengers are just lazy....

    • @EPIK_yt
      @EPIK_yt 5 лет назад +1

      alongfortheride84 the TTC has already extended the bloor platform

    • @casual_boredom7195
      @casual_boredom7195 4 года назад

      @@EPIK_yt I think he means major major modernization of the entire system.

  • @marcelthemaoist
    @marcelthemaoist 11 лет назад +2

    That was a pretty awesome beat.

  • @MrChampken
    @MrChampken 10 лет назад +10

    When you look at many subways around the world you realize Toronto Subway is rather small system for its almost 3 million residents and over 5 million in the Greater Toronto area. New lines should of been built years ago but instead the car and highways became priority and subway line plans were cancelled. To bad we are now up there with Los Angeles as the worst traffic commute and the longest daily travel to work in USA and Canada. The relief line should be the first and foremost line built, before other lines are built you need to build the relief line or else new lines will just add more people into the old Younge and University lines that are already near maximum capacity. Main point, new subway lines are needed bad and need to start building NOW!!

    • @sjappiyah4071
      @sjappiyah4071 9 лет назад +1

      +James 1 I agree! unfortunetly some people are more interested in building frinkin on surface LRT'S than Underground LRT'S an Subway's!
      Sad....

    • @MrChampken
      @MrChampken 8 лет назад +1

      Samuel Appiah LRT's can be very good transit systems, but only if they are integrated well with current Subway systems and inner city commuter rails (Like GO trains, Union to Pearson and future smart Track, if that ever gets built). They have some very good LRT's systems in other cities around the world that work fantastic, the main thing is they need to be raised above ground, main level or underground as long as there is no connection to the main road traffic. Underground is best option but also the most expensive to be built, but they can be built very well above ground. To many people in Toronto think LRT means the same thing as Toronto's old Streetcars that slow traffic down and mix with cars and trucks on the road (however I like the Streetcar system for historic and nostalgic feel of the Streetcar system, for that reason I am glad the streetcar system is still very much a part of hundreds of thousands of peoples every day commute) . Hopefully the future Eglington Line will show many what an LRT line can be. It just needs to be built well, in the right nbeighbourhoods and its probably best to not cheap out for the cheapest transit system, or else you often get cheap results.

    • @sjappiyah4071
      @sjappiyah4071 8 лет назад

      James 1 Fair points, Lrt's can be a useful especially in low density areas that need more than a bus, but less than a Subway...
      But I feel we need to prioritize and complete a full Underground Transit system first.
      , The DRL
      .Scarborough Subway
      .Finch Subway
      After that then yes surface LRT'S seem pretty reasonable in mid-city streets such as
      .Jane
      .Don Mills
      .Sheppard East
      .Lakeshore
      But of course, Money will always be a barrier....

    • @MrChampken
      @MrChampken 8 лет назад +1

      Samuel Appiah yup, so very true. And the Downtown Relief line should have been built decades ago, it is the core of the entire system that needs to be built first, and it is such densely built downtown core that it must be a subway and not a LRT.

    • @sjappiyah4071
      @sjappiyah4071 8 лет назад

      James 1 Agreed The DRL has been way too long coming.
      As well as the Scarborough subway, the SRT is on the verge of death.
      And finch needs an underground Transit line too, places like Jane and Finch and Albion Finch, and Humber college are extremely dense.
      After Building a core full east to west underground transit line,
      yes, LRT'S would be really useful,
      Like on
      .Sheppard East
      .Don Mills
      .Lakeshore
      .Jane
      etc.....

  • @JellyChang
    @JellyChang 12 лет назад +1

    No wonder I never understand anything that is announced in TTC....

  • @rodman1993
    @rodman1993 11 лет назад +3

    Supervisor sounds Trinidadian...

    • @ryanstock7094
      @ryanstock7094 5 лет назад +1

      rodman1993 He probably is (I wrote this comment while reading it in his Accent)

  • @Lochness19
    @Lochness19 12 лет назад +1

    I would the LRT's speed is about in between a subway and the current bus.
    Sheppard bus: 17km/h
    Sheppard LRT: 22-27km/h (depending on stop spacing)
    Current subways: ~30-32km/h
    GO is waaay faster though, around 45-50km/h for milk runs, but close to 90km/h for the express section from Clarkson to Union. I think adding stations on the Markham GO line at Finch, Ellesmere and Lawrence, electrifying the route and having high frequency all day all week service would be even better than a subway.

  • @HesJustSteven
    @HesJustSteven 10 лет назад +9

    No, no the passengers are jist lazt, thats all, how you have a 450 foot long train yet "not be aware" of 20 available doors on the train, just wanting the first four, there is a platform and more cars for a reason, just move down the platform, if some people can run 26.2 miles in a marathon, the civilians can walk the extra 375 feet

    • @Baseshocks
      @Baseshocks 7 лет назад +4

      Those same people refuse to walk for 30 seconds or less to get to the grocery store and wait for a free parking spot to open up.

  • @Geno2733
    @Geno2733 10 лет назад

    Reason for increased ridership: Canadians are paying almost 5 USD for a gallon of regular unleaded, and the GTA is a very big place with lots of traffic.

  • @True8Bit
    @True8Bit 12 лет назад +1

    ACH PSH!!!! Don't tell them! If people opened theirs eyes I'd have to wait twice as long in supermarkets.

  • @TomAlctel
    @TomAlctel 3 года назад +1

    0:24 *The TTC rap*

  • @TTC4300
    @TTC4300 12 лет назад

    The station is ill designed to take passengers from the 2 Bloor-Danforth since the latter wasn't built until 12 years after the Yonge line was built. What the Bloor station needs is its platform to be moved half its current distance northward (60 metres to be precise) so that the transfer portal can be used to accommodate all doors on any train. Maybe make Bloor Station a centered platform like its connecting cousin Yonge Station.

  • @rbrucerye
    @rbrucerye 12 лет назад

    I remember that it would get so bad at Bloor I would just walk to school from their ... difference between walking and taking the subway was an extra 10-15 minutes but it was a lot less stressful then waiting

  • @Randy-k4p
    @Randy-k4p 6 лет назад +1

    Lol. Fooking Trini 😂😂😂

  • @liztewliztew
    @liztewliztew 6 лет назад +1

    When I used to ride the subway, where I stood on the platform before getting on the train was based on where I knew the escalators were at the destination. If I were going to work at Yonge & King, I would want to be on the south end of the south bound trains. If I were going to Ryerson, then I would choose the northern part of the south bound trains.

    • @liztewliztew
      @liztewliztew 2 года назад

      @Untainted Afro It took a bit for me to figure it out, but I think I figured it out by watching others subway passengers. I noticed that others seemed to want to line up at particular spots to get on the subway. If I saw them again when I got off the subway, but they were closer to the escalator than me, that’s likely when things ‘clicked’.

  • @djhowa
    @djhowa 6 лет назад +2

    its all based on the station you are exiting on, obviouly the front of the train seem to be closer to the stairs of the station ur exiting on.

    • @liztewliztew
      @liztewliztew 6 лет назад

      Exactly! Where I stand before getting on the train is the strategic plan to get past as much foot traffic as possible when getting off the train.

  • @dylanneal5340
    @dylanneal5340 2 года назад

    Why not just add a inner middle platform to have passengers exit that way and have it flow in one direction

  • @chillenlikeavillain
    @chillenlikeavillain 11 лет назад

    what is going to happen to traffic on the 401 is something I don't want to even think about.

  • @guslei
    @guslei 11 лет назад

    In a year or two, you'll have the same situation at Yonge-Sheppard with all the condos in process of building right now.

  • @jayneblett8168
    @jayneblett8168 8 лет назад +1

    nice beat

  • @Medsas
    @Medsas 9 лет назад

    wait camera 5 is the south end of the southbound, and camera 8 is the north end of the northbound? I'm confused... I thought he meant both cameras are on the same train (aka both northbound or both southbound)

    • @HesJustSteven
      @HesJustSteven 9 лет назад

      He just wasnt articulating correctly

    • @vince7735
      @vince7735 9 лет назад +1

      Steven Francis Notice he hovers his hand over both cameras and says this is the northbound platform (1:51). When he says this is the south end of the southbound, I think he meant south end of the northbound. I don't know which station that is though because when I worked in the financial district and took the Yonge-Bloor train southboud to King all doors were always utilized and people still got left behind.

    • @HesJustSteven
      @HesJustSteven 9 лет назад

      True I feel like that's Dundas station because I've seen things like this happen before

  • @InfernalSatan
    @InfernalSatan 11 лет назад

    I thought the broadcast was recorded

  • @ryzennav
    @ryzennav 7 лет назад

    why does the news warning music keep playing

  • @homestaymac5202
    @homestaymac5202 11 лет назад +2

    Try riding the subway anywhere in Asia.

    • @ryanstock7094
      @ryanstock7094 5 лет назад

      Homestay Mac Especially Beijing, Tokyo, Shanghai, etc.

  • @jayneblett8168
    @jayneblett8168 8 лет назад +1

    +CipherFiveZero The Stubway should not ove been bulit I think that relif line from Danforth and downtown.

    • @wanderer8903
      @wanderer8903 5 лет назад

      yeah the "stubway" just feeds more passengers into the already overpacked yonge line

  • @andydrewli
    @andydrewli 12 лет назад

    It's not so much as the station design (not that it is a great one to begin with), but it is the over-capacity in the whole system. What we need is a downtown relief line but that will never happen. We may also be benefited with another North-South subway line. I would actually interchange at St. George sometimes to avoid Bloor-Yonge, but with people pressing the emergency buttons, all bets are off.

  • @TheCanadianPublic
    @TheCanadianPublic 12 лет назад

    The TTC needs to visit the Tube in London. The TFL has transformed crowd control into an art form.

  • @trainrover
    @trainrover 3 года назад

    I remember that monitor's bleets...no surprise the scale of its intelligence matching therein the scope of its art of persuasion......

  • @ThomasBrainLine
    @ThomasBrainLine 6 лет назад +1

    If they needed more trains and used all of their T1 Subways and Toronto Rockets, couldn't they keep a bit of H6's.

  • @muyaho420
    @muyaho420 12 лет назад

    Try biking from Finch/Yonge to Dundas/Yonge.

  • @Baseshocks
    @Baseshocks 12 лет назад

    Its ok people with bikes don't understand distance that well, they also do not understand that people cant show up at work drenched in sweat if they work in a office or pretty much any other Job. I also doubt he rides his bike in snow any more then 5 cm.

  • @Geno2733
    @Geno2733 10 лет назад

    Also -- they can "herd" the riders, and better facilitate traffic flow using the TTC light-duty employees, which is probably what they're trying to do at this point.

  • @synthfreakify
    @synthfreakify 11 лет назад +1

    Eeeeeeeeeeyyyyyy Dwike mon!!

  • @metropolitantransit7276
    @metropolitantransit7276 3 года назад

    Overcrowding always happen, even in 2020 with population 6,100,068.

  • @TheGiua1973
    @TheGiua1973 12 лет назад +1

    all this talk of LRT's, streetcars, sheppard subways, none of that, none of it deals with the 1st and foremost transit issue in this city - overcrowding on the yonge line...the only line that takes you to and from downtown...we need a downtown relief line, and we need it yesterday...the downtown relief line was a priority for the ttc until david miller and his cronies came along and decised to put LRT's everywhere...what will those LRT's do?...just bring more people to the overstretched yonge

  • @Baseshocks
    @Baseshocks 12 лет назад

    Thing about LRT is that they are going to have frequent stops, its going to serve as the bus and subway... with a stop every few blocks along with traffic lights.. it will be the same as a bus express lane during rush hour. Speed wise its garbage, its a good bus replacement where possible to save on fuel but to act as a subway line is no where near close.
    I am not against LRT's they are great, as long as they have a dedicated line, like the subway when it goes outside aka YorkDale station.

  • @Jordanninja09
    @Jordanninja09 4 года назад

    Il make an mp3 of the beat

  • @cykz2004_dwimmy_the_oof
    @cykz2004_dwimmy_the_oof Год назад

    0:03 wait wait there are still H4 trains in 2012?

  • @treebush
    @treebush 12 лет назад

    we could have had that relief line back in the 50s or 60s or something dont remember but they didnt do it now look what has happen sighh

  • @stcywll
    @stcywll 12 лет назад

    This why I ride my bike to work rain, snow or sunshine. How do people cram themselves in like that everyday?

    • @ryanstock7094
      @ryanstock7094 5 лет назад +2

      stcywll They get used to it. Just like you got used to riding your bike in the snow and sometimes slush

  • @irtbmtind89
    @irtbmtind89 12 лет назад

    The subway makes already makes a profit. Its the buses that lose money.

  • @muyaho420
    @muyaho420 12 лет назад

    Obviously you haven't lived in Toronto long enough.

  • @sykodemented6294
    @sykodemented6294 11 лет назад

    some world class city, subways close at a certain time. world class = 24/7 subway

  • @trainrover
    @trainrover 9 лет назад

    I bet the crush hours there come about mostly because of the pratts' short-sighted commitment of Torontonians into bearing trains being broader than the platforms they themselves pull into. Overly cramped station facilities, built along some kind of village-esque format, is one of many reasons why living in Ontario becomes distasteful and even repulsive .. blech.

  • @edwardbliss8931
    @edwardbliss8931 6 лет назад

    All those monitors, and no sign of that tall black homeless guy that begs for change

  • @funvideofan1625
    @funvideofan1625 4 года назад

    2:30 How Can Everybody Look Different In 5 Seconds?

    • @Token_Nerd
      @Token_Nerd 4 года назад

      They're the same people (watch the bald hipster in camera 8), they just skipped part of the boarding process to save time in the video and get to the point.

  • @7ra44
    @7ra44 7 лет назад +1

    TTC IF A JOKE! who ever constructed had no vision

    • @TrainsToronto
      @TrainsToronto 7 лет назад

      Do you have a vision of what I will reply next?

    • @7ra44
      @7ra44 7 лет назад

      NO! vision and extra sensory perception are two different things (clown)

    • @TrainsToronto
      @TrainsToronto 7 лет назад

      What?

    • @transittoronto1945
      @transittoronto1945 5 лет назад

      7 ra your grammar is a joke.

  • @True8Bit
    @True8Bit 12 лет назад

    Cattle being corralled. I need a car -_-

    • @Skyfoogle
      @Skyfoogle 3 года назад +1

      enjoy your don valley parking lot, free citizen

  • @calgarytek
    @calgarytek 10 лет назад +1

    I remember it being packed when I was commuting to Ryerson between 2000 and 2005. I can only imagine how bad it is now with so much more development within the downtown core. Then again, I can't, cuz I moved to Calgary and take the C-Train on the West LRT. F*ck Toronto. Hot women though...

  • @Baseshocks
    @Baseshocks 12 лет назад

    As for GO ya i know what you mean, too bad the Fliping province or some billion air dude buys GO and adds a high speed light rail electric line.... Smaller faster trains, more trains on the track :).

  • @jimmoriarty2109
    @jimmoriarty2109 12 лет назад

    Jesus Christ! How can you people even understand the heck the announcer is saying. It's all garbled up.

  • @oAirehko
    @oAirehko 7 лет назад +1

    TTC's subway is the worlds worst subway system that doesn't gamble with lives. It only get's worse if there is a chance you will die like on a Sao Paulo or Mumbai train.

  • @muyaho420
    @muyaho420 12 лет назад +1

    Actually none of the transit systems in the world make profit.

  • @jayvonnoelsmith8445
    @jayvonnoelsmith8445 Год назад +1

    TTC is so 🔥 awesome

  • @crazy4lego
    @crazy4lego 12 лет назад

    Bring back the interlining TTC!!!

  • @pcl1717
    @pcl1717 9 лет назад +1

    Please rename this as SHEEPLE.

  • @ro1882
    @ro1882 6 лет назад

    I had to mute this at 00:18!! that music is extremely painful to listen to especially if you're a frequent commuter.