Yonge–University–Spadina Line
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A subway train waits for passengers at Bloor-Yonge station. |
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Overview | |
Type | Rapid transit |
System | Toronto subway and RT |
Locale | Toronto, Ontario |
Termini | Finch Downsview |
Stations | 32 |
Daily ridership | 714,210 (avg. weekday)[1] |
Operation | |
Opened | March 30, 1954 |
Owner | Toronto Transit Commission |
Operator(s) | Toronto Transit Commission |
Depot(s) | Wilson Subway Yard, Davisville Subway Yard |
Rolling stock | T1, H5, TR |
Technical | |
Line length | 30.2 km (18.8 mi) |
Track gauge | 4 ft 10 7⁄8 in (1,495 mm) |
Electrification | Third rail |
The Yonge–University–Spadina Line (officially Route 1 Yonge–University–Spadina Subway)[2] is the oldest and busiest subway line in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is operated by the Toronto Transit Commission, has 32 stations and is 30.2 km (18.8 mi) in length. It opened in 1954, and had extensions completed in 1963, 1973, 1974, 1978, and 1996. North York Centre Station opened on an existing section of line in 1987.
The line's name has changed as it was extended. It was called "the subway" (Yonge subway is its retronym) until 1963, then the "Yonge–University Line" until 1978, when the Spadina section was added. Briefly in 1966, the Yonge–University subway ran in two branches: one west along Bloor to Keele (Yonge–University–Bloor), the other east along Bloor and Danforth to Woodbine (Yonge–University–Danforth).
Although only two stations are on Spadina Road, a larger portion of the line was originally planned to follow the Spadina Expressway. The part of the expressway that was built was renamed William R. Allen Road, but the name of the line was never changed. It is numbered as "Route 1" (formerly route 602),[3] but its route number is used by the TTC predominantly for internal purposes and is rarely used by the public or on TTC maps.
The subway runs from approximately 6:00 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. Monday to Saturday and 9:00 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. on Sunday. The subway runs every 4–5 minutes, with frequent service (2–3 minutes) during rush hour periods. There is limited service (5 minutes) northbound from St. Clair West Station from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Monday to Friday.
The 320 Yonge Blue Night bus provides late-night service when the subway is not in operation. This service operates frequently from Yonge from Steeles to Union Station. No bus service follows the University–Spadina line, though other night bus services, such as the 311 Bathurst, pass near some of the stations. Bus service is extended on Sundays to account for the 9:00 a.m. start.
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Legend
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On March 30, 1954, after five years of work, the first subway in Canada opened to the public.[4][5] The original Yonge Street subway line went from Union subway station near the namesake railway station north to Eglinton Station. Premier Leslie Frost and Mayor Allan A. Lamport, among other important people, rode the first train that morning, going north from the yards at Davisville Station, and then from Eglinton south along the entire line. The line was then opened to the public, and that day at 2:30 p.m., the last streetcar to travel Yonge Street made its final trip.
Nine years later, the University segment of the line opened, continuing the line from Union north to St. George Station.
On March 31, 1973, the line was extended north to York Mills Station,[6] and the next year to Finch Station as part of the North Yonge Extension project, bringing the subway to North York. Stations were also planned for Glencairn (between Eglinton and Lawrence, though another Glencairn Station would be built on the Spadina line), Glen Echo (between Lawrence and York Mills) and Empress (between Sheppard and Finch, later opened as North York Centre Station). In 1978, the Spadina segment of the line was opened, going from the north terminus of the University line to Wilson Station.
In 1987, the North York Centre station was added between Sheppard and Finch Stations.
On August 11, 1995 at 6:02 p.m., the Russell Hill subway accident occurred as a southbound subway train heading toward Dupont Station crashed under Russell Hill Drive, killing three passengers.[7] This accident prompted the Toronto Transit Commission to review its practices and put resources into safety.
In 1996, the Spadina expansion was opened, adding one new station, Downsview.
Construction has begun on an extension to York University northwest of Downsview Station, and into the city of Vaughan to the proposed Vaughan Metropolitan Centre. Six new stations are planned along the 8.6 km (5.3 mi) route, with 6.2 km (3.9 mi) in the City of Toronto and 2.4 km (1.5 mi) in York Region.[8] Subway service on the extension is estimated to begin by late 2015.[9]
Approximately 2,900 new parking spaces will be built at three stations along the extension in order to encourage commuters to use the subway system. Steeles West Station will have the most at 1,900 spaces, while Highway 407 Station will have 600 spaces, and Finch West Station will have 400 parking spaces.[9]
The estimated cost of this extension is $2.09 billion in 2006 dollars, which will have escalated to $2.63 billion considering costs at the year of occurrence.[10] The Province of Ontario has deposited $870 million into the Move Ontario Trust. The federal government has committed $697 million, but only recently released $75 million at the start of its fall election campaign. The City of Toronto and the Regional Municipality of York have committed to fund one-third of total project costs, with Toronto will contributing $526 million and York Region contributing $352 million.[8]
In 2003, a temporary busway was planned between Downsview Station and the campus, but was opposed by the university, which felt it would lessen government willingness to extend the subway. After numerous delays, construction on the York University Busway started on July 25, 2008,[11] with a short section of the busway opened on September 6, 2009[12] and the remainder opened on November 20, 2009.[13]
The first construction contract was awarded on February 27, 2008.[14] Construction has commenced in July 2008 with the relocation of sewers.[15]
The TTC purchased two tunnel boring machines in the fall of 2010 from LOVAT Inc. for $58.4 million to dig tunnels on this extension, and is expecting two more boring machines in the spring of 2011.[16][17] Tunnel boring for the extension began on June 17, 2011.[18]
The extension north of Steeles Avenue has been maligned in the press for several reasons.[19] The TTC had originally intended to extend the subway as far as York University, with a vast bus terminal complex at the future Steeles West Station. However, provincial funding hinged on the line crossing the municipal border. The area around the future Vaughan Corporate Centre Station is occupied by big-box stores and highways, and lacks the dense development that surrounds most other subway stations. Although a station is planned for the 407 Transitway, most GO Transit buses will actually terminate at Steeles West Station, so as to avoid commuters having to pay an additional TTC fare to reach York University. The TTC has recently announced that it will incorporate a system in which GO Transit users do not have to pay an extra fare to use the subway to arrive at York University Station from the 407 Transitway.
Station name | Architect | Artist | Location/intersection | Parking spaces | Estimated completion date |
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Sheppard West | AECOM | Panya Clark Espinal | Downsview and Sheppard | ||
Finch West | Stevens Group Architects with Will Alsop | Bruce McLean | Keele and Finch | 400 | |
York University | Foster + Partners | Jason Bruges Studio | York University / Steeles and Keele | Late 2015 | |
Steeles West | Alsop Architects with SGA/IBI Group Architects | realities:united (Tim and Yan Edler) | York University / Steeles and Murray Ross Pkwy | 1 850 | |
Highway 407 | Aedas | David Pearl | Highway 407 and Jane | 563 | |
Vaughan Corporate Centre | Arup with Grimshaw Architects | Paul Raff Studio | Vaughan Metropolitan Centre / Highway 7 and Jane |
Proposals have also been put forward to extend the Yonge Street portion of the line beyond Finch to Steeles and into York Region, most likely ending at the Richmond Hill Centre Terminal of Viva bus rapid transit. On June 15, 2007, the Ontario government announced plans to fund this extension as part of a network of rapid transit growth called MoveOntario 2020.[21]
Although completion of this subway expansion is many years away, a local group in York Region is lobbying for the cancellation of the planned busway along this route,[22] which would be a part of York Region's Viva bus rapid transit.
The Yonge portion of the subway line operates at capacity during the morning rush hour, and could not carry the additional riders attracted to this extension. Once a new signal system is in place, the TTC claims it will be able to increase the frequency of trains from 2 minutes 30 seconds to every 1 minute 45 seconds. As of 2011, there is no proposal to increase capacity of Bloor-Yonge station, already the busiest in the entire network serving over 400 000 passengers each day.
GO Transit's long-term plan also calls for all-day service on its Richmond Hill line that would see express trains running every 15 minutes between its Langstaff Station adjacent to the Richmond Hill Centre terminal, and Union station in downtown Toronto, calling into question the additional need for a subway extension.
Toronto council approved the plan in principle in January 2009, but added caveats indicating that upgrades within Toronto would be needed to support the additional capacity from York Region. The plan, as approved, lists six new stations: Cummer/Drewery, Steeles, Clark, Royal Orchard, Longbridge/Langstaff, and Richmond Hill Centre.[23] As of 2009, TTC has no plans to expand this subway line in the "near future" but have VIVA Bus Rapid Transit bus lanes along Yonge Street from Finch Avenue to Highway 7, which would go into full service by 2013.
The line forms a rough U-shape. Its western leg starts at the northern terminus at Downsview Station, at Sheppard Avenue and Allen Road. The line follows the Allen Road, which becomes a short expressway with the subway line travelling in its median for 6 km (3.7 mi). Continuing southeast below the Cedarvale and Nordheimer Ravines, it turns south under a short stretch of Spadina Road.
After sharing the Bloor-Danforth Line's Spadina and St. George Stations, it turns south again under Queen's Park, passing to one side of the legislature, and running the full length of University Avenue beyond. It turns east onto Front Street to serve Union Station, Toronto's main railway terminus, and then north.
The eastern leg runs straight up Yonge Street for 16 km (9.9 mi), crossing the Bloor–Danforth Line again at Bloor-Yonge and the Sheppard Line at Sheppard-Yonge, before reaching its northern terminus at Finch Station. A roughed-in station exists below Queen Station for the proposed Queen streetcar subway.[24]
The line is generally underground, but has several surface or elevated sections between Downsview and Eglinton West, and between Bloor and Eglinton; some portions of the section between Bloor and Eglinton were originally open and have since been covered over to permit other uses above the tracks. Sections between Bloor-Yonge and the track short of Summerhill, and between St. Clair and Eglinton remain in their original open state. Between Summerhill and St. Clair, the track was originally in open cut, but has since been decked over. Evidence of this can be seen in the tunnel: there are no columns or walls between tracks, and ballast and drainage ditches are present, something not seen in the rest of the subway system. There are also tree stumps and the stubs of lamp posts in the tunnel. There are also clues outdoors: seemingly useless railings along the sides of a nearby street, which was once on an exposed bridge, and empty lots following the trains' right-of-way marked with signs warning heavy vehicles and equipment to keep off because they might fall through to the columnless tunnel below.
Most of the tunnel was constructed by a cut-and-cover method, but some was bored, as noted below. All stations, whether by transfer or fare-paid terminal, connect to surface TTC bus and/or streetcar routes. Other surface and train connections are noted below.
As of late 2010, 16 stations have elevators for wheelchair access. Elevator installations are underway at Lawrence West and St. Andrew stations.[25][26]
The preferred alignment and placement for four stations for the proposed "Spadina North" extension beyond Downsview Station to serve York University were finalized in September 2005.[27] Six stations are planned: the tentative name for the new terminus in the Vaughan Metropolitan Centre is "Vaughan Centre" based on the precedent set by North York Centre and Scarborough Centre, with intermediate stations called "Highway 407", "Steeles West", "York University", "Finch West", and "Sheppard West" (which might be renamed "Downsview Park"), with plans to rename Downsview Station "Sheppard West". If built, this extension would likely replace the portion of York Region Transit's Viva Orange bus rapid transit line that covers the Downsview – York University route.
The original design of the oldest stations in the subway system, which are on the Yonge line (from Union to Eglinton), are mainly utilitarian and consisted of Vitrolite wall tiles. Eglinton Station is the only station to retain this wall treatment, though Queen Station retains a narrow band of original blue Vitrolite tiles near the ceiling at platform as well.
The design of the stations on the University line was mainly utilitarian and this style (sometimes referred to as “bathroom modern”) was later used for the Bloor–Danforth line as well. Queen's Park and St. Patrick stations have circular and semi-circular cross-sections because they are constructed in bored tunnels.
Lawrence, York Mills, Sheppard, and Finch Stations are similar to each other in design, but have different colour schemes: Lawrence is red and yellow, York Mills is light and dark green, Sheppard is yellow and dark blue, and Finch is light grey, medium grey, and dark grey.
The Spadina line consists of unique art and architecture for each station. Glencairn and Yorkdale Stations had their art removed.
North York Centre station, being an infill station, has a design that is very different from the other stations in the earlier North Yonge extension.
Downsview, being the newest station on this line, also has art and architecture that is different from the earlier Spadina line.
The Spadina north extension to Vaughan Metropolitan Centre will feature unique art and architecture as well.
As with all other subway lines, the Yonge–University–Spadina Line uses an automated voice system on board its trains to announce each stop as the train arrives. The H5 and the T1 use a human voice, while the Toronto Rocket uses synthesized speech with visual displays indicating the next stop, similar to the ones used on TTC's surface vehicles.
The new Toronto Rocket trains were scheduled for delivery starting between late 2009 and early 2010 but delayed until late 2010. The first train began revenue service in July 2011 with an estimated of up to eight or nine trains operating at its peak so far on the line as of December 2011. They are the first subway trains on the system (and the first in North America) to incorporate full-open gangways, allowing riders to move freely through the entire train, The trains use active route maps which indicate the train's position, the next station and the side of the train on which the doors will open at the next stop. The Toronto Rocket trains are recongizable with the orange-lighted LED destination and run number signs at both ends, unlike the T1 and H5 cars which use destination and run number rollsigns.[28]
The TTC estimates that automatic train control on the Yonge–University–Spadina Line could be installed by 2016. When this system is installed, the TTC will be able to run trains as often as every 105 seconds. The limit of the signal system now is every 150 seconds, the interval at which trains operate at rush hours.
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