York University Busway | |
---|---|
The Hydro Corridor Busway. |
|
Overview | |
Type | Bus Rapid Transit |
System | TTC Bus System |
Locale | Toronto, Ontario |
Termini | Downsview Station York University |
Stations | 4 |
Services |
196 York University Rocket, Viva Orange |
Operation | |
Opened | 2009 |
Operator(s) | Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) |
Technical | |
Line length | 6.5km |
Operating speed | 60km/h |
The York University Busway is the collective name for a series of bus lanes and bus only roadways leading from Downsview station to York University, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is used by the Toronto Transit Commission's 196 York University Rocket and York Region Transit's Viva Orange bus rapid transit routes in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The busway was constructed to address over-crowding and reliability issues on the route 196 York U Rocket.
The busway increased the average speed of route 196 by 41% from 23.3km/h to 32.8km/h,[1] making it the third fastest TTC route at rush hour, after the Scarborough RT and route 192 Airport Rocket. It is now faster than any of the subway lines.[2] Due to the savings in time from using the busway, service frequency on route 196 was increased from every 2 minutes 15 seconds to every 2 minutes while reducing the number of buses operating on the route from 20 to 16.[1]
Contents |
Going north from Downsview station to York University, the segments are as follows:
Total Length: ~6.5 km
The busways consist of a single lane in each direction with barriers along the side. The busway within the hydro corridor has Ontario Tall Wall barriers and the busway within York University has guardrails. Dedicated bus priority traffic signals are present whenever the busways intersect normal traffic. To facilitate left turns from Dufferin Street to the hydro corridor busway, there is a jughandle with bus priority.
The busway in the Finch hydro corridor is officially named "York University Busway", but the busway within the York University campus is unnamed. In TTC route descriptions, the busway within York University is referred to as "busway" (i.e. Buses turn north on busway...) and the busway in the Finch hydro corridor referred to as "busway on hydro corridor."[3]
The stops are as follows, from north to south:
Stop | Connections |
---|---|
York University | TTC 35E Jane Express, TTC 41 Keele, TTC 60 Steeles West, TTC 106 York University, TTC 107 Keele North, Viva Purple, YRT 3 Thornhill, YRT 10 Woodbridge, YRT 20 Jane-Concord, Züm 501 Queen |
Murray Ross | |
Dufferin-Finch | TTC 36 Finch West, TTC 104 Faywood, TTC 105 Dufferin North, TTC 117 Alness |
Downsview Station | TTC Spadina Subway line, TTC 84 Sheppard West, TTC 101 Downsview Park, TTC 104 Faywood, TTC 105 Dufferin North, TTC 106 York University, TTC 107 Keele North, TTC 108 Downsview, TTC 117 Alness |
The busway was proposed in 2004 to increase speed and reliability on Route 196. Groundbreaking occurred on July 25th 2008, at a ceremony featuring Mayor David Miller, provincial Infrastructure Minister George Smitherman and federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty. The York University Busway was scheduled to be completed for the Fall 2009 school term.
During construction, it was discovered that a gas pipeline was closer to the surface than had been thought, so the busway in the hydro corridor had to be redesigned to accommodate it.[4] This caused it to be delayed, and the only part that was open for the fall 2009 school term was the busway within York University, which started operation on September 6 2009.[5] Consequently, route 196 buses continued to use Keele and Sheppard avenues.
The busway was officially opened on November 20 2009[6] and route 196 was rerouted immediately. Other TTC routes using the busway were rerouted a week later.
The final cost of the busway was $37.8 million, of which $18.4 million was contributed by the City of Toronto, and $9.6 million was contributed each from the Government of Canada and the Province of Ontario.[7]
In early 2010, the "busway on hydro corridor" was given the official name "York University Busway".[8]
On May 1, 2011, Viva Orange began using the York University Busway.[9]
Other transit agencies are welcome to use the busway:
The busway has been criticized as a waste of money because both routes 196 York University Rocket and Viva Orange will cease service when the Spadina subway extension opens in 2015. However, when the busway was announced, the subway extension project was only an unfunded proposal. At a cost of less than $50 million, the busway provides valuable service until that date. It allows buses to operate at comparable frequency and speed to the multi-billion dollar subway extension, as well as bypass traffic caused by subway construction.[9] The Dufferin Street / Allen Road portion will continue to be used after the subway extension opens.