Toronto streetcar system
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| Toronto streetcar system | |
| Locale | Toronto, Ontario |
|---|---|
| Transit type | Streetcar |
| Began operation | 1861 (electric lines since 1891) |
| System length | 305.8 km (190 miles) |
| No. of lines | 11 |
| No. of stations | 1, plus 8 shared with the subway (all others are on-street stops) |
| Daily ridership | 328,700 |
| Track gauge | 1,495 mm |
| Operator(s) | Toronto Transit Commission |
The Toronto streetcar system comprises eleven streetcar (tram) routes in Toronto, Ontario, Canada operated by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC), the municipal public transit operator. Totalling 305.8 kilometres in length, the network is generally concentrated downtown and in proximity to the city's waterfront. Some of the TTC's streetcar routes date back to the 19th century. Unlike newer light rail transit (LRT) systems, therefore, most of Toronto's streetcar routes operate in the classic style on street trackage shared with car traffic, and streetcars stop on demand at frequent stops like buses rather than having fixed stations. However, some routes operate (totally or partially) within their own rights-of-way.
Before the TTC came into operation in 1921, there were seven distinct transit systems in the city. There were no transfers allowed between them, and so the free transfer has always been a sensitive issue for the TTC. The goal of ease in changing routes has affected the design of the system.
There are underground connections between streetcars and the subway at Union, Spadina, and St. Clair West stations, and streetcars pass by the entrances of St. Andrew, King, Osgoode, Queen, St. Patrick, Dundas, Queen's Park, and College - other downtown stations. Streetcars also enter St. Clair, Bathurst, Broadview, Dundas West, and Main Street stations at street level.
Despite the use of techniques long-removed in the streetcar networks of other North American cities, Toronto’s streetcars are not heritage streetcars run for tourism or nostalgic purposes; they provide most of the downtown core’s surface transit service, and four of the TTC's five most heavily-travelled surface routes are streetcar routes.
Contents |
[edit] History
From 1921 as the Toronto Transportation Commission, the TTC began as solely a streetcar operator, with the bulk of the routes acquired from the private Toronto Railway Company and merged with the publicly-operated Toronto Civic Railways. In 1925, routes were operated on behalf of the Township of York (as Township of York Railway), but they were essentially TTC routes.
After World War II, the TTC began plans to eliminate all streetcar routes, in part because subway development was thought to eliminate the need for them. At the time of major curtailments in 1966 coinciding with the opening of the Bloor-Danforth subway, the TTC foresaw the end of streetcars by 1980. This policy was dropped in 1972 in the face of widespread community opposition by citizens' groups who succeeded in persuading the TTC of the advantages of streetcars over buses on heavily-travelled main routes.
The TTC then maintained most of their existing network, purchased new custom-designed CLRV streetcars, and then returned to building new streetcar routes in the 1990s, building first a short line along the edge of Lake Ontario (originally numbered 604, it is now operated as the 509 Harbourfront route) and then replacing the route 77 bus along Spadina Avenue with the 510 Spadina streetcar, running in reserved lanes at the centre of the street. They now plan to similarly rebuild much of the 512 St. Clair line with a similarly separated right-of-way to increase service reliability.
The previous policy of eliminating streetcars and using buses for extensions built as the city developed northward account for the concentration of streetcar lines within five kilometres of the waterfront. The busiest north-south and east-west routes were replaced respectively by the Yonge-University-Spadina and Bloor-Danforth subway lines, and the northernmost streetcar lines, including the North Yonge and Oakwood routes, were replaced by trolley buses (and later by diesel buses).
Two other lines that operated north of St. Clair Avenue were abandoned for other reasons: the Rogers Road route was abandoned to free up streetcars for expanded service on other routes, and the Mount Pleasant route was removed due to complaints from drivers that streetcars slowed their cars down, and due to the fact that the track was ageing and needed to be replaced.
The Scarborough RT line was originally proposed to operate with streetcars on a private right-of-way, but the plans were changed when the Ontario government convinced the TTC and the borough of Scarborough to use its then-new Intermediate Capacity Transit System (ICTS) metro trains instead. Another proposed streetcar rapid transit line from Kipling station was abandoned, but the ghost platform at the bus level is a hint of a streetcar line.
On March 16, 2007, David Miller (the Mayor of Toronto) and the TTC announced Transit City, a major proposal for a 120-kilometre, $6.1-billion network of new LRT lines that would provide rail transit to underserved suburban areas of the city.
[edit] Vehicles
Note: Hundreds of cars were acquired from the TTCs predecessor companies, the Toronto Railway Company, and Toronto Civic Railways, among others. The current fleet operates with 248 vehicles.
| Make/Model | Description | Fleet size | Year acquired | Year retired | Notes |
| Preston Car Company (ex TCR) | streetcar ST | 8 | 1915-17 | 1976 | Several at Halton County Radial Railway |
| Birney Car - ex Toronto Civic Railways / J. G. Brill and Company | street car | 20 | 1920 | 1940-1941 | Sold as operating cars to Cornwall and Halifax. |
| Peter Witt - Large / Canada Car and Foundry and J. G. Brill and Company | street car; could pull trailer | 525 | 1921-1923 | 1963 | Car 2424 is at Halton County Radial Railway museum. The entire TTC streetcar system was designed to accommodate cars of this size. |
| Peter Witt - Small / Ottawa Car Company | street car | 50 | 1923 | 1963 | Numbered 2800 - 2898 (even numbers only). Car 2898 preserved at Shore Line Trolley Museum, East Haven, Connecticut. 1 retained by TTC for tour service. 2 cars at Halton Radial Railway in Rockwood, Ontario. |
| St. Louis Car Company / Canada Car and Foundry President's Conference Car class A1 | street car | 745 | 1938 | 1968 | 1 car (4000) at Halton County Radial Railway in Rockwood, Ontario. |
| St. Louis Car Company President's Conference Car | street car | 241 | 1940s | 1996 | New cars were A2-8; 205 acquired as second hand units were A9-10 - Cincinnati Street Railway, A11 - Cleveland Railway Company, A12 - Louisville Railway Company, A13 - Birmingham Railway and Electric Company, A14 - ex-Kansas City Public Service Company; A15 were A2-8 rebuilds
2 St. Louis Car Company PCC streetcar A-15 (used only for private charters and parades; car #4500 is one of these); St. Louis Car Company W30-W31 Rail Grinder - ex-PCC streetcar |
| SIG CLRV L1 | street car | 6 | 1977 | Designed by Urban Transportation Development Corporation, built in Switzerland. These 6 streetcars were the prototypes for the CLRV. There were originally supposed to be 10 numbered 4000-4009 but they were reduced to 6. | |
| Urban Transportation Development Corporation CLRV L2 | street car | 190 | 1977-1982? | Designed by Urban Transportation Development Corporation and manufactured by Hawker Siddeley Canada; air conditioning added to car #4041 in 2006 and to be added to 99 others between 2006-2009. Cars #4030 and #4165 had an automated stop announcer tested in 2006 (mainly in use on the 511 line only). Now all streetcars have the automated announcer. | |
| Urban Transportation Development Corporation ALRV L3 | articulated street car | 52 | 1983-1988 | Designed by Urban Transportation Development Corporation and manufactured by Hawker Siddeley Canada. Demo car 4900 owned by UTDC and destroyed at test facility in Kingston, Ontario. Used mainly on 501 Queen and 511 Bathurst routes. |
[edit] PCC streetcars
The TTC were among the first to buy the then state-of-the-art PCC streetcar when it was designed by a committee of public transport operators in the 1930s. These cars were bought to replace the Peter Witt cars and also older vehicles inherited from the Toronto Railway Company. The TTC's first purchase was in the late 1930s, and by the end of the 1970s they had operated a larger fleet of PCCs than any other agency in the world. The early cars were retired and sent to Mexico and Egypt, and some newer cars were acquired from U.S. operators abandoning streetcar service, including Kansas City, Birmingham, and Cleveland. By the 1970s, the TTC sought to abandon the service as well, but supporters persuaded them to reconsider, and so a new streetcar model was needed to replace some of the ageing PCCs.
Two of the TTC’s PCC streetcars, which operated in regular service until the mid-1990s, are retained for special events such as parades, private charters[1] and special revenue runs, such as holidays in the summer [2].
Most PCCs were scrapped with a few becoming restaurants, housing and other uses. A few cars were purchased by railway museums:
| Relocation | # of cars | TTC fleet # | PCC Class | Builder | Built for | Current use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kenosha Electric Railway | 5 | 4610 (originally 4541), 4606, 4609, 4615 and 4616 | A15 - formerly ex-A8 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | museum pieces with some as active cars |
| San Francisco Municipal Railway | 1 | N/A - Twin City Rapid Transit car repainted as TTC car 1074 (this number never existed and has 2 trolley poles) and ,issing bull light | copy of A8 | St. Louis Car Company - rebuilt by Brookville Locomotive Company | Twin City Rapid Transit | restored/operational, but not in active service |
| San Francisco Municipal Railway | 11 | 4752, 4754, 4757, 4758, 4763, 4764, 4769, 4770, 4771, 4775 and 4777 | A-14 | St. Louis Car Company | Kansas City Public Service Company | operated ex-TTC PCCs during the 1970s - all retired |
| Halton County Radial Railway | 7 | 4000, 4386, 4426, 4600, 4611, 4618, 4684 | A1, A6, A7, A15(3), A12 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry / 4684 by St. Louis Car Company | TTC, except 4684 - Cleveland Railway Company | some restored/operational cars - some waiting for restoration |
| SuperBurger in Primrose, Ontario | 1 | 4341 | A6 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | non-operational diner car |
| The Boutique - Thornhill, Ontario | 1 | 4716 | A13 | St. Louis Car Co | Birmingham Transit Company | non-operational/some damage; former office space for Shylow Farms |
| Perris, California | 1 | 4460 | A7 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | privately owned - static display |
| Perkinsfield, Ontario | 1 | 4524 | A8 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | non-operational car attached to building |
| A Streetcar Named Dessert, Springville, New York | 1 | 4434 | A7 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | non-operational car used as dessert restaurant |
| La Pentola Ristorante, North York, Ontario | 1 | 4774 | A14 | body by St. Louis Car Company | Kansas City Public Service Company | static car; removed from restaurant - fate unknown |
| Langford Restaurant, Langford, Ontario | 2 | 4427, 4560 | A7 and A9 | St. Louis Car Company | TTC, Cincinnati Transit Commission | static car part of restaurant |
| Pickering, Ontario | 1 | 4674 | A11 | Pullman-Standard Car Company | Cleveland Railway Company | privately owned - ? |
| Bombardier Transportation- Thunder Bay, Ontario | 2 | 4359, 4456 | A6 and A7 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | The 2 Cars were on display on tracks outside the plant from the early 90's until 2007 when they were relocated to behind the facility and ultimately removed and sold for scrap |
| Edmonton Radial Railway | 3 | 4349, 4367, 4612 | A6 (2), A15 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | restored/operational museum roster cars |
| Static Outdoor Exhibit in Kansas City, MO (moved from Western Railway Museum) | 1 | 4752 | A14 | St. Louis Car Company | Kansas City Public Service Company | unrestored car/heavily damaged; served as SF Muni 1190 |
| Tahoe Airport Generic Railway, Lake Tahoe, California | 2 | 4404 and 4472 | A7 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | stored for later use for future line in area |
| Valley Metro, Phoenix, Arizona | 1 | 4607 | A15 | St. Louis Car Company | Cleveland Railway Company | static outdoor exhibit |
| Old Pueblo Trolley - Tucson, Arizona | 1 | 4608 | A15 | St. Louis Car Company | Cleveland Railway Company | static museum piece |
| Colorado Springs & Interurban Railway, Colorado Springs, Colorado | 1 | 4478 | A7 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | static museum piece |
| Gomaco Trolley Company, Ida Grove, Iowa | 1 | 4476 | A7 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | ? |
| McKinney Avenue Transit Authority, Dallas, Texas | 2 | 4613 and 4614 | A15 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | static restored car |
| East Troy Railroad Museum, East Troy, Wisconsin | 1 | 4617 | A15 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | static car |
| Michigan Transit Museum, Mount Clemens, Michigan | 1 | 4601 | A15 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | static outdoor display |
| Northern Ohio Railway Museum - Chippewa Lake, Ohio | 2 | 4655 and 4656 | A11 | Pullman-Standard Car Company | Cleveland Railway Company | unrestored/heavily damaged |
| Trolleyville, Olmstead Falls, Ohio | 1 | 4602 | A15 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | restored and operational car |
| Buckeye Lake, Ohio | 2 | 4662 and 4663 | A12 | Pullman-Standard Car Company | Cleveland Railway Company | unrestored/heavily damaged and stored outdoors |
| Vintage Electric Streetcar Company, Windbear, Pennsylvania | 1 | 4524 | A8 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | ? |
| National Capital Trolley Museum, Silver Spring, Maryland | 1 | 4603 | A15 | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | operational |
| Alexandria, Egypt | N/A | N/A | N/A | body by St. Louis Car Company/assembled by Canadian Car and Foundry | TTC | sent to Egypt from 196 to 1968; all retired by 1984 |
[edit] The CLRVs and ALRVs
When the TTC reversed their decision to eliminate streetcars in the 1970s, they were faced with the problem of how to replace their ageing fleet of PCC streetcars given that most cities in North America were switching entirely to buses, and so there were no new mass-market streetcar designs already being built that Toronto could purchase as it had before. While Edmonton and Calgary chose to adapt German stadtbahn (city rail) trains for the new systems they were installing around the same time, the TTC instead had a new streetcar designed in the traditional style, and so the two models of streetcars the TTC uses for revenue service today remain unique to the city. It was hoped that the new models could also be sold to the few other cities that continued streetcar service, such as Boston and Philadelphia, but this strategy proved unsuccessful as the German designs became widely used for the new paradigm of light rail in North America.
The CLRV (Canadian Light Rail Vehicle, ordered 1977 - version L1 and L2) and the one-and-a-half-length ALRV (Articulated Light Rail Vehicle, ordered 1987 - version L3) were designed by the Urban Transportation Development Corporation (UTDC), an Ontario Crown corporation. The first six cars were built by 'Schweizerische Industrie Gesellschaft (Swiss Industrial Company, or SIG) and the rest by Hawker Siddeley Canada Limited in Thunder Bay, with a propulsion system by Brush of England and bogies by MAN of Germany.
The CLRVs and ALRVs retain many features of traditional streetcar design: they collect their electric power by trolley pole rather than the pantograph more common on modern vehicles, and are unidirectional, with a driving position at only one end and doors on only one side, requiring track loops in order to turn around. Even the ALRVs, which have two body sections connected by an articulation, are not very long compared to some other modern trams, which may have as many as four articulations. This has much to do with the fact that the TTC network is largely a "traditional" streetcar network dating back to as early as the 19th century, and not a modern LRT system dismantled decades ago then rebuilt to modern standards more recently. Loops and trolley-pole infrastructure was already in place when the vehicles were built, and the requirement for compatibility with a large fleet of existing vehicles, meant that the CLRVs and ALRVs were built to fit a traditional system rather than a new LRT system. Furthermore, the TTC has never seen any conclusive reason to upgrade the infrastructure; new projects and rebuilds have needed compatibility with the existing system, ensuring these traditional elements will remain indefinitely.
According to the TTC[3], one CLRV replaces 60 private cars in the morning rush period or 72 passengers, whereas one ALRV can carry the equivalent of 90 cars or 108 passengers.
Both models of streetcar have high floors, accessed by stairs at each door. TTC staff have explored a number of possible means to make them wheelchair-accessible, including constructing level boarding platforms, lowering the track level, installing wheelchair lifts, and attach wheelchair-accessible trailers, but have concluded that none of these options is practical.
Unlike the TTC's earlier PCC and Peter Witt streetcars, the current models are never run in two-unit trains, or with trailers; the replacement of the two highest-volume routes with subway lines has decreased the number of passengers streetcars must cope with, and a single ALRV is long enough to provide sufficient capacity on today's busiest routes. Notably, the CLRVs originally came with couplers, but these were removed due to safety concerns.
[edit] The future
As the original CLRVs will reach the end of their thirty-year service life in 2007, the TTC must soon either rebuild or replace them. Until recently, their official plan was to rebuild the CLRVs to extend their useful life by about ten to fifteen years and add new features such as air conditioning, and not purchase any new streetcars until the ALRVs reached the end of their lives. On July 26, 2006 the first streetcar with air conditioning (number 4041) entered revenue service. With new funding from senior governments, however, they now intend to refurbish only one hundred CLRVs to meet Toronto's immediate requirements, and buy new low-floor, higher-capacity trams to replace the current fleet and run planned routes along the waterfront and in the inner suburbs. The remaining 96 streetcars will be rebuilt only if the introduction of new models is delayed.
In June 2007 the TTC launched a public consultation on the design of its new streetcars, including an online survey available at www.mynewstreetcar.ca, and displays at Finch and Scarborough Centre stations, the Albion Centre, and Dundas Square. Mock-ups of the Bombardier Flexity Swift (as used in Minneapolis) and Siemens Combino Plus were on display at the 2007 Canadian National Exhibition in front of the Direct Energy Centre.
On 19 September 2007, the TTC published their specifications for the ‘LF LRV’, as they are calling the proposed new streetcars, which explains what they are seeking beyond that the vehicle be compatible with the TTC’s existing tracks, which require tight turning radii, good hill-climbing ability, and compatibility with single-leaf switches. The tender requests a streetcar of 27–30 m, with multiple points of articulation, and three powered bogies.
Though the document states that the TTC would accept a well-designed 70% low-floor streetcar, they have since decided to seek a 100% low-floor design; folding ramps may be fitted at the doors to allow stepless boarding where platforms are not available. The initial fleet replacing the CLRVs and ALRVs are to remain single-ended with doors on the right only, and current collection by trolley pole in to remain, but the TTC also request that provision be made for future conversion to pantograph, and that the option of buying a bi-directional version of the streetcar for new lines be available. Provision will be made for ticket-vending machines on board, rather than have the driver take fares as is current practice.
The TTC are tendering for an initial order of 204 streetcars, with the first prototypes to be delivered in 2010.[4] Current projections for population increases and new lines indicate that by 2026, the TTC will need to extend its fleet to between 350 and 480 streetcars, suggesting that the replacements for the CLRVs and ALRVs will be merely the first of a large fleet.
The competitors to supply the new streetcars are Siemens, Bombardier, Ansaldobreda, Mytram, Škoda, and Vossloh Kiepe. Kinki Sharyo originally expressed interest, but then dropped out.[5] Siemens have extensively promoted their entry, the Combino Plus, with newspaper advertisements and a web site. Bombardier initially displayed a mock-up of the Flexity Swift from the Minneapolis project, but are now offering a variant of the Flexity Outlook to meet the 100% low-floor requirement,[6] promoting it with a web site called ‘The Streetcar Redefined’.
Regardless of who is selected, new streetcars will not appear in Toronto until at least 2009. In the wake of this, the TTC is facing a shortage of available streetcars. Because the CLRVs are reaching the end of their usable lifespan, they require more frequent repairs, and of the TTC's 248 streetcars, only 186 are available for service, leaving a deficit of almost 10 vehicles in the morning rush hour. The TTC has considered replacing streetcars on Bathurst Street and Kingston Road (Routes 502, 503, 511) with buses during the morning rush hour on a contingency basis so that they can increase service on busier routes until new vehicles arrive.
[edit] List of past Toronto streetcars
Traffic Cars
| Make/Model | Description | # of vehicles | Year acquired | Year retired | Notes |
| Canadian Car and Foundry/Brill Peter Witt streetcar - Large with trailers | streetcars | 392 | 1921-1923 | 1963 | retired |
| Canadian Car and Foundry/Ottawa Car Company Peter Witts - Small Witts | streetcars | 196 | 1921-1923 | 1965 | retired; 1 refurbished for tours |
| St. Louis Car Company and Canadian Car and Foundry PCC streetcars | streetcars | total of 745 with 205 second-hand and 540 brand-new; some PCCs became work cars for the streetcar service and some to the subway | 1938 | 1996 | retired; 2 refurbished for tours |
Work Cars
| Make/Model | Description | Fleet size; | Year acquired | Year retired | Notes |
| Birney Car - ex-Toronto Railway Company (retired) | rail grinder | 1 | 1931 | 1976 | retired |
| St. Louis Car Company W30-W31 | rail grinder | 2 | 1976 | 1999 | ex-PCC streetcar - retired |
| St. Louis Car Company W28 | rail grinder | 1 | 1931 | 1976 | ex-TRC Preston car - retired |
| Toronto Railway Company C1 | crane | 1 | 1921 | ? | sold to Halton Radial Railway |
| W5 | snow plow | 1 | ? | ? | ? |
| W16 | dump car | 1 | 1920s | ? | |
| W26 | sand car | 1 | 1950 | 1967 | |
| S-30 | snow sweeper | 1 | 1947 | 1970 | New York City's Third Avenue Railway System |
| Russell Car Company / S-31 | snow sweeper | 1 | 1947 | 1973 | Built in 1920 as Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway P-601; to Third Avenue Railway System as 86 in 1935; to TTC as S-31 in 1947; preserved at Seashore Trolley Museum, Kennebunkport, Maine |
| S-33 | snow sweeper | 1 | 1947 | 1960s | New York City's Third Avenue Railway System |
| Russell Car Company / S-36 | snow sweeper | 1 | 1947 | 1973 | Built in 1920 as Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway P-607; to Third Avenue Railway System as 89 in 1935; to TTC as S-36 in 1947; preserved at Shore Line Trolley Museum, East Haven, Connecticut |
| Russell Car Company / S-37 | snow sweeper | 1 | 1948 | 1973 | Built in 1920 for the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway; to Third Avenue Railway System 1935; to TTC as S-37 in 1947; preserved at Halton County Railway Museum |
| Russell Car Company / S-39 | snow sweeper | 1 | 1948 | 1973 | Built in 1920 as Trenton & Mercer County 31; to Third Avenue Railway System as 82 in 1935; to TTC as S-39 in 1948; to Public Service of New Jersey as 5246 in 1973; now at Transport of New Jersey in Newark as 5246, semiactive in stub tracks at Newark terminal |
[edit] Track gauge
The tracks of Toronto's streetcars and subways (apart from the Scarborough RT) are built to the unique track gauge of 4 ft 10⅞ in (1,495 mm), 60 millimetres (2 3/8 in) wider than the usual standard gauge of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in). There are arguments over the reason for this. One popular (some say false)[who?] belief, sometimes quoted by the TTC themselves, is that the City of Toronto feared that the street railway franchise operator, first in 1861 the Toronto Street Railways, then in 1891 the Toronto Railway Company, and in 1921 the TTC, would allow the operation of steam locomotives and freight trains through city streets, as was common practice in Hamilton, Ontario (until the 1950s) and in many U.S. cities, such as New York, New York (New York Central), and in Syracuse, NY (Erie Railroad). Standard gauge rails in the streets would have allowed this, but of course steam railway equipment could not follow the abrupt curves in the streetcar network. Opposition to freight operation in city streets precluded interchange even with adjacent radial lines even after the lines changed to TTC gauge. Electric railway freight cars could negotiate street curves, but still freight operations to downtown were not allowed until the final few years of radial operation by the TTC. Some suggest the more practical reason is that early tracks were used to pull wagons smoothly in the days before paved roads, and that they fit a different gauge. The Williams Omnibus Bus Line did change the gauge of their buses in 1861 so as to do this.
The unique gauge has remained to this day, since converting all tracks and vehicles would be expensive and would lack any real benefit. Some proposals for the city's subway system involved using streetcars in the tunnels, and possibly having some routes run partially in tunnels and partially on city streets, so the same gauge was used, though the idea was ultimately dropped in favour of dedicated rapid-transit trains. The use of standard-gauge tracks on the Scarborough RT makes it impossible for there to be any track connection between it and the other lines, and so when RT vehicles need anything more than basic service (which is carried out in the RT's own McCowan Yard), they are carried by truck to the Greenwood subway yards.
[edit] Routes
The TTC operates 305.8 kilometres or 190 miles of streetcar tracks throughout Toronto.
[edit] Route numbers
The TTC has used route numbers in the 500 series for streetcar routes since 1980; prior to then, streetcar routes were not numbered, but the destination signs on the new CLRVs were not large enough to display both the route name and destination, according to the TTC. The only exceptions today to this numbering scheme are the 301 Queen and 306 Carlton Blue Night Network routes, which correspond to the regular 501 and 506 routes; there were similarly a 312 St. Clair and a 304 King streetcar, but the St. Clair Blue Night service is now a bus route, while the King service was removed and partially replaced with extensions of other night bus routes.
The one other exception to the 500 series numbering was the Harbourfront LRT streetcar. When introduced in 1990, this route was numbered 604, which was intended to group it with the subway/RT routes (although these have no numbers in public use) instead of the other streetcars. In 1996 the TTC stopped trying to market the route as 'rapid transit' and changed the number to 510; the tracks were later extended in two directions to form the 510 Spadina and 509 Harbourfront routes.[7]
During times when streetcar service on all or a portion of a route has been replaced temporarily by buses (e.g., for track reconstruction), the replacement bus service is typically identified by the same route number as the corresponding streetcar line. Shorter-term replacement or supplementary shuttle bus service (e.g., due to a track blockage or short-term street closure) is usually marked simply as 'SPECIAL' on the bus destination sign.
[edit] Private rights-of-way
The majority of streetcar routes operate in mixed traffic, generally reflecting the original track configurations dating from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. However, newer trackage has largely been established within private rights-of-way, in order to allow streetcars to operate with fewer disruptions due to delays caused by automobile traffic. Most of the system's private rights-of-way operate within the median of existing streets, separated from general traffic by raised curbs and controlled by specialized traffic signals at intersections. Queen and former Long Branch cars have operated on such a right-of-way along the Queensway between Humber and Sunnyside loops since 1957. More recently, private rights-of-way have been opened downtown along Queen's Quay, Spadina Avenue and St. Clair Avenue West.
Short sections of track also operate in tunnel (to connect with Spadina, Union, and St. Clair West subway stations). The most significant section of underground streetcar trackage is a tunnel underneath Bay Street connecting Queens Quay with Union Station; this section, which is approximately 0.7 km long, includes one intermediate underground station at Bay Street and Queens Quay.
The TTC is reinstating a separated right-of-way — removed between 1928 and 1935 [1] — on St. Clair Avenue, from Yonge Street to just past Keele Street, to be completed by 2008. A court decision obtained by local merchants in October 2005 had brought construction to a halt and put the project in doubt; the judicial panel then recused themselves, and the delay for a new decision adversely affected the construction schedule. A new judicial panel decided in February 2006 in favour of the city, and construction resumed in summer 2006. One third of the St. Clair right-of-way was completed by the end of 2006 and streetcar began using it on February 18, 2007. The portion finished was from St. Clair Station (Yonge St.) to Vaughan Road. The second phase started construction in the summer of 2007 from Vaughan Road to Caledonia Road. The third and final phase from Caledonia to Gunns Loop (just west of Keele St.) will be completed by the end of 2008.
[edit] Current streetcar routes
There are currently 11 streetcar routes in Toronto:
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The 512 St. Clair line is currently under reconstruction, building a reserved right-of-way similar to the 510 Spadina. The 508 Lake Shore is a rush-hour only service.
[edit] Future expansion
| This article or section contains information about a planned or expected public transportation infrastructure in Canada. It may contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change dramatically as the construction and/or completion of the infrastructure approaches, and more information becomes available. |
Various plans for future routes include:
- Continuing a route along Kingston Road into Scarborough, then returning along Eglinton Avenue and stopping at Kennedy subway station
- A route eastward along Queen's Quay, into new developments on the port lands
- More coverage and line connections in southern Etobicoke
- Extending 512 St. Clair to Jane subway station
- Extending the Dundas streetcar from Dundas West (TTC) north to Runnymede Loop at Dundas and Runnymede to connect to a westward extended 512 St. Clair
- Converting the 25 Don Mills bus to streetcar operation
- Creating an LRT from Union (TTC) along Queens Quay East and Cherry Street to Parliament and possibly extending it to Castle Frank (TTC)
- Several ROW routes in Scarborough along Sheppard, Finch, Lawrence East, Eglinton, Danforth, McCowan, and Kingston Road.
The City of Toronto and the TTC’s Transit City report[8] released on March 16, 2007, proposes creating new Light Rail Transit (LRT) lines and Rights-of-Way (ROW) including:
- Don Mills LRT (along Don Mills Road from Steeles Avenue to Overlea Boulevard, and continuing to Pape Station along a possible alignment of Overlea Boulevard from Don Mills Road to Millwood Road , continuing adjacent to the Leaside Bridge from Overlea Boulevard to Pape Avenue and along Pape Avenue from Millwood Road to Danforth Avenue)
- Eglinton Crosstown LRT (along Eglinton Avenue from near Renforth Drive to Kennedy Station, with underground operation from Keele Street to approximately Laird Drive)
- Etobicoke-Finch West LRT (along Finch Avenue West from Yonge Street to Highway 27)
- Jane LRT (along Jane Street from Bloor Street to Steeles Avenue and continuing along Steeles Avenue from Jane Street to Steeles West on the Spadina extension. This line also includes a stub extension of the St. Clair ROW from Gunns Loop to Jane Street)
- Scarborough Malvern LRT (along Eglinton Avenue from Kennedy Station to Kingston Road, continuing along Kingston Road from Eglinton Avenue to Morningside Avenue and along Morningside Avenue from Kingston Road to Finch Avenue)
- Sheppard East LRT (along Sheppard Avenue from Don Mills station to Morningside Avenue, with a connection to an extended Scarborough RT near Markham Road)
- Waterfront West LRT (along Lakeshore Boulevard from Long Branch Loop to near the South Kingsway, continuing along the Queensway to King Street, and adjacent to the Gardiner Expressway to Exhibition Loop; from Exhibition it will continue to Union station in either its own as yet to be determined alignment, or in the Harborfront West LRT alignment)
The Ontario government has in its MoveOntario 2020 plan, proposed funding approximately 2/3 of the $5.5 billion of the seven Transit City lines, with the expectation that the federal government would fund the remaining 1/3.
[edit] Abandoned streetcar routes
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[edit] Toronto Street Railway routes
- St Lawrence Hall-Yorkville (1873-1891)
- Yonge (1873-1891)
- Queen (1873-1891)
- Front (1873-1891)
- Sherbourne (1873-1891)
- Carlton (1873-1891)
- St Lawrence Market-Woodbine (1873-1891)
- Dovercourt-McCaul (1873-1891)
- North Toronto-Union Station (1873-1891)
- King (1873-1891)
- Bloor (1873-1891)
- Spadina (1873-1891)
[edit] Toronto Railway Company routes
- Queen-High Park (1891-1921)
- Church (1891-1921)
- Carlton-College (1891-1921)
- Yonge (1891-1921)
- Belt Line (1891-1921)
- Bloor-McCaul (1891-1921)
- Avenue Road (1891-1921)
- Dundas (1891-1921)
- College-Yonge (1891-1921)
- Bathurst (1891-1921)
- Wincester (1891-1921)
- Parliament (1891-1921)
- Broadview (1891-1921)
[edit] Toronto Civic Railway routes
- Danforth Division (1913-1921)
- Gerrard (1912-1921)
- Bloor West Division (1915-1921)
- St. Clair Division (1913-1921)
- Lansdowne (1917-1921)
Please see abandoned streetcar routes [2]
[edit] Properties
[edit] Loops
Since all of Toronto's current streetcars are unidirectional, they require off-street track loops in order to change direction.
The following loops are or have been used by the TTC (some are no longer used or have been disposed of):
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Source: Toronto Streetcar Track Map
[edit] Carhouses
Toronto's streetcars are housed and maintained at various carhouses or "streetcar barns":
| Yard | Location | Year Open | Notes |
| Hillcrest Complex | Davenport Road and Bathurst Street | 1924 | former site of farm and later Toronto Driving Club track; services streetcars and buses, repair facilities |
| Roncesvalles Carhouse | Queen Street West and Roncesvalles Avenue | 1895; rebuilt 1921 | built for the Toronto Railway Company; indoor and outdoor streetcar storage |
| Russell (Connaught) Carhouse | Connaught Avenue and Queen Street East | 1913 | built for the Toronto Railway Company; indoor and outdoor streetcar storage |
Inactive carhouses once part of the TTC's streetcar operations:
| Yard | Location | Year Open | Year Closed | Notes |
| Danforth Carhouse | Danforth Avenue and Coxwell Avenue | 1915 | 2002 | built for the Toronto Civic Railways |
| Dundas Carhouse [15] | Dundas Street West and Howard Park Avenue | 1907 | 1936 | storage for 60 cars; wye and runaround loop since disappeared and area re-developed |
| Eglinton Carhouse | Eglinton Avenue West and Yonge Street | 1922 | 2002; demolished | |
| Lansdowne Carhouse | Lansdowne Avenue and Paton Avenue | 1911 | 1996; demolished 2003 | Built for the Toronto Railway Company |
| St. Clair (Wychwood) Carhouse | Wychwood south of St. Clair Avenue West | 1913 | 1978 | built for the Toronto Civic Railways |
Lost carhouse
| Yard | Location | Year To Open | Notes |
| Runnymede Carhouse | Runnymede Road | 1926 | proposed carhouse / never developed and abandoned in 1960s |
Source: The TTC's Active Carhouses
[edit] Facilities
The TTC vehicles are serviced and stored at various location throughout the city:
| Shop Name | Year Open | Location |
| D.W. Harvey Shops | 1924 | Hillcrest Complex |
| W.E.P. Duncan Shops | 1985 | Hillcrest Complex |
| Greenwood Shops | 1966 | Greenwood Yard |
| Roncesvalles Yard | 1895 | At Intersection of Roncesvalles, Queen and The Queensway |
[edit] Operator Training
A mockup of a CLRV is used to train new streetcar operators is located at Hillcrest. The training simulator consist of an operator cab, front steps and part of the front of a streetcar.
Operators also train with a real streetcar. Front and rear rollsigns on the vehicle will identify it as a training car.
[edit] Statistics
- The TTC still has a blacksmith employed to make specialized parts for the overhead wires used by the streetcars.
- The lights, or bullseyes, over the route sign on today's CLRV and ALRV, are relics of the past streetcars in Toronto. Before lighted route signs, single green and red lights on the front and back of the cars allowed people waiting for streetcars at night to tell which direction a car in the distance was travelling.
- The Streetcars (and Subways) are powered with 600VDC.
- To reduce friction noise of wheels on tracks on curved sections of track, water is piped in to the tracks; if oil was used for lubrication, it would destroy the tires of cars that drive over the tracks.
- Sand is used for the brakes for extra traction; a passenger might notice spilled sand on the streetcar floors near the front of the car.
- Eglinton West station features an artwork called Summertime Streetcar by Gerald Zeldinwith, which consists of two enamel murals depicting PCC streetcars facing each other, although these streetcars had never served this station.
[edit] References
- ^ Red Rocket Historic Charters. Toronto Transit Commission (January 2007). Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- ^ Bow, James (August 2007). TTC Runs PCCs on August Civic Holiday. Transit Toronto. Retrieved on [[2007-08- 16]].
- ^ TTC Operating Statistics (PDF) (2005). Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- ^ Toronto Transit Commission (September 19, 2007). Status of Low Floor Light Rail Vehicle Procurement Project.
- ^ Toronto Transit Commission (June 13, 2007). Light Rail Vehicle Acquisition Update.
- ^ Gray, Jeff. "Toronto's $1.25-billion light-rail gamble", The Globe and Mail, 24 November 200, p. M3.
- ^ Bow, James (2006-11-10). Route 509 - The New Harbourfront Streetcar. Transit Toronto. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- ^ Transit City. City of Toronto. Retrieved on 2007-07-21.
- Gray, Jeff. "TTC to shop for new streetcars", The Globe and Mail, 2005-06-23.
- Future Streetcar Fleet Requirements and Plans. Toronto Transit Commission (2005-06-22).
- Livett, Christopher. Toronto's Streetcar System (schematic track map). Transit Toronto.
- Opportunities for New Streetcar Routes (PDF). Toronto Transit Commission (1997-01-21).
[edit] See also
- Toronto Transit Commission
- Toronto buses and trolley buses
- Toronto subway and RT
- Toronto PCCs
- Queen's Quay-Ferry Docks (TTC)
- Lower Queen
- Scarborough RT (TTC)
- Transit City
[edit] External links
- Toronto Transit Commission
- TTC Transit City - LRT expansion proposals
- TTC's website for its new vehicle procurement programme
- Siemens' proposal for Toronto's new streetcar fleet
- Transit Toronto Streetcar Pages
- The Toronto LRT Information Page
- TTC Schedules by Route Name
- Pictures of old Toronto streetcars, mostly from the 1960s and 1970s.
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