I'd say there are "propositional" transit maps, and fantasy transit maps. This video was very much an example of a propositional transit map. One is serious, the other is like the transit version of a gingerbread and candy village.
I feel like the canada line should also be expanded to tsawassen mills, tsawassen ferry terminal, and link up with the fraser line in white rock with stops in surrey newton/panorama ridge
Great video! Please do make that dedicated West Coast Express video - it would be so nice to see an expanded longer distance and more frequent passenger rail service. How nice would it be to take a weekend trip from Coquitlam to Chilliwack by train?!
Pretty please could you do a video about Calgary and the CTrain? I feel like it’s a really good dynamic because there are 2 LRT with a 3rd low-to-the-ground LRT line under construction with 2 phases yet to be built BUT ALSO There are BRT lines as well which might or might not be able to be routed better. Additionally, there is no line to one of the largest Airports in the country. Thanks a bunch and you’re vids are great
Best and forward thinking transit system?? Where?? I didn’t realise it could get any worse than Vancouver but I’ve previously only lived in Australian cities. I’m writing this early into the video so let’s see the vision 😊
Hey do you think it is possible to add a distance scale for the maps. sometimes the maps may not give a complete idea of how spread out train lines are like the difference between Vancouver and LA county
Personally I think the Skytrain should extend all the way past Langley to Abbotsford if not Chilliwack, as well as branch south from King George all the way through White Rock to the Peace Arch. I think this would do wonders for reducing the cost of living, because people could live in cheaper areas and still have fast access to downtown Vancouver, as well as easy access to the border. Could even take the Richmond end down to Point Roberts and East from Delta to meet up with that White Rock extension, giving Point Roberts residents significantly easier access to Blaine. Perhaps Washington State could even contribute some funds for such a thing, since their residents would benefit? If the Richmond end of the Canada line was extended, they could potentially even create a second route from YVR going south without changing at Bridgeport, allowing people to get between Surrey and the airport by a different route without going through downtown, which could relieve the pressure on the parts of the Canada line we have now. They could even do a connection going east from Richmond, through Annacis Island and North Delta to Surrey.
I totally agree about things like Wi-Fi and platform doors. Having doors on the train and none on the platform is like having an elevator with doors on the car and no doors on the floors. Just an open elevator shaft on every floor. It's insanely unsafe. And also cross-platform interchanges. The worst thing is how they've made Columbia station the place where people have to change trains if they want to go from Surrey to Coquitlam, when it not only has two platforms on the side instead of just one in the middle, but it forces you to go down, under, and then up to get to the other platform to change trains, and there isn't even an escalator on the side going up. And then after that you have to change trains again just a few stops later at Lougheed and navigate the bizarre connection there with the extra platform.
And speaking of Metrotown station, I still can't believe there used to be a pedestrian crossing from the station to the mall, and then they redesigned the station and just... avoided it. It's now just sitting there, completely blocked off and connected to nothing, while people are forced to cross a busy street in huge numbers.
There's something about looking at fantasy transit maps that are so appealing to me. Especially how they highlight areas of cities that are more important than they otherwise seem for a person who is unfamiliar with the city
I think thats they key, you need to have an honest understanding of existing land use and travel patterns to create a map that feels . . . . reasonable
Perhaps instead of to UBC, the Inlet Line could take the Stanley line’s route south of the river to Tsawwassen. In doing so, the greater feeder lines can transfer onto it with direct access to the TFT and bus access to Horseshoe Bay via Park Royal
Bicycle routes and parking need to be connected to all other forms of transportation. Bicycles, ebikes, electric cargo bicycles, robo taxis and escooters are great options for last mile, short distance travel. Walking, running, bicycles, escooters, green open spaces, electric buses, water ferries and trams are all parts of a good transportation system and need to have connections to each other.
As much as the ferries are major, I don't think they currently justify rail or will in the foreseeable future - much more bus service is probably fine!
I don't think that is needed. If there are enough foot passengers to justify rail to Horseshoe or Tsawwassen, ferries direct from DT Vancouver to Nanaimo and Victoria would likely be cheaper for Translink and faster for the passengers. At least with a north shore line the bus connection to Horseshoe Bay should be faster and more reliable.
Personally, I think BC ferries just needs to offer passenger ferry service from waterfront to Victoria. It's crazy to me that nothing like that exists...
I think people underestimate how fast Surrey is growing. Surrey will soon pass Vancouver in population and the transit offerings for many areas are shockingly bad, if existent at all. Vancouver has a lot more dense corridors to easily expand but the delayed approach to Surrey's mobilization scares me a bit.
Surrey and Langley has the greatest potential for density and development in the region guessing that’s why the Expo expanded to those areas. I’m guessing Surrey Central might actually be a Central station when it expands down south, north east or even south west being a more crosstown
Surrey Transit is the worse. The service is always delayed, especially for a Rapid Bus. In my honest opinion, building the SkyTrain from Surrey to Langley is truly a waste of money. I'd rather use that money to build an LRT line from Surrey Central SkyTrain directly to Guildford Mall, because that's where everybody goes in Surrey after they get off the SkyTrain at Surrey Central. The current route of the Rapid Bus in Surrey is truly unreliable. It either comes very late or there are two Rapid Buses arriving in a row. It's just ridiculous. After building the LRT lines from Surrey Central to Guildford, the Rapid Buses can concentrate from Newton to Surrey Central, and from Scott Road to Surrey Central instead. After that, Surrey roads will be less congested. In the future, I'd suggest they build an LRT line from Newton to Surrey Central as well, to further eliminate the congested areas of Surrey. The government in Surrey under Doug McCullum, did not understand nor cared about Surrey residents at all. He wasted Surrey's tax dollars on useless projects, like the Surrey to Langley SkyTrain that nobody asked for. That's why Surrey residents kicked him and his useless party out of the mayor's office immediately. The new mayor, Brenda Locke is trying to fix everything Doug McCullum did previously.
@@thuydoan7496 I think the Surrey Langley skytrain is far more useful for people than an LRT to the mall. People are able to get to school and work downtown or anywhere else along the way so much easier, freeing up both traffic in Surrey and on the trans Canada.
@@jackdonohue7893 I don't think you live in Surrey to know the routes. It is always packed on the Rapid bus, and traffic is usually stuck from Newton bus station to Surrey Central SkyTrain station to Guildford Mall afterwards. People who live in Langley can take the Trans Canada highway just fine, because it isn't congested.
That plan looks great! Just three suggestions. 1 revive the Olympic village LRT and possibly make a Vancouver tram network that connects with arbutus, west end and Olympic village. 2 extend the Canada line to north Vancouver with the Inland line at a mega tc by the rocky mountaineer station. 3 merge Granville and city centre stations into a single stop. This would allow for a major downtown hub in central Vancouver and not cause any confusion for new riders. Plus get customers from Richmond and Yvr to Chinatown, pacific central station, and surrey.
1. 100% 2. The Canada Line yearns to cross the inlet, but according to the BIRT study this would necessitate a re-build of the Canada Line north of Yaletown in order to get to the required depth. Maybe worth it? 3. Do you mean simply relabelling the stations, or actually upgrading them into a single integrated one? That transfer is presently awful, but mostly unnecessary once the Broadway Subway opens. The only thing I could see that would justify upgrading the station with some sort of tunneled pathed to each other's platforms is if the Expo line is extended north towards West Vancouver.
@@adamjamesburnett It just doesn't make sense though. A tunnel there is a ~billion dollars, and saves ~5 minutes, you have to put the water side stations super deep increasing access time, eliminating the time savings. While the seabus just takes 15 minutes, and can easily put more boats for higher frequency if needed.
@@chiliishot but this billion could be extended a bit more to serve north Vancouver direct with Canada line trains, no transfers, all under ground. This would not only shield commuters from the freezing Canadian winters, but provide north Vancouver with some well needed north south in addition to (including what RM transit added) east west sky train (or should I say earth train ahahahah) coverage. Not to mention a mega transfer hub, which sound pretty sweet
I feel this plan is somewhat Vancouver centric. In this arrangement, surrey and Langley remain as commuter based housing oceans. Surely it makes more sense to build more office space in surrey central and Langley city so people can work closer to home, and improve connections between different areas of the south of fraser with better transit. After some 60 years of construction, all we have are 3 branch lines that all meet in the same place, which would make it impossible to really move around surrey if you don’t live in, or are going to, surrey central. A network of Canada line esque, lower capacity elevated skytrain lines to better connect the south of Fraser region will be necessary to reduce car traffic and usage, so I propose: A line running from Scott road to Newton, via 120th and 72nd to act as an upgrade to the R-6 when it reaches capacity. An extension of the north branch of the Fraser line down 200th to meet Langley central expo at a cross platform transfer A line running from guildford mall south along 152st then curving around north Fleetwood to intersect the 160st expo station, and then running along 84ave and south down 152st and west along 72ave to act as an extension to the Scott road line. A new east-west line starting at 160st expo and then running west along 88ave creating connections with both sides of the Scott line, and the south branch of the fraser line, and then running over a pair of rail bridges to stop in queensboro and then terminate at 22st station in new west. If knight street can get a 7 car expo skytrain line, and arbutus can get a tram train, then surely Scott road, and 200th should get it aswell.
I would love to see a canada line expansion that goes past Richmond into the Ladner Delta/Tsawassen region. It would really clear up traffic congestion in the tunnel. My dream would be stops at Ironwood, Cascades Casino, Ladner Bus Exchange, Tsawassen Mills, and Termanating at Tsawassen Ferry Terminal. I think this would be a really positive development change and could get a lot of cars of the road and encourage more cycling in these regions that are nearly entirely car dependent.
I think Vancouver's current plans are pretty sensible, like the North Shore-Metrotown line seemingly being next in line without much controversy, but yeah I do agree that mode choice and a faster line South of the Fraser are issues. The West End is also a continual blindspot of the network. So I think your blueprint is pretty good.
Surrey and Langley simply have so much potential when it comes to density thanks to the Expo Line expansion. These cities need to realize that the reason the housing crisis in North America exists because there isn't enough high-density housing, let alone affordable housing! Cars in NA are seen as a symbol of freedom, but for those who don't have or can't drive a car, having walkable cities with solid transit is freedom. And for the Lower Mainland region to get to a true walkable transit region, it needs to improve its regional rail. There needs to be bi-directional service north of the Fraser, and south of the river an entirely new line like Chilliwack - Abbotsford - Langley - Surrey etc. Ideally this would be through-running, cross Burrard Inlet near Stanley Park, and continue up the Sea-To-Sky Highway to Whistler or Pemberton. It needs trains to the ferry terminals at Horseshoe Bay and Tsawwassen (and perhaps a light-rail shuttle to the Point Roberts border so people can walk across to Port Roberts if they want to), train ferries, and regional rail on Vancouver Island. The island USED to have VIA rail service, the linear pattern of development there is good for rail, and the corridor for it remains intact, it just needs maintenance. Of course for all this to work, the communities it would connect would have to have effective local transit as well.
There’s not really a housing crisis in America, only in Canada. Americans earn much higher salaries and have significantly lower housing prices. Only California and New York have housing as expensive as Canada but the average salary in these two states is about $100,000 USD whereas the average salary in Canada is $40,000 USD. But, most parts of the US like Texas has housing several times cheaper than Canada
Even the LIRR has cross-platform transfers! On the Montauk Branch, part of my ride to NYC is getting off at Babylon for either the express or local train to Penn Station and it's a simple walk across the platform. Cross-platform transfers are simple yet very effective thing for a system to have. And agreed about high-density housing! As more people become environmentally aware, on top of those who either can't afford a car or can't physically or mentally drive one, building transit-oriented development is a must as a way to solve the housing crisis. Hangzhou for example has the Regent International apartment building home to 7,500 people (according to JR Urbane Network; though people have exaggerated to say 10K to 20K), workspaces, a mall, and is connected to two Hangzhou Metro lines! The Hangzhou Metro itself went from one line in 2012 to 13 lines as of 2023 and over 500 km! And that's not mentioning the fact Chongqing has a 19-story residential building with a monorail station right inside it (it has noise reduction equipment to isolate it from the residences). More companies are evolving to have an urban mindset, like Costco which already has an urbanized Vancouver location next to Stadium-Chinatown station. IKEA has taken a sustainable approach as well in Vienna!
Hey Reece, curious on your thoughts about how to handle the Delta and other south of YVR connections. It's always been strange how not smooth the connection between the ferries and rapid transit network is, and that deficiency does seem to drive quite a bit of car-dependency (with all the problems that brings for traffic etc)
@@RMTransit it would be nice to have something faster than the 620! Speed parity with private vehicles would be a major selling point. With the points made in the video in mind, is this one route which would benefit from BRT treatment?
Completely agree with you on the ferries, though I don't think a solution to them will help Delta much. Horseshoe bay is pretty clearly better suited towards becoming the more foot-passanger port where Tsawwassen stays as is. This is both because of the constraints Horseshoe bay has to handling more vehicles as well as the connections to Bowen Island and Gibsons. I think a regional rail ( something absent in Reece's video ) solution would fit best and a pretty space-generous one at that both supporting connection from the Burrard pennisula ( say around the Brentwood area ) to the ferry terminal as well as up the valley, south of the border and up the sound towards Squamish. With longer hauls between stops, higher speeds and a bunch of sit down space it would be well suited to not just allowing commuters to commute but also for people to connect to a bunch of BC's various wilderness recreation hotspots. Imagine taking the train to Horseshoe with your bike and then biking down the Sunshine coast after a ferry ride, or getting into Squamish to do some hiking around there. Unfortunately though I just don't think Tsawwassen is the right ferry terminal for a lot of foot traffic so I'm not sure there's enough people in the Delta area to help out much there. Though if they do want to do something they need to decide fast so they can make the new south fraser crossing with accommodation for transit expansion.
Please please do a video on Vancouver regional rail! We need a heavy rail connection south-east through the valley south of the Fraser, connecting Chilliwack, Abbotsford, Langley, and Surrey to Vancouver with faster and long-distance service, and north to Squamish and Whistler. Track to Whistler already exists, and in the valley there are existing sections that could be used, and new track would not be difficult to build, as much of it would be crossing farmland or running alongside/inside highways.
Sorry to break it to you but investment into this kind of infrastructure IS politics. It’s inherently political, the alternative being the kind of car-culture/conservative convergence we’re also seeing these days
Canada Line cars should never have had fwd/aft seating. The line is a maximum end to end travel time of what..20-25min? The vast majority of people do not *need* to sit, and 2 abreast seating just means ppl having to shimmy around all the time to let someone out from or move over to the window. More importantly, ..the train goes to the airport, so there's going to be people with suitcases. Longitudinal seating means people could have their baggage in front of them if needed, as opposed to the current setup where people regularly impolitely take up a second seat with their baggage. Great route, but very poor seat layout for such a short route and one that serves an airport.
I'm actually wondering if the Vancouver-Seattle-Portland HSR would change your alignment of the Fraser Valley Express line? I would imagine such a line could share tracks through the Surrey-Vancouver section with a form of local express service that could, for example, branch out as far as Abbotsford.
I am really surprised that you would consider this much branches for Vancouver. I usually don’t like branches as a transit enthusiast/rider myself because they are quite complicated, and lines without branches are better (in my opinion) even if they reach less places, require more transfers, and don’t reach designated destination this fast as branching lines (since no direct connection).
Branches are good when the suburbs that they go to together add up to the ridership of the trunk. They make the trunk a better investment and also provide good enough service for the level of demand at the branch.
@@szurketaltos2693 I personally think a Metro/Subway line should be build for capacity. To serve a larger area it is advisable to just build another line, or if there is no big demand just serve a nearby metro station with another transportation mode. If a city is build sprawlingly, so branches are perhaps an cheaper option, this is then fundamentally wrong city designing/land use.
@@RMTransit Totally agree, (my opinion:) still if a line has just one branching point it is quite confusing when you go into a station if you are at the right platform and boarding the right train, especially when the branching line doesn’t have its own name/color. Also I think it would be better if there was a regional train system (S/RER-style) instead of many different corridor lines branching (even just once) so that a line reaches more places in the suburbs.
Looking at the Phase 5 SkyTrain map, it really made me feel like Vancouver would need to reach NYC/HK level densities to be able to fund and really take advantage of that level of rapid transit service (which I wholeheartedly welcome!)
@@RMTransit HK density is 6300/km sq, Metro Vancouver is 913/km sq, NYC 11,313.81/km2. Vancouver is building further and further away and density up to pair with those two world class cities are miles away.
*Get real: Medellin in Colombia has a better public transit system than Vancouver. Vancouver’s is already overcrowded, trains on Sunday start too late and the earliest trains to Surrey are sardine packed. Vancouver’s political class is terribly shorted sighted. Stations are constantly being rebuilt: first the BC United Scrooge Party’s witch and gremlin’s toll gates that don’t work, secondly for the addition of toilets that should been included from the beginning, and then further building for more train cars which will be inadequate by the time they’re built, etc. The problem is the political appointees who run the system rely on cars and never regularly use the system. And I’ve just started about the stupidity that is the root cause of the problem.*
Hi Reece: Can you Become Mayor of Vancouver or head of trans link or BC minister of transport? That would be awesome. This was so interesting having just visited Vancouver. I’d say all lines need more capacity. I experienced crowds on all three lines. One question: where do you see trolleybuses fitting in the picture of Vancouver’s nec is adult low carbon future where we need more buses to be electric. Should trolleybuses that can automatically detach and then reconnect with wires be used on rapid bus routes? Do you think more routes should receive trolleys?
They're starting to build high rise apartments in the Township of Langley along 200th Street and there are developers trying to get them in Aldergrove on the old mall site that they tore down I think last year or the year before. We don't need the SkyTrain now, but we will soon.
I'm loosing so much hope in the Vancouver region to actually get the ball rolling on anything. There is still too much of a love affair with cars here despite how obviously dysfunctional relying on them is, and so much nimbyism that fights tooth and nail to block anything and everything. The bones are in place for this region to become an incredible, affordable, walkable, bikeable, transit focused and economically sustainable region... but nope.
Ottawa octranspo is havi g a hard time keeping line 1 conferatiin like up and running for more the a few mo ths at a time with major and minor problems.
Something that needs to be considered is a Connection to YVR to various emerging Downtown Cores. YVR to/from Surrey Central should be heavily considered given that Surrey Central is positioned to be Metro Vancouver's Next downtown
No, that is not necessary. The route directly from Surrey to Richmond does not have any major businesses nor major residential areas. It is practically still farm land there, so there's no need for a SkyTrain route. That is the disadvantage of living in Surrey. It is far away from Vancouver. You can still get to YVR from Surrey by way of the Expo and Canada lines, or you can take the double decker bus directly from Surrey to Richmond as well.
New high-speed route (200kmph capable) along mostly existing right of ways. Pacific Station -> Braid(skytrain) - -> Scott Rd -> Nordel (s. end of alex fraser), -> Panorama Ridge -> 152nd -> 176 -> to the border. Now you've built the 1/4 quarter of a fast rail line to Seattle, and added hugely needed capacity from South Surrey (missing in your plans). Extend Canada Lline south, over the Fraser on the new crossing (bridge/tunnel project), to Tswassassen Mills and the ferry terminal) Expo and Canada Lines are already at capacity, building it out to Langley is going to be a colossal mess; as the trains are already full when they get to New West in the morning; you need an alternate route to get people off of skytrain for those in Surrey.
100% agree with you, maybe something north of HWY 1 that can connect to the millennium line and go as far east as High Street in Abby( which will help with us people in the FV)
The challenge with Calgary will be discussing transit without talking about building/neighbourhood density. I think the C-train system is quite well designed. However, because the density is so low around the stations, they are largely useless.
The lack of any expansion plans for the WCE is so disheartening for me. All the talk of new Skytrain lines (which are great, don’t get me wrong) to really far-flung areas of metro van and even further annoy me when we already have tracks and at least wide enough right of ways to have excellent regional rail to places like white rock, south surrey, the Fraser valley, the north shore, squamish, and Whistler. We should also have trains running to both ferry terminals (Italian-style train ferries to the Island?). All we would need is stations, some double-tracking, and signaling upgrades and we could have a huge regional train network for the cost of a single Skytrain line. But, the tracks and right of way are owned by the freight companies and everyone is so defeatist about it. “We can’t even run WCE all day or both directions because the mean train companies won’t let us 😢). Tell them to go f-themselves!
In this video you talk about 'Gondolas'. But in this video there was no risk of people thinking that you were talking about BOATS. Firstly you said 'mountain gondolas' . Secondly you showed a clip of an aerial cableway. Thank you! (By the way, have you any experience of 3-S aerial cableways? There are a FEW in the alps. The three in the Swiss Alps I have been on all have cabins which take 25-30 passengers.
@@vincentng2392 Sorry Vincent. When Europeans (like me) talk about gondolas, we mean the boats which operate in Venice. More importantly, when talking about these Venetian boats, we always put the emphasis on the first syllable. If you do not believe me, listen to a recording of the operetta 'The Gondoliers'. As I said in a comment on another recent video from Reece, there was a proposal to build a 'gondola' up a mountain in the English Lake District. Even some readers of an English transport journal Local Transport Today thought boats were involved!
@@vincentng2392 If a North American opera/theatre company put on a production of The Gondoliers they would, like all other opera companies around the world, put the emphasis on the first syllable. (If they tried to put the emphasis on the second syllable, it would not fit in the music!)
3S gondola lifts (not boats) Take up more space. Yes, the cabins are bigger but more spread out to allow for loading. More smaller cabins can handle more passengers. Toulouse is a good example for 3S urban gondola.
What economy does Seattle and LA have? Vancouver has smaller versions of both of those, plus a substantial gaming industry, major western Canadian port and airport. Not that our housing prices are ultimately supportable by all that because nobody's economy can support hosing prices like that but there is a functional economy going on here, just imagine what it could be if we actually solved or substantially improved some of the housing issues.
Pretty hard to get as big and great transit with Paris in North America even with the most transit friendly areas with a RER, Metro, Grand Express, Tramways design to replicate
Ambitious ideas for Vancouver's transit. Youd have to include massive overlap in the construction of these lines so that you dont wind up taking more than 50 years to get it all built.
???????? we have 2 major multi billion dollar projects currently being built. the broadway connection and from Surrey to Langley and then Langley to Abbottsford. Meanwhile Montreal, Toronto along with NY are the biggest examples of how NOT to build a city or transportation system. Your fantasy line is like a 3 trillion dollar project.
Great video, but you seem to ignore the Canada Line into (and beyond) Richmond. First thing: Expand the existing stations to allow 4 Car or larger trains! Cheap-ass politicians tried to save a buck and it will cost more to do it now, but it needs to be done. Second, the line needs to hook up somehow with Steveston, Ironwood, and the Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal. Third: Can we please make it mandatory to have public washrooms in ALL transit stations and hubs? It is not fair to put that on private business located near stations.
Surrey Transit is the worse. The service is always delayed, especially for a Rapid Bus. In my honest opinion, building the SkyTrain from Surrey to Langley is truly a waste of money. I'd rather use that money to build an LRT line from Surrey Central SkyTrain directly to Guildford Mall, because that's where everybody goes in Surrey after they get off the SkyTrain at Surrey Central. The current route of the Rapid Bus in Surrey is truly unreliable. It either comes very late or there are two Rapid Buses arriving in a row. It's just ridiculous. After building the LRT lines from Surrey Central to Guildford, the Rapid Buses can concentrate from Newton to Surrey Central, and from Scott Road to Surrey Central instead. After that, Surrey roads will be less congested. The government in Surrey under Doug McCullum, did not understand nor cared about Surrey residents at all. He wasted Surrey's tax dollars on useless projects, like the Surrey to Langley SkyTrain that nobody asked for. That's why Surrey residents kicked him and his useless party out of the mayor's office immediately. The new mayor, Brenda Locke is trying to fix everything Doug McCullum did previously.
I would build in Vancouver? A 24 hour casino/bar/drug den/exotic dance club/brothel where all minor 'sins' are legal. Oh...you mean public transit-wise? Nevermind. ☮
All looking good. However, you mainly focus on where you think the population will be in the future and that transport is a priority. For instance, I can't see the arbutus greenway ever being used for rapid transit - it's success as a walking/cycle path has been too great and you know how Vancouver loves cycling. Also the UBC extensions - you're likely to see one in the next ten years or so, but two? With the costs involved, and who would pay, not ever likely.
@@RMTransityou have enabled and informed others like myself very well. I think the government could learn from you & your videos & Not Just Bikes. You clearly know what works especially in Canada. Especially with the progressive Toronto Mayor being an advocate for public transport. Just a idea 💡
Langley doesn't deserve a skytrain?! Buddy you are wrong on that front. Sorry. Surrey and Langely have gotten MASSIVE in the last 10 years. We definitely deserve that lane now. Because it will be used.
It's fascinating to think that Vancouver is actually located in N America while being miles ahead of the rest of the continent (though Montreal is catching up with the REM & Toronto with the Ontario line & Go Expansion - but definitly not crosstown). Building new transit continuously is the key, that's how Madrid, Istanbul, Paris, Shanghai and other cities in Eurasia build hundreds of km of undeground metro so affordibly, they keep improving their expertise while cities like London, New York or Montreal (which were transit havens in the past but have hardly no serious expansion plan today) lost it for being inactive too long, eg REM B instantly became as expensive as the 2nd avenue subway after being taken over by public ARTM. On the other hand, Paris and Istanbul metro systems are half the size of NYC and London's, but both will overtake them inroute lengh in just 10 years! But there's still hope, just as Montreal did with the CDPQ for the REM or Serbia is doing with RATP for the Belgrade metro. Hiring world-class companies to bring their expertise is the right thing to do; that's in fact how China started, they learned and no longer need these companies anymore, building Guanghzou 150km underground high speed line 18 for less than what Toronto spend on crosstown! A multiple-phased plan like the one you are proposing for Vancouver is great. Using and improving its elevated driverless light metro and TBM tunneling expertise with the Broadway extension during phases 1 & 2 would definitely help with planning and cutting costs for the higher scale Fraser line. I wouldn't be surprised if the companies that make the SkyTrain in Vancouver were hired by many transit authorities in the US or Canada in the future I would also add modern european tram lines as neighborhood connectors to the skytrain, Vancouver with its growing density is definitly suited for trams! Good job Vancouver, but please don't let the transit golden era train pass without getting onboard! be an example for the rest of N America
CDPQ infra wasn't such a great idea. Their proposition for the REM de l'Est was bad. There's a reason why they're not on that project anymore. The ARTM isn't doing much better though. The real price tag for their project was actually 17 billions, but they decided to add some esoteric calculations into the mix to raise it up all the way to 36 billions. Why would they do that, I have no idea, except to sabotage the project. Would be great to have someone like Reece at the ARTM.
@@alexseguin5245CDPQ wasn’t as good as European or Asian companies, but we must admit that they managed to build an entire 67km line for much less than what we usually spend
it really is insane that there is literally only one point on the skytrain where you can do a cross-platform interchange, which is at lougheed station getting off the expo line coming in from waterfront to get on a millennium line train heading to lafarge lake
Vancouver is considered to be a good city for transportation by North American standards. I moved here last year after living in Europe for most of my life and i am very disappointed. In most cases by far the easiest way to get places is to drive. And driving in Vancouver is not very pleasant. Looking at this fantasy transport map just makes me sad that i won't be able to see any of this in my lifetime most likely.
Absolutely love the way you say Olympic Village PROPER at 13:26. Still boggles my mind why the current Olympic Village station isn't actually in Olympic Village and is instead in this random, under Cambie bridge location that no one ever uses.
To be fair, the big empty lot next to the Cambie bridge is supposed to be filled in with more buildings, thus completing Olympic Village all the way up to the bridge and making the name make a bit more sense.... any day now....
that station was GREAT during the Olympics, when they had the trams running to Granville Island! they should never have covered the old railway line when they built the olympic village, that would be a solid tram corridor. it used to go all the way to science world
Oregonian here! I went to Vancouver for the first time in July, car free, taking Amtrak and my bike. Thank you Reece for your Vancouver videos. I felt so much more confident that I could go car free because you have highlighted services so well. Being car lite living in Portland and having lived car free in Seattle, I'm so happy to see you pushing for lofty transit goals. Portland has really stalled out for now, where as Seattle is steaming ahead with ST3. It's good to see others dreaming big and using their platforms to push for progress. if you ever need Portland transit B roll, let me know!
Vancouver, the city, has bad council. The only thing they can think of is taxes. As everyone knows, if you're not making progress, you're holding back. Already there, the West Express would be a game-changer if just it runs more frequently
Great video and ideas! Moving to Victoria from Vancouver has highlighted to me the deficiencies of transit connections to the Tsawwassen and Horseshoe Bay ferry terminals. The connections exist and aren't terrible, but improvements could shift many people from taking cars on the ferries to walking or biking on. The Hullo passenger ferry between downtown Nanaimo to downtown Vancouver starts service in mid-August, 2023 and could point the way. Unfortunately, BC Ferries is stuck car-centric thinking and passenger-only ferries have always been private start-ups that can't survive a bad year and so they come and go. Obviously the transit connections have to be good on both sides and that's a whole other problem. It might be interesting to hear you dive into this (I can provide more details, info, etc.).
Where's the love for Richmond? I would love to see the Canada line extended to Steveston or the constantly congested Ironwood. Richmond is woefully under-served by transit, and has tons of suburban space where we could increase density. Going bolder it would be great to have rapid transit all the way to both ferry terminals. That would have the potential to take a huge chunk of traffic off the road and reduce the wait times for BC ferries.
I really think it's impossible to extend the Canada Line stations (beyond 50m). They would have to rebuild every single station, shut down the line for months (years maybe?). No way man. Cost would be better put to building parallel lines. By the way... Even 50m trains don't actually exist they would need be custom made by Rotem and may not be feasible. Probably it's stuck with 40m forever.
Longer trains are absolutely feasible and they do not need to be made by Rotem - the Canada Line uses bog standard specs. Rebuilding stations to lengthen platforms has been done - including while lines have been in service plenty of times. I addressed Toronto for example adding a giant new platform to more than one underground station while it was in service.
@@RMTransit Good to be postive I guess but I think very low probability of feasibility. Other issue with that line is the single track ends which also limit frequency. Oh and love the videos!
I just do not see any reason why it would not be feasible. Not sure what you are referring to. Single track sections can 1) be expanded or 2) you can just short turn. Thanks for watching!!
Here me out, what about railless trams as the core system and from the last stops - monorail into suburbs? It would be the first city in the world to implement such visionary solution!
Rail less Trams? Like trolley buses? And why use monorail if Skytrain is already the better use of elevated railway in the region and he kinda already made videos on the pros and cons of monorails and trackless Trolleys
@@TheRandCrews it was a joke. It's a Chinese invention - both byd monorail and "railess trams" - which we call trolleys, both are pretty useless technology.
I have a few minor changes I'd make to this plan, but I can't be bothered to enumerate them. Instead I'll submit my pettiest Vancouver transit fantasy: rename the Patterson station to Central Park!
Very ambitious ideas for SkyTrain. Definitely makes it more of a system to get around the city, whereas I was surprised when I visited a few years ago that SkyTrain was more of a regional rail system and getting around central Vancouver required riding buses.
As well as cross-platforming, existing skytrain stations need better integration with street scene. One in Port Moody is next to two massive car dealership lots and nothing else. Another is physically close to bars, parks and entertainment but the only entrance is on the other side and to reach them it's a 10 minute walk, not the 30 second walk it should be. Metrotown has one broken pedestrian skybridge - joke. Extending platforms is good but for smaller stations, as you said, doors can open selectively, provided the new models allow movement between carriages (which they do) Gondola will be epic. Build it! Your suggestions for POCO extension, plus Metrotown to North Shore via BCIT - beautiful but needs expansion to Horsehoe Bay. Bus stations and interchanges need to be covered and attractive structures. Phibbs Exchange looks like it belongs in 1990s Bosnia.
Do you think Vancouver needs to specialize the sky train ? Right now it’s half commuter rail half metro. I think the sky train of the future becomes a metro while a commuter rail or at least express service would connect city centres across the region.
Like BART? Skytrain seems to be more metro like than commuter due to its frequencies than service that most rapid transit systems do: bringing people to downtown. There’s not much good corridors for regional rail yet without massive redesign and enhance of existing or abandoned freight railways and the grade crossing that come along with it that need to separated. Nor does it have the capacity in its trains to carry that much people unless having larger be longer trains than it has now. I guess why it’s easier to implement the Skytrain when it did start using some freight railways as it right of ways, though much has changed. Though I’m guessing they could implement express services onto the skytrain network due to did they have a third tracks then to do so in certain stations since the expo decades ago.
The biggest issue here is the limited space in Vancouver as it's an already built-up region. For comparison: The reason Chicago and NYC as well as the underground tracks of London were quite a big deal as the only railways which only were build there (to the point of legally restricted like in London) were street railways / tramways. Skytrain is thus a regional metro because it is the only viable way to build a railway network without resorting to demolition or streetcars.
I have very much enjoyed your spectacular visions for future transit in Vancouver! This is home and always has been! I do love it here and I do leave the car at home and regularly use transit or occasionally my bicycle. Living in Kits does make it easy to hop on transit and have me Downtown very quickly and if I have a work meeting I walk or hop on a bus or the Sky Train to get me where I need to go but the transit system needs huge expansion. Usually it's efficient and quick! I am in Toronto quite frequently and I am shocked at the delays and lack of vision for transit. I have a huge appreciation for the transit we have but I absolutely agree that it needs to be far more bold and specific! My goodness it has been a long time since I have been on the Sea Bus and sometimes I think it's under appreciated but as far as I know use is high? My niece is out in Langley and she'd love to be able to take the Sky Train in all the way to Downtown Vancouver. I hope this is eventually possible! I think your thoughts on what Vancouver should be planning for transit are so well analyzed. It struck me that I rarely think about issues like flooding and the implications for transit. Thank you for being so comprehensive. I need to read a lot more and study these serious issues. I am excited at your terrific outlook on the future of Vancouver transit and the choices the city should make. Thanks for the amazing video!! 🙂
My biggest gripe with the Skytrain is how ungodly loud it is compared to many trains in Japan(despite being almost half the speed in most cases). I can hear the Skytrains come and go from my place on the other side of a decent sized mall (Brentwood). But when I was in Japan, a lot of trains make little noise to the point where you sometimes can't even hear them coming at the platform until they're less than 50m away (even in the subway). I hope that the new trains and the modifications will be enough to significantly reduce noise.10
I took the Skytrain on my way back from a visit to Tokyo actually (I live in Seattle, so I was taking it to pacific central) and this was also the very first thing I noticed. They are SO LOUD even going at half the speed.
I once looked at a place near Joyce-Collingwood to rent, and I decided against it because even with the windows closed, a block away from the tracks, I could still hear the SkyTrain enough that it would have been forever messing with my video recording/streaming if I lived there.
I just want bathrooms! I travel from Richmond to New West fairly often, and while it only takes on train stop (22nd Street to New West), the trip takes an hour, and that is after waiting for the 402. The Safeway there has literally never had a working (public) bathroom, and the Timmy Ho's is only working half the time. I need to pee, and I hate to admit it, but considering the smell of the corner by the Shopper's, so do a lot more people.
Generally available, clean public bathrooms would be a big improvement for Vancouver civility. Once we have them, people will see they're an indispensable amenity. It's not like travel to Mars, but people act like it is.
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Living at UBC, I am constantly appalled at the ride quality of even some of TransLink's newest buses used on the 84 and R4 lines. I would much prefer if the existing trolleybus network were (re)transitioned into an extensive tram network with full right-of-ways, so that passengers who aren't in as much of a hurry can enjoy a smooth ride at the street level and help to further wean Vancouver off of its still very significant obsession with cars and motorcycles. Why does TransLink hate trams so much?
Looking at mid-to-near upgrades, I think that definitely a 33rd-Queen Elizabeth Park Station is needed on the Canada Line for the large amount of housing going up in the area, the major tourist attraction that is Queen Elizabeth Park, and for the super popular (and constantly congested by cars) Hillcrest Community Center and Nat Bailey Stadium. A 57th Ave station is also needed due to the major redevelopments in the area, and that could serve as a catalyst for the city to convert the Langara golf course into a mixed use residential area for 20k-50k people surrounded by ample luscious parks - in that case, 57th avenue could finally be extended through the area that is now the golf course to provide a new East-West link with the same capacity as 49th Avenue through the city that could support decent local bus service for South Vancouver at the very least. I notice that at all intersections of 57th avenue, there is often either a business, a school, or higher density housing, and many often overlook the importance of this artery. What I would build in Vancouver is somewhat similar, but instead of the Fraser Line, I would have an Eastern Skytrain system that wouldn't even touch Vancouver, and instead connect White Rock, North Langley, Surrey, and Coquitlam. This would of course connect to Vancouvercentric skytrain lines we know and love, but this skytrain would see Surrey Central as the hub of Vancouver's emerging Twin City. I'd also have a Skytrain Line designed to relieve congestion on all other lines. It starts as a circle around downtown connecting many areas and services, but would then go down Hastings, through Burnaby mountain and Como Lake Avenue to connect directly with Coquitlam Central, with another branch going down Victoria Drive, connecting with commercial, and going to Richmond's Aberdeen center via Cambie Road. At the same time, beyond a WCE upgrade, I think Vancouver needs to get serious about regional rail, as the optimist in me sees an HSR line to Portland being built within the next 30 years, and rather than cramming everyone into Greater Vancouver, we need to think about building up our smaller cities and towns. So that means several HSR + Regional Rail compatible S-Bahn tunnels through the COV (Granville, Grandview, and the Waterfront) that converge downtown and run underneath the Burrard Inlet and connect to an upgraded, branched rail link towards both Whistler (Including Ambleside, Horseshoe Bay, Lions Bay, and Squamish) and the other much shorter branch terminating at Phibbs via Lonsdale. The other ends of this regional rail system would be Chilliwack (Via South Fraser line), Abbotsford or Agassiz/Harrison (via WCE line), and Tsawwassen or White Rock (via the Richmond line). This of course means greatly upgraded railways for both freight and passenger service, but every investment would yield massive dividends and create thousands of jobs. These new branches and mainlines could even serve greater intercity passenger service throughout BC to areas such as Kamloops, Kelowna, and Prince George.
Some certainly are, we should use cut and cover and shallow tunnel boring as much as possible. But ultimately metro vancouver is tricky - the geography is not simple!
Many ambitious plans but personally not a fan of the shuttle from Lougheed to Columbia idea. That portion of the system already gets less service than the Surrey branch, in general, I know because of less ridership. For example at night the service get drastically reduced in favour of the Surrey branch.
Phase I should begin in Surrey. A parallel line down Scott Road and King George Boulevard connected by 72nd Avenue would address the affordable conditions in Surrey and North Delta. Building transit infrastructure in places like the West End or the North Shore would be so much more expensive than focusing on the South Shore. Surrey has the potential to be another Metropolitan Centre to the region.
I don't think I talk about them quite that often... that being said they are a globally implemented technology which has many benefits and is highly visible!