tangent
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 11, 2012
- Messages
- 1,789
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With respect, no way. Maintenance of the status quo (constant delays on the major transit lines, inability to deal with routine winter weather, constant peak congestion of the major roadways into the city) is going to cause attrition of the workforce over the medium to long term. Unless you mean bringing our current infrastructure up to a state of good repair, and operating it optimal levels.
No I mean in terms of "needs" versus "wants" or "nice to haves". The current system with all its apparent flaws is functional for the current number of people and current settlement patterns.
I agree we "want" to improve the system as a quality of life issue and so we can grow the population and move more people around more efficiently so we don't waste people's time and have greater flexibility to route around maintenance and construction and such. The point was just that approaching this as a "must have" or "need" is not a good approach. Better to keep an eye on how what we want to do will benefit people and how it is economically sustainable or more efficient to do it differently. Because the baseline for all its faults is actually working for people now.
And adding 50,000 anywhere? People would feel that. imagine pushing 50,000 more people through the core crossings. Those platforms don't seem like they can deal with it.
I don't think anywhere. But adding 50,000 people within a mile or half mile of Government Center or Downtown Crossing or Park Street (or maybe North or South Station) I think is doable without any major infrastructure reconfiguration. It isn't like we are talking about 50,000 people punching a clock at 5:00 and heading towards the same platform.
If this goes the way it should then we are talking about multiple buildings spread out a bit with people dispersing to go to different lines and in different directions. So something like an additional couple thousand people per station spread out over a couple hours in the morning and evening.