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Here are 3 different futures for King Street

Toronto city staff are looking for feedback on three proposals for the re-design of King Street in a pilot project that will stretch from Bathurst Street to Jarvis or Parliament Streets.

Toronto's chief planner Jennifer Keesmaat says the objective is to prioritize transit movement

CBC Toronto's Chris Glover breaks down three proposals for the re-design of King Street

8 years ago
Duration 0:44
A new city report proposes a pilot project on King street to provide a dedicated streetcar lane for transit vehicles.

Toronto city staff are looking for feedback from the public Monday evening on three proposals for the re-design of King Street in a pilot project that will see an overhaul of the arterial road from Bathurst Street to Jarvis or Parliament Streets. 

All three designs focus on transit, dedicating lanes of traffic to streetcar flow. "The overall objective here is to prioritize the transit movement," said Jennifer Keesmaat, the city's chief planner.

"A lot of people, quite frankly, have given up on transit along this corridor," Keesmaat said. "It's the most rapidly densifying area of the entire country and yet the transit service is pretty compromised." 

See the three proposed plans below. 

Alternating Loops

In the alternating loop model streetcars are given priority, with separated lanes in the centre of the street for both eastbound and westbound streetcars.

It is referred to as an alternating loop because every other block vehicle access is limited to local traffic, meaning delivery vehicles, taxis and people who work and live on the block. The alternating blocks will have full public access. No vehicles will be able to make a left hand turn, crossing the streetcar lanes.

In this model there is also extended "bump outs" on the sidewalk on the alternate side of the street being used for vehicle access, giving pedestrians more space.

Separated Lanes 

As the title suggests, this design provides physically separated lanes for streetcars. This model keeps vehicles on King Street moving in both directions, but vehicles still won't be able to turn left and stopping curbside will be forbidden.

Unlike the alternating loop design, this model doesn't include additional space for pedestrians, instead keeping the sidewalk portion of King Street as it is now. 

"This option means that you have servicing and loading happening right along the street side," said Keesmaat. "You no longer have street-side parking but you in fact, might run into a scenario where one car stops to drop someone off and all the other cars are stopped behind it because they don't have a way out." 

Transit Promenade 

With the transit promenade proposal, pedestrians would be given preference on the King Street corridor stretching from Bathurst Street to Jarvis or Parliament Streets. 

"Imagine the sidewalk doubling," Keesmaat said.

It also includes accessible curbside boarding for streetcars at all stops along the street, and dedicated streetcar lanes, though they won't be physically separated. 

Public consultation

Keesmaat says the alternating loops model is her favoured option, addressing both pedestrian and transit needs. 

Still, she says "all three options have merits." 

Coun. Joe Cressy says all three options would make a big impact, something he says the city needs with some 900,000 people in the downtown area every day.

"It's not working for streetcars, it's not working for drivers and it's not working for pedestrians," Cressy said.

But, he says, he's concerned that the third option will mean drivers are backed up with just the one lane of vehicle traffic.

"You know what that's going to do, the minute a taxi pulls over to let someone off, it's going to back everything up for everyone," he said.

The city is hosting a public consultation session on the proposed changes to King Street Monday at Metro Hall from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

You can also tweet feedback to the city using #KingStreetPilot. 

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