Toronto Star

Commuters going gaga over new TTC stations

Transit agency gives riders a glimpse of three stops on line that extends subway to Vaughan

- LISA WRIGHT STAFF REPORTER

Dazzling. Thrilling. Breathtaki­ng.

You wouldn’t normally associate such adjectives with a TTC station. But that was the typical reaction Saturday when the public got a sneak peek at three new stations on the long-awaited TorontoYor­k Spadina subway extension, on track to open Dec. 17.

“It’s just so unique; it really stands out,” said Israel Mbevi, while outside the new Pioneer Village station on Steeles Ave. W. with his 12-year-old son, Baraka.

“We came here from Mississaug­a on a rainy day just to see this. He loves anything to do with trains,” Mbevi said.

The trains aren’t in service yet, so shuttle buses ferried droves of curiosity seekers, transit buffs, train fanatics and longsuffer­ing commuters from Sheppard West station, on the western tip of the Yonge-University line, up to the Pioneer Village, Highway 407 and Vaughan Metropolit­an Centre stations.

Officials said that by the halfway point of the four-hour open house more than 2,000 people had visited the stations.

The six-stop, 8.6-kilometre extension has been in the works for over a decade and was beset by a two-year delay and a cost that ballooned to $3.2 billion from $2.63 billion.

Gary David Brown said he was “attracted by the novelty of it, and just curious to see how our tax dollars are being spent.”

Spectators were wowed by the ultramoder­n architectu­re and design touches including huge skylights, reflective ceilings, a giant stained-glass mural, terrazzo flooring and slanted columns on the platform, and brass railings that include a ledge for cyclists to glide their bikes down the stairs beside them to get to the train.

Each has a dramatical­ly different design to reflect the character of the nearby community, said project director Keith Sibley, whose project management firm Bechtel took over in 2015.

“I’m happy to say we’re in position to open Dec. 17,” he said.

Sibley noted how people told him that the massive brown chandelier at Pioneer Village station resembles “the sesame seed bun on a Big Mac, or a very big mushroom.”

“People are saying the 407 station looks like a spaceship has landed,” noted Sibley, who was thrilled with the turnout and all the questions he was being asked.

With less than 50 days to go before opening day on the line, visitors were scooping up TTC memorabili­a for sale at Pioneer Village station while a two-piece band played “Old MacDonald Had a Farm” for all the kids running around. People talked to the architects and transit officials while York University had recruiters on sight, and of course there was an informatio­n stand for Black Creek Pioneer Village, a 10-minute walk from the station.

The other three stops on the highly anticipate­d extension will include Finch West, Downsview Park and York University.

With his two children in tow, Toronto shop teacher David Hann said he was pleased to see it all finally come to fruition, though too late for his sister, who endured the dreaded commute to the York University campus, where she attended school.

“It was one of the reasons I went to Uof T,” he said with a laugh.

“It’s also been . . . years since we saw the last subway line built, and I was in high school then, so it’s been a while,” he said, referring to the Sheppard subway line.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR ?? Pioneer Village station near York U. features a glass and steel structure.
STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR Pioneer Village station near York U. features a glass and steel structure.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? The main building at the Highway 407 station features a stained-glass window.
STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR The main building at the Highway 407 station features a stained-glass window.
 ??  ?? All the new stations include selfie spots.
All the new stations include selfie spots.

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