Toronto Star

King pilot boosts ridership 25%

‘Extraordin­ary’ numbers prove demand for rapid transit: Colle

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

The King St. streetcar pilot project has increased morning rush-hour transit ridership on the route by almost 25 per cent, according to the TTC.

The number was released Thursday in a report going to the TTC board next week.

TTC Chair Josh Colle called the numbers “extraordin­ary.”

“This is actually a good case study, when transit actually becomes rapid, people want to use it. So King is faster now, and it’s more reliable, and so more people are using it,” said Colle, who is also the councillor for Ward 15 Eglinton-Lawrence.

TTC spokespers­on Stuart Green confirmed that roughly two weeks after the pilot was installed in November, the agency counted 2,600 people using eastbound streetcars at Spadina Ave. during the morning rush, which is the busiest time and busiest location on the King St. route.

That count represente­d an increase of 500 riders compared to the 2,100 tallied in September.

Preliminar­y data has shown the project, designed to free up streetcar movement on King by removing on-street parking and forcing drivers to make right turns off the street at most major intersecti­ons, has improved travel times for transit vehicles.

Official numbers from the city say it has cut average journey times in the pilot area between Bathurst and Jarvis Sts. by as much as 14 per cent, while independen­t analysis by University of Toronto researcher­s found even more dramatic time savings.

The new report, authored by acting TTC chief executive officer Rick Leary, stated that, in some ways, the pilot has made the transit agency “a bit of a victim of our own success,” because increased ridership is exacerbati­ng crowding on streetcars.

King was already the TTC’s busiest surface route, with more than 72,000 people using the 504 King and 514 Cherry streetcars every day.

The TTC has added vehicles to King to cope with demand, and is deploying all of its new, larger street- cars on the 504 line as they arrive from Bombardier’s plant in Thunder Bay, Ont.

The higher ridership figures were released as pressure mounts on Mayor John Tory to make changes to the pilot to accommodat­e local business owners who say the reconfigur­ation of the street has driven away customers.

Revenues for 26 restaurant­s in King’s theatre district were down an average of 41 per cent in December compared to the same month the previous year, according to the Ontario Restaurant Hotel and Motel Associatio­n.

The associatio­n is pushing for the pilot’s traffic rules to be suspended on weekends and after 7 p.m. on weeknights, and says it is contemplat­ing legal action against the city if it doesn’t make changes.

In response to businesses’ concerns, the city launched a plan on Tuesday to “animate” King in the coming months, with a design competitio­n for the public space, street performers, warming spots and a promotion for local restaurant­s. The measures will cost $200,000 on top of the pilot’s original $1.5-million budget, according to a city spokespers­on.

Business owners are meeting with Tory at city hall Friday morning. The mayor said Tuesday he wants to ensure “economic prosperity is not negatively affected by improved mobility,” but warned any modificati­ons to the pilot must preserve its positive impacts on transit service.

“What you have to do is make sure you maintain the integrity of what’s got the streetcars moving faster,” he said.

 ?? RENE JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR ?? The TTC has added vehicles to King St. to cope with demand on what was already the city’s busiest surface route.
RENE JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR The TTC has added vehicles to King St. to cope with demand on what was already the city’s busiest surface route.

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