Toronto closes major transit corridor to cars: transit, biking, walking way up
Streetsblog USA reports one year after Toronto, Canada turned King Street in a transit- and walking-priority street, streetcar ridership, biking and walking are way up. (King Street Transit Pilot: July & August Update: http://bit.ly/2DD7fKG https://pps.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2c803e70a8ad33c13a95a1ee6&id=2f424aaaed&e=8577dd457f) The project, which cost just $1.5 million, has produced an 11% increase in average daily ridership, and as much as 34% at peak hours. Once the street was closed to cars, about 20,000 additional streetcar riders materialized practically overnight. Biking, meanwhile, is up by as much as an astounding 440%, according to city estimates. Toronto will decide before the end of the year whether to make it permanent. There remains, however, a certain amount of discontent among some business owners. Toronto reports business receipts are up along the corridor as well, albeit a tiny 0.3%. The rest of the city was up 3.8% over the same period. http://bit.ly/2DEKTbH https://pps.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2c803e70a8ad33c13a95a1ee6&id=a9af222ca7&e=8577dd457f
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Beth McKechnie