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  #81  
Old Posted Jul 31, 2013, 1:57 PM
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http://www.thespec.com/news-story/39...-hill-project/

Now the Queen St hill won't open until October. Ugh it's going to be a rough start this September.
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  #82  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 3:23 AM
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This will be a Jolley fun weekend.

Claremont Access closed during holiday weekend
(Hamilton Mountain News, Aug 27 2013)

A busy Mountain access will be closed for much of the holiday weekend.

Hamilton’s public works department will close all lanes of the Claremont Access at 7 a.m. on Saturday to allow for preventative maintenance — rock scaling work — on the exposed face of the escarpment. It says the closure is required due to the potential for falling debris associated with this work.

The Claremont Access should be reopened at noon Monday.

The alternative routes are reduced as the Queen Street Hill (Beckett Drive) remains closed for reconstruction. That access is to reopen in mid-October.
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  #83  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 10:30 AM
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I can't wait to see the Spec headline:

Traffic chaos predicted for holiday weekend
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  #84  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:33 PM
markbarbera markbarbera is offline
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Originally Posted by Dr Awesomesauce View Post
I can't wait to see the Spec headline:

Traffic chaos predicted for holiday weekend
That would be almost as accurate as their "Red Hill Creek Flooded" article the other day, which disappeared quickly from their online site when the report they made was proven incorrect by public works staff dispatched to investigate the alleged flooding.
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  #85  
Old Posted Aug 30, 2013, 3:48 PM
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That would be almost as accurate as their "Red Hill Creek Flooded" article the other day, which disappeared quickly from their online site when the report they made was proven incorrect by public works staff dispatched to investigate the alleged flooding.
That's funny because CHML reported that public works confirmed there was flooding but when I drove by soon after, there was nothing.
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  #86  
Old Posted Sep 23, 2013, 9:40 PM
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Dan Nolan tweets:

#HamOnt The City of Hamilton will permanently close Upper Mount Albion Road to vehicular traffic on Tuesday, September 24th
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  #87  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2013, 4:56 PM
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Queen Street Hill construction late and more expensive
(CBC Hamilton, Sept 25 2013)

Anyone who was hoping to be driving on the newly renovated Queen Street Hill in a week or two is going to have to wait a little while longer.

The road reconstruction project that was originally started back in June likely won’t be finished until the end of October, and will cost more than the original $4.3 million estimate, says Gary Moore, the director of engineering services with the city’s public works department.

“We’re still monitoring it week by week,” Moore told CBC Hamilton. “We don’t right now see anything lasting past the end of October.”

The project was originally slated to finish up in early September – but a single special butternut tree and the need for more retaining walls pushed back the process.

A few dozen butternut trees were found along the embankment of the hill and had to be catalogued with the Ministry of Natural Resources as they’re listed as a species at risk.

One specific tree showed a resistance to butternut canker – a fungus that has had a devastating impact on North American butternut populations – so further steps had to be taken to protect it, Moore says.

Crews also found that more retaining walls than originally estimated are needed to protect against erosion and reduce slope movement on the embankment. Those additional walls will drive the price of the project up, but Moore couldn’t yet say by how much.

“I don’t have the updates yet,” he said. “We’ll be going to council at some point and reporting that, probably close to the end of the job.”

The retaining walls are up, and sidewalk work has finished at the top and the bottom of the hill, Moore says. But there is still roadwork, lighting, restoration and paving yet to do.

The contractor on the project is working as much as daylight will allow at this point, he says. Currently, crews are working from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. from Monday to Saturday, and even some Sundays. “There just isn’t much time left for him to extend,” he said.

The city won’t open the hill with partial construction still happening because it’s too narrow to close lanes and still have decent traffic flow, Moore says.
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  #88  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2013, 11:44 PM
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Partial closures on Queensdale Avenue starting Monday
(Hamilton Mountain News, Sept 27 2013)

Sections of Queensdale Avenue will be closed for the next few weeks as road reconstruction kicks into high gear.

Starting Monday, individual blocks will be closed during daytime working hours between Upper Wentworth and Upper Sherman to facilitate underground servicing work, says the city’s public works department.

The closures will occur for three to four weeks. Lane restrictions will then resume on the road until the first phase of work on Queensdale — from Upper Wentworth to East 24th Street — is completed in mid- to late-November. Works resumes in the spring and is expected to be completed by the summer.
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  #89  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2013, 9:04 PM
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Traffic Chaos, Natch

Hamilton to smooth out bumps on Rymal
(Stoney Creek News, Kevin Werner, Oct 2 2013)

Hamilton traffic staff and politicians are hoping to smooth over the congestion bumps that appeared last week after the closure of Upper Mount Albion at Rymal Road East.

“We are trying to ease the pain up there,” said Geoff Lupton, director of energy, fleet and traffic. “I have had staff up there every day monitoring the situation.”

There was traffic chaos across the east Mountain and Upper Stoney Creek last week when Upper Mount Albion was closed, producing long lines along Rymal and Pritchard.

“It’s been a real challenge,” said Glanbrook councillor Brenda Johnson, who said she was swamped with emails and calls from constituents about the problems.

Johnson, along with area councillors Tom Jackson and Brad Clark banded together to urge city officials to implement some immediate improvements to promote better traffic flow within the area.

“Brenda’s area did take the brunt of (the traffic problems),” said Jackson.

Fixes were quickly made among the affected intersections. For instance, the lights along Rymal Road from Nebo to Fletcher have been synchronized to help prevent stops and starts. In addition, the city will be laying down asphalt on Rymal to allow westbound traffic to turn right at the Pritchard intersection. An advanced green light will also be incorporated at the Dakota and Fletcher intersection.

Lupton said new traffic signs have been installed to better inform drivers about the changes.

Jackson, who has been co-ordinating these improvements with city staff, acknowledged the new lights at Pritchard were not working properly because of a sensor malfunction.

“The sensors had to be adjusted,” he said.

The councillors are also pushing city staff to accelerate the implementation of the Transportation Master Plan Study recommendations that were created from the 2006 Regional Official Plan Amendment 9. The plan recommended the closure of Upper Mount Albion and Rymal Road, as well as the widening to five lanes of Rymal Road from Dartnall to Trinity Church Road, and the extension of Dartnall Road to Twenty Road. Upper Mount Albion is now closed, even though those projects were supposed to begin in 2014.

The Trinity Church arterial corridor, a cornerstone of the master plan, has been delayed for at least two years, contributing to the traffic uncertainty in the area.

“I understand there has been short-term frustration,” said Johnson. “All these intersections will need some tweaking. People will need to have some patience.”

If there are any funding problems for the projects, Jackson said he is confident his colleagues will approve the costs.

The transportation master plan examined the project traffic patterns in the area, including along Mud Street West, Upper Centennial, Rymal Road East and Pritchard Road, to allow for existing and proposed development. But the residential developments, especially along Rymal at Summit Park, have been extraordinary with the services not keeping up to the increasing number of residents moving into the area.

Lupton said a week after the traffic nightmare, it seems to have “improved.” The paved right-hand turn lanes are expected to be in place over the next few weeks to alleviate the “log jam” that was created along Pritchard and Rymal.

Jackson said he is asking drivers and residents in the area to be patient as city officials smooth out the problems.

“This is about short-term pain for long-term gain,” he said.
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  #90  
Old Posted Oct 17, 2013, 1:32 PM
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Hamilton, Toronto drivers overpaying for road costs: report

A new study by the Conference Board of Canada attempts to dispel the notion that motorists are being heavily subsidized by the taxpayer.

The report, issued Thursday, found that in Ontario at least, fuel taxes and other fees paid by motorists cover between 70 and 90 per cent of annual road construction, maintenance and policing costs.

And drivers in Hamilton and the Greater Toronto Area paid more in taxes and fees than it cost to operate the road network, according to a study by the Conference Board of Canada called Where the Rubber Meets the Road: How Much Motorists Pay for Road Infrastructure.

The study, paid for by the Canadian Automobile Association South Central Ontario, focused on light-duty vehicles such as cars, minivans, sport utility vehicles and light pickup trucks.

'Misconception' that Ontario drivers are heavily subsidized,' CAA director says

"This comprehensive study sheds new light on the common misconception that road users in Ontario are heavily subsidized," said Teresa Di Felice, director of government and community relations for CAA SCO.

"Before any decisions can be made about new revenue tools (tolls, taxes and increased fees), it is essential to understand who pays for our road network," Di Felice said in a statement.

Vijay Gill, the Conference Board's director of policy research, said one of the major challenges in addressing traffic congestion is determining who should pay the costs of additional road infrastructure.

"Virtually all the discussion about congestion is related to the presumption that users of the road infrastructure are heavily subsidized by all taxpayers," Gill said.

"The findings of this report don't remove policy options such as congestion charges from consideration. They do, however, shed new light on the conventional wisdom about who pays for road infrastructure."

Revenue more than $7.5 billion between 2008 and 2010, report says

Province-wide, road network related revenues from fuel taxes, licence fees and other sources totalled more than $7.5 billion annually between 2008 and 2010, the latest year with available data.

These revenues covered between 70 and 90 per cent of annual road costs, depending on the method used to calculate infrastructure expenditures.

Revenues collected from motorists in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area in the same years totalled almost $1 billion annually, more than the yearly cost of the road network in the region.

However, the study noted that local governments — which own and maintain a large part of the infrastructure — collect a relatively small portion of the revenues related to road use.

Vehicle ownership and maintenance costs were also not included in the results as they are paid for directly by motorists, although estimates of those costs can be found in the report.

Social costs — from accidents, congestion, greenhouse gas emissions, and criteria air contaminants — were also not included in the main calculations.

"But research evidence on them was examined and typical estimates of the external components of congestion, accidents and emissions would not change the conclusions of the calculations radically," the Conference Board said.

CBC Hamilton News
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  #91  
Old Posted Oct 17, 2013, 7:03 PM
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Interesting that a car lobby funded study would reach a different conclusion than the Transport Canada study already done:

http://www.tc.gc.ca/media/documents/policy/tp14491.pdf
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  #92  
Old Posted Oct 17, 2013, 8:03 PM
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Originally Posted by Jon Dalton View Post
Interesting that a car lobby funded study would reach a different conclusion than the Transport Canada study already done:

http://www.tc.gc.ca/media/documents/policy/tp14491.pdf
How are the results different? I may be reading wrong, but the 2005 Transport Canada report indicates a cost recovery rate ranging from 81-112% for the province of Ontario. This seems to be in line with the 70-90% rate mentioned in the 2013 CAA report that is cited by CBC. Of course, in a perfect world, the goal should always be a 100% cost recovery rate, but that hardly ever the case for all things publicly funded.
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  #93  
Old Posted Oct 18, 2013, 2:49 PM
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Get ready for slowdowns on Centennial Parkway
(Stoney Creek News, Kevin Werner, Oct 16 2013)

Hamilton drivers should get ready for traffic gridlock when one of the city’s largest infrastructure projects begins next month.

The city will start building a detour around the CN bridge on Centennial Parkway that will kick off the extensive and complicated replacement of the bridge, and reconstruction of Centennial Parkway from King Street to Goderich that is scheduled to be completed by the summer of 2015. Total cost for the two projects is estimated to be about $20 million.

“This will be short-term pain, for long-term gain,” said Ward 5 councillor Chad Collins. “It’s the largest project in the city, if you combine the bridge with the road work. But it’s something that needs to be done. We just want to do it as quickly as possible.”

The Centennial Parkway detour around the CN bridge will encroach upon the Home Depot area, and will add an extra lane to the temporary roadway from the current three lanes. One of the lanes was eliminated to provide a safe pedestrian walkway.

City officials say the detour should be completed by next spring, possibly May or June. Then the real work begins when the city, CN and GO Transit begin the mammoth task of demolishing the 84-year-old bridge and building a new structure for CN and GO trains.

The project will add an extra track, and a platform to accommodate an expected GO transit service from the downtown to Stoney Creek.

A new GO transit station is being contemplated within the Kenora area. A sidewalk will also be built underneath the bridge to allow for safer pedestrian traffic, said Collins.

The bridge replacement is being managed by CN, but the estimated $12-million price tag, which also includes building a new pumping station to alleviate the persistent flooding problem underneath the bridge, and reconstructing Centennial Parkway from Centennial to Goderich is being paid by the city, CN and GO transit.

The bridge is estimated to be about $10 million, with the reconstruction of Centennial near the bridge and the pumping station expected to cost about $2.4 million. A new water main will be added from Warrington to Goderich. The city is paying for the detour, road reconstruction and pumping station portion of the project.

Collins is particularly pleased that a new station will be constructed near the bridge to mitigate the flooding issues under the bridge that occurs during severe rain storms.

“It won’t eliminate the flooding, but it will reduce the number that happens,” he said.

Meanwhile, city officials will be issuing a tender next January or February for the reconstruction of Centennial Parkway from King Street to Arrowsmith. The budgeted cost is about $7 million.

Collins compares what Centennial Parkway will look like to the current Queenston Road, with its easy turning lanes, and relatively smooth traffic flow.

“The businesses along Queenston are doing well,” he said. “There is a free flow of traffic. The centre lane is less hectic.”

The project includes eliminating the majority of the medians along Centennial Parkway that has hampered, according to local businesses, traffic and contributed to the constant tie-ups. The project will also include installing a large 120 mm water main that will connect to Barton Street and link up with a similar water main already built along Upper Centennial to Elfrida, and Nash Road. The water main is necessary to accommodate the exploding residential growth on the mountain. There will also be another small water main installed around Barton Street.

The reconstruction of the road, which the city took over in 1998 from the province, will also include new sidewalks. City officials said they still have to conduct a geo-technical study, and utility companies will be consulted.

The reconstruction will be done in sections to minimize disruptions starting in 2014, and last until the summer of 2015, the same time when the CN bridge work is scheduled to finish. The road work will include lane closures, warn city officials.
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  #94  
Old Posted Oct 18, 2013, 2:55 PM
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Sounds good. Those new sidewalks are sorely needed with that Walmart plaza up there. It'll be even more necessary once the GO station goes in.
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  #95  
Old Posted Oct 18, 2013, 6:39 PM
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With regards to the GO station, I'd love if they did what they do in Germany with integrating the S-bahn and local transit. Namely, taking the GO from this station downtown would cost the same as a regular HSR fare or allow monthly pass HSR passengers to use it without additional cost. I suppose this will sort of be handled by Presto, but you would really boost the use if riding this section was pretty much the same farewise and transferwise as taking the bus.
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  #96  
Old Posted Oct 18, 2013, 9:12 PM
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I know Germany also allows local streetcars or light rail vehicles to share tracks with intercity trains, making transit more seamless. That is currently illegal in Canada. Imagine smaller electric trains running express service across the city on the CN right of way. You could get from downtown to the Centre Mall, Stadium and Centennial areas and into Stoney Creek in a fraction of the time buses take.

There are some places where light rail uses existing abandoned railway rights of way, such as Ottawa's O-train and the north leg of Edmonton's LRT. It's a cheaper and faster way to introduce light rail without dealing with car traffic (but also missing out on the street level benefits). Many rights of way are still active but have less track capacity than they did in the past, and thus would have room for separate LRT tracks if it was allowed.
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  #97  
Old Posted Oct 19, 2013, 12:25 AM
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This is great news - that underpass has been flooding for decades. And Centennial doesn't really "work" the way it could, so hopefully the improvements are good all around for pedestrians and drivers and transit.

The GO station could potentially change things in what's been a dead part of town. That plaza just north of the tracks could see more life, and while I've never been to the new power centre you'd have to think there could be TOD potential there. If the plans for Confederation Park create the kind of draw that Collins et al have mentioned, that whole neighbourhood (if you can call it that with the QEW there) could really become something more than it is.
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  #98  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2013, 1:59 PM
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Sherman Cut closed next week as part of ongoing bridge work
(Hamilton Mountain News, Oct 23 2013)

The Sherman Cut will be closed much of next week as part of the work to replace the Mountain Park Avenue bridge.

The cut will be closed Monday at 9 a.m. It is expected to reopen Friday at 6 a.m.

The closure is required in order to complete work on the bridge and repave the Sherman Cut, says the city’s public works department.

The eastbound and westbound legs of the Sherman Access will remain open during this time.

The entire Mountain Park Avenue bridge project is expected to be completed in November.
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  #99  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2013, 2:08 PM
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gonna be lots of pissed off surprised motorists doing u-turns at the top of those accesses!
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  #100  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2013, 8:17 PM
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Yikes, both Queen St and the Sherman Cut closed? This is gonna be rough for drivers.
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