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  #3321  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 8:19 AM
urbancanadian urbancanadian is offline
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  #3322  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 10:16 AM
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libtard libtard is offline
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Mayor moonbeam with a transportation game changer right there
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  #3323  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 10:29 AM
cornholio cornholio is offline
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Used to take that exit several times a week. That traffic light is not needed. Just a reconfiguration of the merge. Having said that I hope that traffic light stays just flashing yellow during off peak hours and at night so people can still yield instead of sitting there and wasting time with no traffic.
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  #3324  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 1:59 PM
moosejaw moosejaw is offline
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Originally Posted by cornholio View Post
Used to take that exit several times a week. That traffic light is not needed. Just a reconfiguration of the merge. Having said that I hope that traffic light stays just flashing yellow during off peak hours and at night so people can still yield instead of sitting there and wasting time with no traffic.
Are you referring to going eastbound on Marine Dr?
Afraid thats the norm nowadays, intersections like these are popping up all over the place. It appears to stop free flow but it actually helps. The delays wont be long and they will help move eastbound traffic quicker
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  #3325  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 2:10 PM
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aberdeen5698 aberdeen5698 is offline
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Originally Posted by cornholio View Post
...I hope that traffic light stays just flashing yellow during off peak hours and at night so people can still yield instead of sitting there and wasting time with no traffic.
In BC the default is that right turns are allowed after stopping at a red light. So it shouldn't be an issue unless they sign it otherwise.

I don't generally drive during the rush hours, but even at off-peak times I've seen that northbound-to-eastbound ramp back up right onto Knight Street on several occasions - so adding a second lane to provide more storage capacity seems like a pretty sound idea to me.
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  #3326  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 3:18 PM
WarrenC12 WarrenC12 is offline
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Originally Posted by libtard View Post
Mayor moonbeam with a transportation game changer right there
Yes, the mayor personally has a hand in every road design.

Still waiting on your fully costed estimate and drawings...
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  #3327  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 4:25 PM
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CanSpice CanSpice is offline
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Yes, the mayor personally has a hand in every road design.

Still waiting on your fully costed estimate and drawings...
Here, let me make things easier for you.
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  #3328  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 8:24 PM
makr3trkr makr3trkr is offline
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there's no way there isn't going to be accidents there
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  #3329  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 8:35 PM
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Originally Posted by makr3trkr View Post
there's no way there isn't going to be accidents there
That probably would have required expropriating at least one property, and taken away the transit priority there which could make the transit network worse.

Edit: darnit, you'd said something about tying it into the northbound bus ramp, presumably so westbound Marine traffic would turn right to get to northbound Knight.
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  #3330  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2017, 10:56 PM
officedweller officedweller is offline
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Originally Posted by makr3trkr View Post
there's no way there isn't going to be accidents there
I would expect that it would be timed to coincide with the left turn signal from westbound Marine to southbound Knight.
So there would be zero eastbound Marine traffic using the loop when those left turns are made (unless someone from Knight is making a U-turn).
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  #3331  
Old Posted Aug 2, 2017, 3:51 AM
flipper316 flipper316 is offline
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love how in the pdf presentation they're spouting all the usual bs buzzwords about efficiency, flow, goods movements etc etc. get real. metro van with it's 50km/hr roads with traffic lights galore.
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  #3332  
Old Posted Aug 14, 2017, 2:02 AM
Trainguy Trainguy is offline
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Here is an interesting article proposing fixing grade separated crossings.

9 August 2017

Could Rail Overpasses Improve Safety for Cars?

Coquitlam British Columbia - Two Tri-City mayors say a proposal to build overpasses at key intersections in the region to improve rail capacity could go a long way towards reducing driver inconvenience while also improving safety along a narrow stretch of Lougheed Highway in Coquitlam that was recently the scene of a tragic car accident.

Three overpasses are proposed for Colony Farm, Pitt River Road, and Kingsway Avenue while an underpass at Westwood Street is viewed as the best solution for separating rail traffic from cars, according to the Gateway Transportation Collaborative Forum.

The early estimate for the projects' cost is $180 million.

Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart said he hasn't yet seen the forum's proposal but welcomes efforts to make the area safer.

"It has to get done. I don't ever want to attend another collision along that corridor," he said, referring to a crash 28 Apr 2017 that left two children and a woman dead, although there has been no information from police that the rail crossing had anything to do with the accident.

(Coquitlam RCMP are continuing their investigation and have yet to declare a cause for the crash.)

Coquitlam has long contended that Lougheed Highway along the Riverview Hospital lands is dangerous and needs work, either a median or some other solution to make driving safer, and an overpass proposed for Pitt River Road to eliminate the road intersection with the railway could provide opportunities for elevating and widening the highway.

"Until now, every attempt we've made to advance a median barrier has failed because its a complicated a stretch of highway," Stewart told The Tri-City News.

NO FUNDING

And while there is as yet no funding allocated toward the local projects, which are part of a larger initiative of 14 Gateway recommendations, Stewart and Port Coquitlam Mayor Greg Moore agree that the federal government is in the best position to pony up the necessary cash.

"The railroad does have significance to the national economy, if they can make the case," Moore said.

"You see ports and rail infrastructure funded because of its national significance."

Moore said he has heard of the project being touted as a way for Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) to gain Transport Canada approval for doubling its tracks, and while he supports the overpasses and underpass in theory, says the work would have to be funded nationally, not out of city coffers.

He said he hasn't seen drawings for proposed work, and the projects are not identified in the city's transportation plan.

Still, he could see the benefit to commuters, who frequently have to wait for trains to pass.

"From the city's perspective, Pitt River Road, as well as Kingsway at the track there, we know are two massive headaches for people," Moore said.

PROPOSED PROJECTS

Westwood Street underpass - $50 million, located at Westwood Street, north of Dewdney Trunk Road, involves constructing an underpass beneath the railway corridor;

Colony Farm Road overpass - $30 million, Colony Farm Road would pass over of the CP corridor and Lougheed Highway, and would tie into Cape Horn Avenue, which would be raised above its current grade;

Pitt River Road overpass - $53 million, this intersection would be raised approximately 9 metres above the current grade, with Pitt River Road passing over the railway corridor, eliminating the at-grade crossing;

Kingsway Avenue overpass - $47 million, the existing intersection of Kingsway and Westwood Street would be closed and they would be connected via a new grade-separated extension of Kingsway Avenue over of the rail line and Westwood Street.
WHAT'S NEXT? No one from the Gateway Transportation Collaborative Forum Steering Committee was made available to speak about the need to increase railway capacity to ports in the region or give an update on the project.

But a report contained in Metro Vancouver Parks' 7 Jun 2017 agenda lays out the plan as the conclusion of a Fraser River Trade Area study, stressing they are "options" and none have yet become "projects."

"However, a preliminary implementation strategy has been developed to provide a starting point for the Gateway Transportation Collaboration Forum partners to identify partnerships and delivery opportunities should any of these options move toward becoming a project," the the planning study states.

PARK CONCERNS

Meanwhile, Metro Vancouver's parks committee is concerned about the impact of Pitt River Road and Colony Farm overpasses on Colony Farm Regional Park and plans to build the Sheep Paddocks Trail, a 1.6 kilometre multi-use trail that will connect Pitt River Road to the internal park trails at Colony Farm and slated to start construction this year.

The parks committee has approved a letter to the chair of the forum expressing concerns.

"We're actually trying to be proactive and see what opportunities there are for us to work with them and maybe make it better," said Port Coquitlam Coun. Darrell Penner, who represents the region on Metro Vancouver's parks committee.

"There's certainly some value in having those crossings improved for sure. This definitely has great benefits," he said.

But he added, "This is completely at the initiative of the railroads. They want to increase traffic."

The group proposing the options is made up of federal and provincial ministries of transportation as well as TransLink, Port Metro Vancouver, and the Greater Vancouver Gateway Council.

Diane Strandberg.
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  #3333  
Old Posted Aug 14, 2017, 4:37 AM
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aberdeen5698 aberdeen5698 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Trainguy View Post
Here is an interesting article proposing fixing grade separated crossings.
That'll have to compete with the need to grade separate the level crossing on Venables at Glen Drive in Vancouver.
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  #3334  
Old Posted Aug 14, 2017, 4:52 AM
flipper316 flipper316 is offline
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yea good luck with that coquitlam. that will never get done in our lifetimes. Anyone know what's up with the bumps on the outside lanes on Highway 1 between the cape horn and Brunette? They're really annoying and odd considering this is still a brand new road.
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  #3335  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2017, 9:00 PM
Sheba Sheba is offline
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I figured I'd leave this here as about half of it is transportation infrastructure: 19 giant infrastructure projects that could reshape the world
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  #3336  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2017, 2:54 PM
go_leafs_go02 go_leafs_go02 is offline
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Looks like announcement for removal of bridge tolls on Port Mann & Golden Ears Bridges will happen today.
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  #3337  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2017, 5:14 PM
Millennium2002 Millennium2002 is offline
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It just did...

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/britis...n-bc-1.4261972

I have to wonder though, isn't the premier's argument a bit of a slippery slope considering we still have to pay for BC Ferries, BC Transit, TransLink fares, and other usage-based fees for a myriad of government services? Would that not also qualify as being unfair to visitors and residents using such routes or services?

Last edited by Millennium2002; Aug 25, 2017 at 5:31 PM.
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  #3338  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2017, 5:20 PM
Pinion Pinion is offline
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Ferries have always cost money. Putting tolls on people that are already priced out of the more desirable side of the river is just a dick move.

Happy for Surrey etc but there are theories on the north shore that the increased Hwy 1 usage will make our traffic even worse (through more accidents in Burnaby/Coquitlam that paralyze traffic all the way to Park Royal).
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  #3339  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2017, 5:48 PM
DKaz DKaz is offline
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On the plus side, the Patullo and Alex Fraser should see a little less volume this September, well compared to last September that is.
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  #3340  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2017, 5:51 PM
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BREAKING: Tolls coming off Golden Ears and Port Mann bridges

http://www.mapleridgenews.com/news/b...-mann-bridges/
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