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Inscrit le: 27 Sep 2011 Messages: 7915 Localisation: England
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Posté le: Lun Oct 21, 2013 2:43 pm Sujet du message: if there’ |
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{Riders play peek-a-boo at Lake Shore Blvd,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Outlet[/url]. transit shelters: The Fixer}
It’s easy to miss the bus when you can’t see it until it’s almost at the stop.That’s the problem facing TTC riders at Lake Shore Blvd. W. and 10th St.,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Sale[/url], who gamble on missing the bus or streetcar if they wait for it inside the transit shelters. A reader reported on SeeClickFix that shelters for both stops at the intersection are positioned so that passengers and TTC drivers can’t see each other.“The bus shelter is around the corner from the bus stop,” said the reader. “No one can use it, because if you do, you won’t see the bus and it won’t see you.”We went there and found TTC stops on the southwest and northeast corners of Lake Shore with shelters for both located on 10th, just a few metres from the corner.The one on the northeast corner predates a recent townhouse development that obscures it from the street,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Sale[/url], making it impossible for people using it to see a TTC vehicle until it’s almost at the stop.The shelter on the southwest corner is behind a store that makes it at least as hard for passengers and TTC drivers to see each other as on the other side.But it’s a problem that can’t easily be fixed. The obvious solution is to move the shelters onto Lake Shore,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Cheap Toms[/url], but the stores and townhouses on both corners don’t leave nearly enough space next to the sidewalk.STATUS: We asked Carly Hinks,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Cheap Toms[/url], who’s in charge of city street furniture, including shelters,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Outlet[/url], if there’s any way to improve the situation. Hinks emailed to say they checked out the shelters “and determined that there is insufficient space on Lake Shore,” for them. She noted that “our criteria is to provide a minimum of 1.7 metres of pedestrian sidewalk space to meet the accessibility guidelines after a shelter is installed. It is for this reason the shelter was placed on the flanking street, so riders have some protection from the elements.”UPDATE: Our Thursday column was about audible pedestrian crossing signals for the visually impaired, at the intersection of Ellesmere and McCowan Rds., which could barely be heard. A reader who uses a white cane told us she needed help to cross the intersection because she couldn’t hear the boop-boop sound needed to locate the button. Linda Lee, a senior traffic engineer with transportation services, called to say the signals have since been adjusted to make sure they’re loud enough.What's broken in your neighbourhood? Wherever you are in Greater Toronto, we want to know. To contact us, go to thestar.com/thefixer or call us at 416-869-4823. To read our blog, go to thestar.blogs.com/thefixer . Follow us on Twitter @TOStarFixer. _________________ People watching the forthcoming beginning of the German half of the inhabitants of Berlin are no interested in co-optation |
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