Hurontario LRT

The Hurontario LRT (formerly the Hurontario–Main LRT) is a light rail line under construction in the cities of Mississauga and Brampton, Ontario, Canada. The line will run along Hurontario Street from Mississauga's Port Credit neighbourhood north to Steeles Avenue in Brampton.[1] The line will be built and operated as a public-private partnership by Mobilinx, a consortium of private European and Japanese companies, with provincial transit agency Metrolinx retaining ownership of the line.[3] It will be the only street railway operating in the Greater Toronto Area outside Toronto proper.

Hurontario LRT
Hurontario LRT tracks under construction in 2022
Overview
StatusUnder construction
OwnerMetrolinx
Locale
Termini
Stations19
Websitewww.metrolinx.com
Service
TypeLight rail
Operator(s)Transdev (within Mobilinx consortium)
Rolling stockAlstom Citadis Spirit
History
Planned openingQ4 2024
Technical
Line length18 kilometres (11 mi)[1]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC overhead catenary
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph)[2]
Route map

Brampton Gateway
County Court
Ray Lawson
Hwy 407 Maintenance Yard
Brampton
Mississauga
city limits
Derry
Courtneypark
Britannia
Matheson
Bristol
Eglinton & Hurontario
Mississauga City Centre
Square One
Mississauga Transitway
Robert Speck
Burnhamthorpe
Fairview
Cooksville
Milton line
Dundas & Hurontario
Queensway
North Service
Mineola
Port Credit
Lakeshore West line

Upon opening, the route will be named the Hazel McCallion Line in honour of Hazel McCallion, the former mayor of the City of Mississauga. In 2022, the provincial government announced the line's renaming on the occasion of the former mayor's 101st birthday.[4] As of December 2022, the line has not yet been assigned a route number or map colour, although Metrolinx wayfinding documents suggest teal will be used as the colour.[5]

The cities of Mississauga and Brampton have determined that rapid transit along Hurontario is required due to the chronic overcrowding of Mississauga's (and the suburban Greater Toronto Area's) busiest bus routes, 2/17 Hurontario, which carry more than 25,000 passengers a day, combined with the numerous high-density development proposals along the corridor and the high growth in both cities.[6] They identified three options: light rail transit for the entire corridor, bus rapid transit for the entire corridor, or a combination of both (light rail south of Mississauga City Centre and bus rapid transit north of it).[7] After three public information sessions, the residents of both cities favoured light rail transit along the full length of the corridor.[8]

On October 28, 2015, Brampton City Council voted against allowing the LRT to run along the Main Street portion of the route because of concerns of low ridership projections, impacts on Brampton's historic downtown and the preferences for an LRT along an alternate route. Thus, the LRT will terminate at the Brampton Gateway Terminal on Steeles Avenue instead of Brampton GO Station.[9][10]

Construction began in 2020 and the line is projected to enter service in the fourth quarter of 2024.[11][12]

History

Costs

Bus shelter ad (using the Hazel McCallion Line name) for the Hurontario LRT from 2022

In 2016, the LRT line was projected to cost $1.4 billion.[13] (Prior to the cancellation of the Brampton portion of the line, the estimated cost was around $1.6 billion.[14]) On April 21, 2015, the Government of Ontario announced that it would completely fund the line, not including local capital costs such as utility relocations, surface upgrades, and landscaping.[15][16][17]

When Mobilinx was chosen as the winning bidder, the total contract value was $5.6 billion. This included $4.6 billion to design, build and finance plus $1 billion to operate and maintain the line for 30 years. The line was previously costed at $1.2 billion for capital costs only. The City of Mississauga is expected to cover the operating and maintenance costs.[18]

Benefits

Mississauga plans to use the Hurontario LRT to spur commercial development and employment opportunities along the line. According to Ed Sajecki, Commissioner of Planning and Building for Mississauga, downtown development had been mostly residential towers as developers felt it was to too expensive to provide parking for large office towers. Sajecki expects that the LRT will eliminate the need for downtown parking. With the LRT, downtown population is expected to double in less than two decades from its currently estimated 40,000. According to Mayor Bonnie Crombie, Mississauga is planning for mixed-use zoning along Hurontario including accommodation, businesses, commercial, retail and arts-cultural development.[19]

Criticism

  • In 2015, many in Brampton were critical of the LRT's original route through the city's downtown. The fear was that the LRT on downtown Main Street would adversely affect the heritage aesthetics of old city centre.[20] Brampton city council voted against the Main Street route, and Metrolinx cancelled the section on Main Street.[21]
  • Since 2019, Mississauga's mayor and city council have been disappointed with Metrolinx's decision to cancel the Mississauga City Centre loop in order to reduce costs.[22]
  • In January 2018, the residents of the Kingsbridge Garden Circle area were advocating for a stop in their area which would between the Highway 403 and Eglinton Avenue. The Eglinton & Hurontario stop would be the nearest, about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) to the north. Residents claimed that 10,000 people live in the area. Mississauga's commissioner of transportation and works said the request came too late as procurement to construct the line was in progress. One estimate for the extra stop would be $850,000.[23] In addition, some residents later advocated for the reallocation of a proposed traction power substation near their neighborhood fearing it would be unsightly and lower property values. The substation would be a container-size structure that would sit in an expropriated area of a parking lot.[24]
  • Some residents in Mississauga and Brampton were concerned about disruptions due to construction, aesthetics and the cost of the project.[20]

Main Street cancellation

The cancelled section of the LRT route along Main Street in Brampton's heritage downtown

Before its cancellation, the Main Street route was controversial. At a Brampton Council meeting on July 8, 2015, five of the eleven councillors opposed to the Main Street route argued that the LRT plan was being directed by Mississauga with Brampton absent from negotiation. They demanded an alternative route funded by the provincial government.[25]

On October 28, 2015, Brampton City Council voted 7–4 against allowing the LRT to run along Main Street through its heritage downtown area, as originally planned by the province. Without this agreement, the province has indicated it would move ahead with the project, terminating the LRT at Steeles Avenue (Brampton Gateway Terminal) instead of Brampton GO Station.[9] Opposed council members had also previously cited a lack of projected growth along the northern half of the proposed Brampton route to support an LRT.[25]

Proponents said the Main Street route advocated by the province would have revived the city's struggling downtown core. However, opponents argued that the Main Street route lacked potential for ridership and future growth.[9] According to City of Brampton's transit ridership data, the current ridership along Main Street has an average of 200 riders per hour per direction on weekdays and Brampton's downtown has a ridership of about 450 passengers an hour.[26] Opponents were also concerned that running the LRT on Main Street in Brampton's historic downtown would diminish its heritage character and have an impact on downtown parking.[27] There was also a concern that the city might have to pay up to $100 million for relocating utilities, road resurfacing, traffic redirection, landscaping, etc.[28]

Although all councillors were in support of an LRT, they disagreed on the route it should take. Councillors opposing the Main Street route have proposed running the LRT east or west along Steeles Avenue and then north to Queen Street where it would then possibly continue east from Brampton's downtown area to the Bramalea GO Station or possibly all the way to the terminus of the western branch of the Toronto subway's Line 1 Yonge–University at Vaughan Metropolitan Centre.[29] In March 2013, Brampton City Council asked city staff to consider two alternative routes north from Steeles Avenue, either (1) partially north on Main Street, east to Peel Memorial Hospital, north to Queen Street and west to Brampton GO Station, or (2) north on Kennedy Road, west on Queen Street to Brampton GO Station.[30]

Metrolinx CEO Bruce McCuaig said the provincial money allocated to the Main Street route in Brampton would now be available for other transit projects across the province. However, McCuaig also said Metrolinx would be open to evaluate alternate transit proposals from Brampton for provincial funding for the next round of transit initiatives.[9] On November 3, 2015, Transportation Minister Steven Del Duca announced that the funding for the cancelled Main Street route will be invested in priority transit projects in the Greater Toronto Area which might or might not include Brampton.[31]

At its February 20, 2020 meeting, the Metrolinx Board of Directors endorsed a prioritization framework for a proposed Frequent Rapid Transit Network that was inclusive of a proposed LRT extension from Brampton Gateway Terminal to Brampton GO Station; with a forecasted ridership of 5,500 in 2031 and a proposed line length of 3.3 km (2.1 mi) along Hurontario Street, the project scored 'Medium' with a preliminary benefit-cost ratio of 0.66 - 0.90.[32]

In January 2022, Brampton city staff were working on two alternative plans to extend the Hurontario LRT from Brampton Gateway Terminal to Brampton GO Station in downtown Brampton. One plan was to extend the LRT on the surface at a cost of $500 million. The alternative plan was to put most of the extension underground costing $1.7 billion. Brampton prefers the underground plan and is asking upper levels of government to cover the extra cost of the preferred plan. City Council approved the recommendation to progress the LRT extension study to 30% Preliminary Design and to prepare a Draft Environmental Project Report for both alternatives. Brampton needs to replace its aging water mains, and the choice between a surface or underground LRT extension must be made before Brampton can finish planning for water main replacement.[10] Brampton politicians, including Mayor Patrick Brown, have been advocating for the Main Street extension.[33] On February 27, 2023, Brampton Transit staff presented a project update to City Council, noting that design development updates and inflation have increased the costs of the surface alignment ($933 million) and underground alignment ($2.8 billion). City staff still recommend the underground alignment due to perceived benefits in travel time savings, infrastructure modifications, downtown revitalization, operations and maintenance, and protection for a future extension.[34]

City Centre loop

A roughly 2.5-kilometre (1.6 mi) branch-loop is planned around Mississauga City Centre and Square One Shopping Centre. The loop would serve most of the City Centre at a walking distance of 500 metres (1,600 ft), and include stops on Burnhamthorpe and Rathburn Roads, and a still-undecided north-south street. It was initially cancelled on March 21, 2019 whe Metrolinx announced that the downtown loop would be dropped due to financial restrictions beyond the spur to the stop on Rathburn serving the City Centre Transit Terminal.[35] Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie indicated that the rest of the loop could be built as a later phase.[21] In September 2021, it was listed as one of the city's six transportation priorities by Mississauga City Council.[36]

On February 14, 2022, at the aforementioned press conference to rename the line after former Mayor Hazel McCallion, Premier Doug Ford offered to reinstate the loop but did not specify a time frame. Reinstating the loop was estimated to cost between $300 million and $400 million, and could be added after completion of the line. Mississauga politicians, including Mayor Bonnie Crombie, had been advocating for the loop's reinstatement. The original plan for the loop called for the north-south leg to follow Duke of York Boulevard, but Crombie is planning for a route further west along Confederation Parkway.[22][37]

Other design changes

Circa 2010, the LRT was to have extended south of Lakeshore Road turning west on Port Street terminating at Elizabeth Street.[8] At a 2013 open house, local residents objected to this extension as an invasion of a residential area and an inconvenience for pedestrians and motorists using the street.[38] The Price Street extension was subsequently dropped; thus, the LRT would terminate at the Port Credit stop beside the GO station.[1]

On March 21, 2019, in addition to cancelling the City Centre loop, Metrolinx also cancelled a stop at Highway 407 and a pedestrian bridge at Cooksville GO Station to reduce project costs.[21]

Originally, the Brampton Gateway stop was to be located on the north side of Steeles Avenue. After the cancelation of the Main Street segment of the line in 2015, the City of Brampton asked Metrolinx to relocate the stop to the south side to allow for a future extension north along either Kennedy Road or McLaughlin Road. Thus, Metrolinx changed the stop location. However, by January 2022, Brampton reversed its decision and requested that the stop be moved back to the north side so that riders would not have to cross Steeles Avenue to transfer between the LRT and the bus terminal. Metrolinx said they would consider Brampton's request out of safety concerns.[39][40]

According to a published 2017 design, the LRT would occupy the centre median of Hurontario Street as it crossed over the Highway 403 intersection on a bridge. At the southern approach to the bridge, there would be an junction for an LRT branch to the Mississauga City Centre, and the junction would have crossed the southbound traffic lanes of Hurontario Street and a Highway 403 exit ramp at grade.[41] By 2021, this design had changed to locate the line on the west side of Hurontario Street on elevated guideways. One guideway would run north from Square One Drive and cross over Rathburn Road. A second guideway would continue the line over Highway 403. Between these two guideways, there would be a junction to a branch on a third guideway descending to City Centre.[42]

Procurement

In 2010, Metrolinx placed an order for 182 Flexity Freedom vehicles manufactured by Bombardier for use on the light rail lines it was building in the Greater Toronto Area. However, by 2016, Bombardier was having delivery problems supplying vehicles for the Eglinton Crosstown LRT (officially Line 5 Eglinton). Thus, Metrolinx would seek another vehicle supplier for its other LRT lines.[43]

Infrastructure Ontario (IO) and Metrolinx decided to deliver the Hurontario LRT project according to IO's Alternative Financing and Procurement (AFP) model which basically is a public–private partnership arrangement.[44]

On October 18, 2016, IO and Metrolinx started the procurement process by issuing a request for qualifications to design, build, operate and maintain the Hurontario LRT. The request said bidders could offer to supply 44 light rail vehicles, which implied that Metrolinx would break its contract with Bombardier for the delivery of Flexity Freedom vehicles.[43]

On June 6, 2017, IO and Metrolinx announced that three teams had been shortlisted:[45]

  • Hurontario Light Rail Connection Partners (HLCP) including equity providers Cintra, Colas and Acciona. In the HLCP team, the constructors are Acciona, Ferrovial, Colas, DPM Energy and LURA Consulting. The designers are Arup, SENER, Dillon Consulting, DTAH and Grimshaw. Operation and maintenance would be provided by RATP Dev, Acciona, and Colas Rail.
  • Mobilinx including equity providers Astaldi, John Laing, Hitachi-Ansaldo STS Transdev and Amico. In the Mobilinx team, the constructors are Astaldi, Hitachi, Amico and Bot. The designers are IBI, Hitachi, Morrison Hershfield, Arcadis and Daoust Lestage. Operation and maintenance would be provided by Transdev, Hitachi-Ansaldo and Astaldi.
  • Trillium Transit Partners including equity providers Kiewit, Meridiam and Keolis. In this team, the constructors are Peter Kiewit Sons, Bird, Mass Electric, Black and MacDonald and Coco Paving. The designers are Stantec Consulting, STV, Perkins + Will, Urban Strategies and Entuitive. Operation and maintenance would be provided by Keolis.

On December 1, 2017, IO and Metrolinx announced that the route would employ 44 Citadis Spirit vehicles, from Alstom to be manufactured at a new assembly plant in Brampton. These vehicles are longer and have higher capacity than the Flexity Freedom vehicles purchased by Metrolinx for the Eglinton Crosstown LRT.[46][47][48] Subsequently, Metrolinx decided to initially use only 28 vehicles on the line.[49]

On May 23, 2019, IO and Metrolinx announced that proposal have been submitted by only two of the three shortlisted teams of private companies, namely Mobilinx and Trillium Transit Partners.[50][51] Hurontario Light Rail Connection Partners did not submit a proposal.[50][51]

Hurontario LRT tracks under construction in 2023

On October 21, 2019, IO and Metrolinx announced that Mobilinx had been awarded the contract to design, build, finance, operate, and maintain the Hurontario LRT for a period of 30 years. The total contract value was $4.6 billion with a completion date of the fourth quarter of 2024 was set in the announcement.[3] John Laing, Astaldi, Transdev, Amico, and Hitachi are part of the consortium.

Construction

Elevated guideway construction over the eastbound exit ramp of Highway 403
Construction progress of Courtneypark station in May 2023

In spring 2020, construction started on the Operations, Maintenance and Storage Facility, just south of Highway 407.[52]

By January 2021, excavation work had started to build the LRT's below-ground Port Credit station in a trench adjacent to the Port Credit GO Station, and Mobilinx is constructing the passage for the LRT under the Lakeshore West line tracks using the Verona System.[42][53] Three temporary bridges were constructed under the GO line using piles and beams. A hollow, concrete "push box" structure was constructed in the trench and is being pushed under the railway line using hydraulic jacks while excavation clears a path. This is being done without disrupting overhead railway traffic with most work occurring at night. The temporary bridges will be removed and the GO tracks will lie on top of the push box which will be a permanent part of the LRT infrastructure.[54] By June 2023, the push box was in its final position, and was ready to be converted into a 46-metre (151 ft) tunnel under the GO railway tracks for the LRT line.[55]

In related work, a wider channel and flood walls are being added to Mary Fix Creek which runs on the north side of the Lakeshore West right-of-way before curving on the west side of the LRT right-of-way.[56] The road bridge over the creek at Inglewood Drive will be replaced by a new bridge further south opposite Eaglewood Boulevard which will be extended west from Hurontario Street. At Eaglewood and Hurontario, there will be a new signalized intersection with the LRT crossing Eaglewood between the creek and the west side of Hurontario.[57][58]

By April 2022, the first tracks were being laid at the Operations, Maintenance and Storage Facility (OMSF). In later phases of construction, LRT tracks will be laid on Hurontario Street north and south from the junction to the OMSF.[59] By July 2022, construction started on the guideway on Hurontario Street working northbound from Matheson Boulevard to Britannia Road. At the operations, maintenance and storage facility, 15 metres (49 ft) of track had already been laid.[60] Track construction started in September 2022 at various intersections along Hurontario Street between Sandstone Drive (south of Britannia Road) and Matheson Boulevard.[61]

On Hurontario Street at the Queen Elizabeth Way, the push box technique was used to create new northbound traffic lanes under the QEW so that the space for the current northbound lanes can be used for the LRT.[56][62]

On March 8, 2023, the first of 13 traction power substations was installed at Skyway Drive and Hurontario Street. The next two substations to be installed along Hurontario Street will be at Britannia Road and Topflight Drive, the latter street providing LRV access between the Operations, Maintenance and Storage Facility and the mainline.[63]

Route

Schematic map of the Hurontario LRT, also showing a section of the Mississauga Transitway

Description

Laying the wye trackage at Topflight Drive that will lead to the OMSF in October 2023

The 18-kilometre (11 mi) LRT line will have a dedicated right-of-way throughout the entire corridor. Most of the corridor will be along Hurontario Street with the LRT in a reserved centre median and with two lanes in each direction for general traffic plus turning lanes. General traffic will cross tracks only at major signalized intersections.[1][49]

The LRT line will begin at the Port Credit GO Station where the LRT station will be below grade on the west side of Hurontario Street just east of the GO station building.[64] After passing under GO transit's Lakeshore West line, the LRT will continue north for about 250 metres (820 ft) on the west side of Hurontario Street before crossing over to the LRT's centre median.[58] The line will cross under the Queen Elizabeth Way along the former northbound lanes of Hurontario, with new northbound lanes for road traffic passing beneath the QEW in a new tunnel.[42] At Dundas Street, the LRT could connect to a proposed Dundas bus rapid transit. The LRT will indirectly connect to Cooksville GO Station using the LRT's Cooksville stop at John Street.

Further north, between the Robert Speck stop and Highway 403, the line will switch to the west side of Hurontario Street and run onto an elevated guideway. Midway across this guideway there will be a Y-junction for a spur descending to Rathburn Road and terminating at the Mississauga City Centre stop. Here there will be connections to the Mississauga Transitway and the Mississauga City Centre Transit Terminal, and access to Square One Shopping Centre. To leave the stop, light-rail trains must reverse back to the mainline, before crossing over Highway 403 on the elevated guideway and returning to centre median running on Hurontario on the north side of the highway.[42]

The first stop north of Highway 403 will be at Eglinton Avenue, with stops at Bristol Road, Matheson Boulevard, Britannia Road, Courtneypark Drive, and Derry Road. North of Derry, at Topflight Drive, there will be a junction to the line's maintenance and storage facility.[59] The line will then enter Brampton, with two stops at Ray Lawson Drive and the north leg of County Court Boulevard before terminating at the Brampton Gateway Terminal on Steeles Avenue,[1] which offers connections to the 511 Züm Steeles BRT line.

Stations and connections

There will be 19 stations throughout the corridor with an average spacing of 850 metres (2,790 ft) and will feature 90-metre (300 ft) platforms.[38] They are expected to have heated shelters, CCTV cameras, real-time information system and bicycle lockers. Most of them will feature secondary entrances, but since most of the corridor is currently suburban in nature, these secondary entrances create mid-block crossings throughout Hurontario and Main Streets, which enhance pedestrian access.[65]

In January 2018, a consultation process was started to select unique and memorable names for the stops. To avoid or minimize duplication of existing transit station names in the Greater Toronto Area, the stops at Dundas Street and Eglinton Avenue were named "Dundas & Hurontario" and "Eglinton & Hurontario" respectively to avoid potential rider confusion with Dundas and Eglinton stations on the Toronto subway system, as well as (in the case of Eglinton) Eglinton GO Station. The stop at Central Parkway was named "Fairview" as there is already a Central Parkway station on the Mississauga Transitway.[66][41]

List of stops
Stop name[41] Stop location Platform Connections
Brampton Gateway Steeles Avenue Centre, south side[40][lower-alpha 1]
County Court Sir Lou Drive –
County Court
Centre, north side Brampton Transit bus routes:
  • 2 Main
  • 33 Peter Robertson

Züm

  • 502 Züm Main
Ray Lawson Ray Lawson Boulevard –
County Court
Centre, north side Brampton Transit bus routes:
  • 54 County Court
  • 200 Turner Fenton SS
  • 206 St. Augustine SS
Derry Derry Road Centre, north side MiWay bus routes:
  • 18 McLaughlin - Derry
  • 42 Derry
Courtneypark Courtneypark Drive Centre, south side MiWay bus route:
  • 57 Courtneypark
Britannia Britannia Road Centre, south side MiWay bus routes:
  • 39 Britannia
  • 70 Keaton
Matheson Matheson Boulevard Centre, north side MiWay bus route:
  • 25 Traders Loop
  • 43 Matheson-Argentia
Bristol Bristol Road Centre, north side MiWay bus route:
  • 10 Bristol-Britannia
Eglinton & Hurontario Eglinton Avenue Centre, north side MiWay bus route:
  • 35 Eglinton
Mississauga City Centre City Centre East side
Robert Speck Robert Speck Parkway Centre, north side MiWay bus routes:
  • 10 Bristol-Britannia
  • 76 City Centre-Subway
Burnhamthorpe Burnhamthorpe Road Centre, south side MiWay bus route:
  • 26 Burnhamthorpe
Fairview[lower-alpha 2] Central Parkway[58][41] Centre, north side[58] MiWay bus routes:
  • 53 Kennedy
  • 304 Father Goetz-Mississauga Valley
Cooksville John Street[58] Centre, north side[58]
Dundas & Hurontario Dundas Street Centre, south side
Queensway The Queensway Centre, south side
North Service North Service Road Centre, north side
Mineola Mineola Road Centre, south side MiWay routes:
  • 8 Cawthra
  • 335 Glenforest South
Port Credit Port Credit GO Station Centre[58]

Operations

The LRT is planned to run every 7.5 minutes during rush hours, and every 10-12 minutes for the rest of the week.[49] Service hours on the LRT corridor are planned to be between 5:00 AM and 1:30 AM Mondays to Saturdays and 7:00 AM to 12:00 AM on Sundays and holidays. Bus service is expected to supplement the remaining hours, making the Hurontario corridor have a 24/7 transit operation. The LRT will take 40 minutes to travel the whole route, compared to 58 minutes by private automobile.[38]

The LRT is planned to have multiple-unit trains, carrying up to about 600 people. Station will have platforms of at least 90 metres (300 ft) long to accommodate the trains.[38] The line will have 13 traction substations, each housed within a steel structure about the size of a shipping container, to convert from AC to DC and to provide electricity for the LRT.[67]

The line will use 28 Alstom Citadis Spirit light rail vehicles to be assembled at an Alstom facility in Brampton. These will be 100 percent low-floor for accessibility. Each vehicle will be 48 metres (157 ft) long and can carry up to 292 riders sitting and standing depending on the seating arrangement. Although the maximum speed for the vehicle is 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph), the actual operating speed will be lower.[46][49]

Vehicles will be stored and maintained at the new Operations, Maintenance and Storage Facility (OMSF) adjacent to a hydro corridor and Highway 407.[38] The OMSF will occupy 84,386 square metres (908,320 sq ft) of land providing room for expansion.[68] The main building will have an area of 10,634 square metres (114,460 sq ft) and contain five through tracks, a vehicle repair shop, a cleaning facility and material storage. Its second floor will contain offices and control rooms for operational staff, meeting rooms and staff break rooms. There will be 12 exterior tracks in the yard. The facility will be able to hold up to 42 light rail vehicles (LRVs), allowing room for expansion.[69][70] Rail access from the OMSF will be via Edwards Boulevard and Topflight Drive to a junction with the main line on Hurontario Street.[59]

Existing bus service

Hurontario Street Corridor interim service plan
Route Terminus Service span and average frequency Connecting services
AM rush Midday PM rush Evening Saturdays Sundays
103
Hurontario Express
Trillium Health Centre Brampton Gateway Terminal 10 10 10 20 20 22 Brampton Transit
GO Transit
MiWay
Züm
502
Züm Main
City Centre Transit Terminal Sandalwood Parkway 9 14 9 20 20 20
2
Main
(Brampton Transit)
Highway 407 Park and Ride Heart Lake Terminal 20 20 20 30 30 30
2
Hurontario (South) (Miway)
Port Credit GO Station City Centre Transit Terminal 10 10 10 15-20 15-20 15-20
17
Hurontario (North)
City Centre Transit Terminal Highway 407 Park and Ride 10 10 10 15-20 15-20 15-20

On May 16, 2011, MiWay realigned service along Hurontario to include limited-stop service (Route 202) during Saturdays for passengers wishing to bypass Square One.

On September 6, 2011, Brampton Transit launched its second bus rapid transit line, Route 502 Züm Main, which runs from Sandalwood Parkway to Mississauga City Centre all week long. This route replaced MiWay's 102 Intercity Express. Züm buses run every 10 minutes during rush hours and 20 minutes during off-peak hours and weekends.[71] The frequency of its local counterpart, 2 Main, was reduced to boost ridership in the express service.

At the same date, MiWay replaced 202 Hurontario with a new route, 103 Hurontario Express, which offers additional mid-day and evening services. Its local counterpart, 19 Hurontario, was cut to GO Transit's Highway 407 Park and Ride to fortify the overlapping express services, however its frequency was further increased to address ongoing overcrowding issues between Britannia and Lakeshore Roads, the busiest section of the corridor.[72] 103 Hurontario Express runs every 17.5 minutes during rush hours, 19 minutes during middays and 24 minutes during Saturdays.

In 2013, Mayor Susan Fennell of Brampton had proposed to run the 502 Züm Main along the entire LRT route to Port Credit as a temporary measure. This would have given Brampton transit users access to the all-day, two-way GO Transit train service at Port Credit. Mayor Hazel McCallion of Mississauga rejected the alternative proposal, citing gridlock south of Mississauga City Centre as a reason.[73]

On May 5, 2014, MiWay realigned service along Hurontario corridor once again to provide more 10-minute service on daytime along the express route during weekdays, while cutting Routes 19A, 19B, and 19C for the local service south of Trillium Health Centre, leaving only the main branch of Route 19 to serve the entire Mississauga portion of the corridor from Highway 407 to Port Credit.

On April 27, 2020, Miway has split the route 19 Hurontario into two routes: 2 Hurontario (South) operating between City Centre and Port Credit GO Station and 17 Hurontario (North) operating between the Highway 407 Park & Ride and City Centre to improve reliability during the LRT construction; while on August 3, 2020, route 103 Hurontario Express was truncated to end at the Trillium Health Centre discontinuing express service south of Trillium Health Centre to Port Credit GO Station.[74]


See also

Notes

  1. In January 2022, the City of Brampton requested that the Brampton Gateway stop be moved from the south side of Steeles Avenue to its north side so that riders would not have to cross Steeles Avenue to transfer between the LRT and the bus terminal.[39]
  2. The Fairview stop, located adjacent to Central Parkway, is named after the Fairview neighbourhood. There is already a Central Parkway stop on the Mississauga Transitway; thus, Fairview was chosen as the LRT stop name.[41]

References

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  2. "Eglinton Crosstown LRT vehicles hit top speeds". Metrolinx. May 6, 2022. Archived from the original on May 6, 2022.
  3. "Contract Awarded for Hurontario LRT". www.infrastructureontario.ca. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  4. "Ontario Names the Hurontario LRT After Former Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion". news.ontario.ca. February 14, 2022. Archived from the original on February 15, 2022. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  5. "Wayfinding Design Standard Version 3.4" (PDF). Metrolinx. August 1, 2019. p. 112. Retrieved January 23, 2023.
  6. "Hurontario/Main Street Rapid Transit Benefits Case" (PDF). Metrolinx. June 2010. p. 51. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  7. "Connect10" (PDF). Cities of Mississauga and Brampton. October 2008. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  8. "Connect10" (PDF). Cities of Mississauga and Brampton. March 2010. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  9. Grewal, San (October 27, 2015). "Brampton council rejects downtown LRT". The Toronto Star. Toronto. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
  10. "What's the latest on the Hurontario Light Rail Transit plans? Here's five things you should know". Brampton Guardian. January 22, 2022.
  11. "Transdev Awarded Contract for Hurontario Light Rail Transit Project, Ontario, Canada". Newswire.ca. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
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