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512 St. Clair

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512 St. Clair
Streetcar arriving at Keele from Gunns Loop
Overview
LocaleToronto, Ontario
Termini
Stations St. Clair
St. Clair West
Service
TypeStreetcar Route
Operator(s)Toronto Transit Commission
Depot(s)Roncesvalles[1]
Rolling stockCLRV
Technical
Line length7.00 km (4.35 mi) [1]
Track gauge4 ft 10+78 in (1,495 mm) - TTC Gauge
Route map

Station with off-street
fare-paid platforms
Connection  00 
Terminus  00 
 
Gunns Loop
 189 
Gunns Road
Old Stock Yards (eastbound only)
Weston Road
to Northland and Avon Loops
Keele Loop
Keele Street
 41   89   941   989 
CN Weston sub. & CP MacTier sub.
Townsley Loop
 127 
Old Weston Road
 41   127   168   941 
Hounslow Heath Road/Silverthorn Ave
Laughton Avenue
CN Newmarket sub.
Caledonia Road
 47B   47C 
Earlscourt Loop
 47 
Lansdowne Avenue
 47   47B   47C 
Earlscourt Avenue
Dufferin Street
 29   929 
Northcliffe Boulevard
Glenholme Avenue
Rogers Road
Oakwood Avenue
 63   161 
Oakwood Loop
 63A 
Robina Avenue
Winona Drive
Arlington Avenue
Christie Street
 126 
Wychwood Carhouse
Wychwood Avenue
Vaughan Road
 90 
Bathurst Street
 7 
St. Clair West station
 33   90   126 
Tweedsmuir Avenue
Spadina Road
 33 
Russell Hill Road
Dunvegan Road
Avenue Road
 5 
Deer Park Crescent
Yonge Street (westbound only)
 97 
St. Clair station
 74   88 
to Mount Pleasant Loop
Avoca Avenue 
Vale of Avoca (Avoca Ravine)
Inglewood Drive
St. Clair & Mt. Pleasant
Moore Park Loop
Heath Street
Moore Avenue
 88 
Mt. Pleasant Cemetery
Merton Street
Davisville Avenue
 28 
Belsize Drive
Manor Road
Soudan Avenue
Eglinton Avenue
 34   51   54   56   100   103 
Mount Pleasant Loop

The 512 St. Clair streetcar is an east-west streetcar route in Toronto, Canada, operated by the Toronto Transit Commission.

History

The streetcar route along St. Clair Avenue was created by the Toronto Civic Railways in 1911 in a successful attempt to promote development in a newly annexed section of the city.[3] Originally, the route ran in a dedicated right of way. The route was transferred to the Toronto Transportation Commission upon its creation in 1921, which removed the dedicated right of way in 1928. It is the northernmost streetcar route still in operation, and was the first to make an underground connection with the subway's St. Clair West Station. It also once ran past St. Clair Station up Mount Pleasant to Eglinton Avenue, but this portion was later made a separate Mount Pleasant route that was subsequently converted to bus operation in the 1970s.

When first built, the St. Clair streetcar operated in a dedicated right-of-way, similar to the modern 510 Spadina route. A dedicated right-of-way is a lane generally in the centre of the street, reserved for transit vehicles. However, it was removed between 1928 and 1935 and replaced with paved trackage open to mixed traffic. The TTC later came to regret this decision, and in 2005 it began rebuilding a dedicated streetcar right-of-way.

The TTC is now running a pilot project of time-based transfers on portions of the 512 St. Clair, under which passengers who take a transfer (see Toronto Transit Commission fares) may disembark and then board another streetcar from the same route, even one going in the opposite direction, as long as they do so within a certain amount of time after their original boarding. This means that one can stop part-way through a journey and then continue, or even make a round trip, without paying multiple fares.

The line is operated with Toronto’s single-length CLRV streetcars.

Roncesvalles Carhouse serves the St. Clair streetcar route. When a 512 St. Clair streetcar begins service, it travels from the yard at Roncesvalles and the Queensway, along King Street, then on Bathurst Street, which connects to St. Clair Avenue. When a 512 streetcar finishes service, the roll sign indicates "512 RONCESVALLES", and the vehicle travels on Vaughan Road to Bathurst and King Streets, ending in Roncesvalles Yard, with some ending at Bathurst Street's Hillcrest Yard.

Upgrade to dedicated right-of-way

CLRV #4146 waits for a green light at the Yonge Street passenger shelter.
CLRV #4164 moves east along its dedicated right-of-way.

Following the success of the new 510 Spadina route along dedicated right-of-ways on Spadina and Queen's Quay and on portions on several streetcar routes, the TTC decided to upgrade the St. Clair streetcar to a dedicated right-of-way. The tracks along the route needed replacement, and the TTC estimated that building a dedicated right-of-way would cost only $7 million more than simply replacing the tracks. Furthermore, St. Clair Avenue is one of the few streets in Toronto wide enough to accommodate a dedicated right-of-way without significantly reducing the width of traffic lanes.


Possible extensions

Two major plans have been proposed and examined in the past. The first plan would see Route 512 extended west along St. Clair Avenue West to Runnymede Road, and south underneath the Canadian Pacific Railway Galt Subdivision line to a bus loop at Runnymede Road and Dundas Street West, replacing a portion of route 71 Runnymede. Streetcar tracks would then be extended southeast along Dundas Street West to Dundas West Station where the 504 King and 505 Dundas streetcar routes currently terminate. The tracks on Dundas would be served by a new route replacing the current 40 Junction bus route. While this scheme may not be warranted by potential ridership[citation needed], it would cut down the amount of deadhead (not-in-service) time required by St. Clair streetcars to get to St. Clair Avenue.

The other plan comes as part of Transit City, the Light Rail expansion proposal. It would see route 512 extended west on St. Clair all the way to Jane Street, replacing portions of routes 71 Runnymede and 79 Scarlett Road, where it would connect with the planned Jane Street LRT.

Stops and connecting routes

The St. Clair west right of way consists of 26 stops (east to west). Full Streetcar service resumed (St. Clair Station to Gunn's Loop) on June 30, 2010.[4] Streetcar service resumed to Earlscourt Loop (Lansdowne Ave.) December 20, 2009,[5] with a pre-opening event on the 19th utilizing the TTC's two remaining PCC streetcars. Prior to that portion of the line being reopened streetcars only serviced stops between St. Clair and St. Clair West Stations.

The Torontoist reports that, even during rush hour, it takes 29 minutes to travel the entire route, from Yonge Street to Gunn Avenue.[6]

Night route

Unlike the 512 route, the 312 Blue Night buses stop at the curb (sidewalk), not the streetcar islands. Recently, the TTC placed several signs along the route to indicate this, likely due to passenger confusion over new, "far-side" streetcar stops while the curb bus stops remain "near-side" (stopping before crossing the intersection).

Transfer points on St. Clair and Jane, 312 St. Clair Blue Night bus:[7]

Bibliography

  • Bromley, John F., and Jack May. Fifty Years of Progressive Transit, Electric Railroaders’ Association, New York (New York), 1978.
  • Filey, Mike. Not a One-Horse Town: 125 Years of Toronto and its Streetcars, Gagne Printing, Louiseville (Quebec), 1986.
  • Hood, J. William. The Toronto Civic Railways: An Illustrated History, The Upper Canada Railway Society, Toronto (Ontario), 1986.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Toronto Transit Commission (September 18, 2009). "TTC Service Summary" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Ridership and cost statistics for bus and streetcar routes, 2011" (PDF). Toronto Transit Commission. April 2011. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  3. ^ Lloyd Alter (2013-11-25). "Streetcars save cities: A look at 100 years of a Toronto streetcar line". Treehugger.com. Archived from the original on 2013-11-25. Retrieved 2013-11-25. A hundred years ago, a new streetcar line was installed on St. Clair Avenue in Toronto in a dedicated right-of-way. In 1928 they got rid of the right-of-way to make more room for cars; In 2006 they rebuilt it again, putting the right of way back. {{cite news}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 2013-11-26 suggested (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ http://www3.ttc.ca/Service_Advisories/Route_diversions/512_St_Clair_10630.jsp
  5. ^ TTC Streetcar service advisory: 512 St. Clair and 505 Dundas routes
  6. ^ Dan Foster (2011-04-05). "A St. Clair Journey". Archived from the original on 2013-12-23. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Toronto Transit Commission. "TTC Blue Night Service Map" (PDF).