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Eglinton West station

Coordinates: 43°41′57″N 79°26′09″W / 43.699209°N 79.435819°W / 43.699209; -79.435819
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Eglinton West
General information
Location1300 Eglinton Avenue West
Toronto, Ontario
Canada
Coordinates43°41′57″N 79°26′09″W / 43.699209°N 79.435819°W / 43.699209; -79.435819
PlatformsSide platforms
Tracks2
Connections
  •  32  Eglinton West
  •  63  Ossington
  •  109  Ranee
  •  332   Eglinton West
  •  363   Ossington
Construction
Structure typeUnderground / at grade
AccessibleYes
Architect
History
OpenedLine 1: January 28, 1978
OpeningLine 5: 2022 (2 years ago) (2022)[1]
Passengers
2022[2]6,569
Rank67 of 70
Services
Preceding station   TTC   Following station
Template:TTC lines
  Future services  
Template:TTC lines
(opens 2022)

Eglinton West is a subway station on Line 1 Yonge–University in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the median of Allen Road on the north side of Eglinton Avenue West.

Line 5 Eglinton will also serve Eglinton West station upon its completion, scheduled for 2022.[1] At that time, Eglinton West will become an interchange station and be renamed Cedarvale. Metrolinx is building the line along Eglinton Avenue from Template:Ttcs to Template:Ttcs.[3]

History

The station opened in 1978, as part of the Line 1 extension from Template:Ttcs to Template:Ttcs station.

In 1978 when the station opened, a trolley bus route (63 Ossington) served the station and looped around the station building. To coincide with the station opening, the route was extended from its prior terminus at Oakwood Avenue and Eglinton Avenue. The route ran south to the loop at King Street. In 1992, the route was converted to diesel buses and the overhead wires were removed.[4]

Eglinton West had been planned to be an interchange station as part of the proposed Eglinton West line (not to be confused with the Eglinton Crosstown line). This was one of the three proposed subway lines in the Network 2011 Plan created in 1985 by the Toronto Transit Commission. The project was cancelled in 1995 after the election of a Progressive Conservative government led by Mike Harris. Afterwards, the small amount of tunnel that had been dug under the station was refilled.

Since October 2005, the station has been wheelchair-accessible.[5]

In December 2012, commuter parking lots formerly located east and west of the station building on the north side of Eglinton Avenue were taken out of service, leaving no immediately adjacent parking. The lots were used as staging areas for the tunnel boring machines (TBMs) during the construction of Line 5 Eglinton.[6] On the weekend of April 18 and 19, 2015, the TBMs Dennis and Lea were extracted from the east-side staging area and then transported on a heavy truck trailer to relaunch from the west-side staging area.[7] The two staging areas will each be the location of a new station entrance.[8]

Description

The station building is located on the north side of Eglinton Avenue West between the entry/exit ramps for Allen Road. The station currently has two levels: street level and the platform level for Line 1 trains. The station's pedestrian entrance, the station concourse and a bus terminal are all located at street level. The bus terminal, located in a fare-paid area, surrounds the concourse area with bays on three of its four sides.[9]

After the opening of Line 5 Eglinton in 2022, Eglinton West will have two more station entrances: one just east of the Allen Road entry ramp, and the other just west of the Allen Road exit ramp. The current entrances, which will be retained for direct access to the bus terminal for walk-in patrons not riding the subway or LRT, and the new entrances will all be on the north side of Eglinton Avenue. On the south side of Eglinton Avenue just west of Everden Road, there is a possibility of an emergency exit or a fourth entrance to be incorporated into some future private development.[8]

The Line 5 tunnel and platform will pass under the Line 1 platforms. Above the Line 5 platform level, there will be a new underground concourse divided in two sections by a gap where the Line 1 tracks cross. Crossover tracks to reverse Line 5 trains will be located just east of the Line 5 platforms.[8]

Architecture

The station was designed by Arthur Erickson and Clifford & Lawrie.[10] The main ticketing and concourse area at surface level is sheltered by an exposed concrete space frame supported by eight circular columns. The concrete ceiling is, in effect, a large slab, and overhangs the entrance. With a glass curtain wall, it appears to float. Inside, it is coffered throughout the station, with skylights in certain areas, allowing for increased penetration of natural light. Eglinton West makes use of sandblasted concrete and brick wall finishes extensively, distinguishing it from most stations on Line 1 and Line 2 Bloor–Danforth, where tiles are predominant.

As the north end of the station is in Allen Road's median, the Line 1 platform level is partly built at surface level. Designers took advantage of this and added windows at platform level. The northbound platform has regular windows, allowing for a view onto Allen Road, while windows on the opposite platform are frosted. This combination of window treatments allows transit riders to view cars speeding onto Allen Road's northbound expressway lanes, while blocking views of cars stuck in traffic approaching Eglinton, where the expressway—originally planned to continue south to downtown—ends.

During July 2009, the TTC installed an $850,000 green roof over the northern end of the station to reduce maintenance costs, increase the lifespan to 40–50 years, reduce the heat island effect by lowering the temperature of the surrounding area by a few degrees, and to reduce runoff. The TTC had to repair the roof anyway, since it had been leaking since 2000. The plants atop the 835-square-metre roof are low-maintenance sedums. Template:Ttcs and Template:Ttcs stations are slated to have green roofs installed as well.[11]

Art

Summertime Streetcar

The station's artwork, on two enamel murals facing each other, is Summertime Streetcar by Gerald Zeldin, is a montage of PCC streetcars from differing perspectives. The artwork is two storeys high and is located in the appropriately high ceiling section of the platform level.

In future, as part of a program to install artworks at major interchange stations along Line 5 Eglinton, the station will feature the artwork Super Signals by Douglas Coupland consisting of aluminum panels with brightly coloured concentric circles against a background of black and white diagonal lines. The artwork is an exaggeration of traditional wayfinding graphics.[12]

Line 1 infrastructure in the vicinity

South of the station, Line 1 continues underground below Everden Road to reach the Cedarvale Ravine, then continues southeast below the ravine. Moving northward, tracks continue on the surface, in the median of Allen Road.

Nearby landmarks

Nearby landmarks include the York–Eglinton BIA, Little Jamaica, and the Oakwood-Vaughan and Humewood-Cedarvale neighbourhoods.

Surface connections

When the subway is closed, buses do not enter the station, but will service nearby stops. TTC routes serving the station include:

Route Name Additional Information
32A/C Eglinton West Eastbound to Eglinton station
32A Westbound to Renforth station
32C Westbound to Jane Street and Lawrence Avenue West via Trethewey Drive
32D Westbound to Jane Street and Emmett Avenue
(This station is the eastern terminus for this route)
63A Ossington Southbound to Liberty Village
109B Ranee Northbound to Neptune Drive via Marlee Avenue and Flemington Road
109C Northbound to Neptune Drive via Marlee Avenue and Varna Drive
332 Eglinton West Blue Night service; Eastbound to Eglinton Station and westbound to Renforth Drive and Pearson Airport
(On-street transfer)
363 Ossington Blue Night service; Southbound to Exhibition Loop
(On-street transfer)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Spurr, Ben (17 February 2020). "Eglinton Crosstown faces another setback, delayed until 2022 | The Star". Toronto Star. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  2. ^ "Subway ridership, 2022" (PDF). Toronto Transit Commission. Retrieved May 4, 2024. This table shows the typical number of customer-trips made on each subway on an average weekday and the typical number of customers travelling to and from each station platform on an average weekday.
  3. ^ "Eglinton West station to become 'Cedarvale' because of Crosstown LRT". November 24, 2015. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
  4. ^ Bow, James (December 25, 2016). "63 Ossington". Transit Toronto. Retrieved November 27, 2017.
  5. ^ "Eglinton West Station". MyTTC.ca. Archived from the original on April 26, 2009. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
  6. ^ "Eglinton West TTC commuter lots closing Dec 21st for conversion to construction staging". Metrolinx. December 17, 2012. Archived from the original on 2014-02-03. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  7. ^ Mitanis, Marcus (April 20, 2015). "Crosstown LRT Tunnel Boring Machines Successfully Moved". UrbanToronto. Retrieved November 27, 2017.
  8. ^ a b c "Cedarvale (formerly Eglinton West) Station". Metrolinx. October 13, 2016. Retrieved November 27, 2017.
  9. ^ "Eglinton West Station (Station Description)". Toronto Transit Commission. Retrieved November 27, 2017.
  10. ^ "Eglinton West Subway Station". TO Built. Bob Krawczyk. 2008. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
  11. ^ Kalinowski, Tess (August 4, 2009). "Green roof takes root at Eglinton West". Toronto Star. Retrieved August 4, 2009.
  12. ^ "Artists and Artworks". Metrolinx. Retrieved February 9, 2018.