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ION - Waterloo Region's Light Rail Transit
I’m not sure you guys realize how many people not in KW are trying out the ION this week. I know a bunch of people from Guelph that have come out and a few people from London as well.

This is still a novelty for lots of people in the area that aren’t served by busses.

I don’t blame Conestoga Mall for not giving up their parking spots for free. Although I think a better business decision would have been to embrace the free week. Advertise to people they could come and park this week only and then make it clear that once regular service starts they aren’t a park and ride.

I agree that it’s unlikely to be a big problem long term. There’s generally a lot of free/cheap parking around the places the ION goes (including uptown).
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Rainrider22 Wrote:
Quote:I agree, I did the same when I used the LRT, I parked at Park and Ride.  I know the strong proponents of transit on here say take the bus, but, baby steps.  Lets get people using the LRT regardless of how they get to the station, then start working up to full transit experience including buses.  It is a major cultural shift we are talking about here.,  People will change and adjust.  My kids are likely going to end up being very transit dependent because we have traveled a lot and utilize transit systems in other cities so my children don't view public transit with a negative stigma.  As the older car dependent people age and lose their drivers licence, they will learn to rely on the transit too.  Eventually it will become the norm for the urban populations of the Region.  Rome wasn't built in a day, and we have only started to build what I believe is going to be an amazing city and the envy of many cities in  North America... So lets all stay positive and encourage new people to try the LRT.  If each of us gets a new person to try, we will be on our way. I know personally I have already gotten three families to try and they are very impressed.  They don't see any of the complaints that people on here are talking about because they aren't experts  in transit.  So, remember the lens that many people are viewing through is different than your own. I predict that this is going to be huge success and that the second phase will be built sooner than later based on the success.

I'm actually focused on trying to get people to try the bus. A lot of people I'm talking to have been eager to try the LRT- even over and over again- but don't want to make a connection. I've been sending people schedules and talking to them about what it's actually like.

Hopefully your prediction is right; I love the positivity.
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It's an uphill battle. One gentleman was of the impression that Ion fare was approximately $10; when I let him know it was the same as bus fare, which is $3.25 at most, he was genuinely surprised.
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(06-27-2019, 08:26 AM)KevinL Wrote: It's an uphill battle. One gentleman was of the impression that Ion fare was approximately $10; when I let him know it was the same as bus fare, which is $3.25 at most, he was genuinely surprised.
Some people think we bought a monorail from the Simpsons too !! Those damn Shellbyville people !!
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(06-27-2019, 08:26 AM)KevinL Wrote: It's an uphill battle. One gentleman was of the impression that Ion fare was approximately $10; when I let him know it was the same as bus fare, which is $3.25 at most, he was genuinely surprised.

I wonder if that's because a certain columnist in the region lied and said it was about that.
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Just $3.25 from the northern most point of Waterloo to the southern most point in Cambridge - an easily $45 Uber ride! That's pretty amazing hah. Just so long your transfer doesn't expire!
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Get a fare card (for no charge!) and, for $2.76, you can take the 59 from practically the Cambridge city limits, connect to the 302 at Ainslie, connect to the 301 at Fairway, and ride it to Conestoga. That would take just about exactly 90 minutes, so if you are exceedingly lucky, with the same fare you can catch the 21 to Elmira.

Elmira to Ainslie would be no problem on a single fare.
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(06-26-2019, 11:56 PM)rangersfan Wrote: I am really surprised that a portion of the Conestoga parking lot was not set a side as a park and ride.
Seems like an oversight.

Are there any other park and ride spots besides Fairview?

I was under the impression that they tried to work out a deal with the mall, but the mall was not receptive to that
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I was thinking last night about how psychologically the various parts of the line feel far more connected now with LRT than with the bus. I'm not entirely sure why. I was going to a late movie at the Cineplex on Fairway with some friends and was early and considering options for food. With the bus, I would have only considered the options around the mall and theatre. Last night, I was running through all the options all along the line. Did I have time to run up to Vincenzo's? It's been awhile since I've grabbed a sandwich there.

I think the level-boarding trains and station infrastructure have a part in that. Physically there are few barriers (although the pedestrian infrastructure around the mall is horrendous right now, particularly with the construction there). The free fares is definitely another factor too, probably the largest. It makes me wonder if it is worthwhile for the region and municipalities to subsidize transit specifically to remove the mental barrier that the fare payment creates. Would free bus routes create the same sense of connection? It certainly doesn't seem that way, seeing as the bus system is free right now too.

Has anyone else noticed a radical change in their mental map of the city with the advent of ION service?
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(06-27-2019, 10:03 AM)jamincan Wrote: I was thinking last night about how psychologically the various parts of the line feel far more connected now with LRT than with the bus. I'm not entirely sure why. I was going to a late movie at the Cineplex on Fairway with some friends and was early and considering options for food. With the bus, I would have only considered the options around the mall and theatre. Last night, I was running through all the options all along the line. Did I have time to run up to Vincenzo's? It's been awhile since I've grabbed a sandwich there.

I think the level-boarding trains and station infrastructure have a part in that. Physically there are few barriers (although the pedestrian infrastructure around the mall is horrendous right now, particularly with the construction there). The free fares is definitely another factor too, probably the largest. It makes me wonder if it is worthwhile for the region and municipalities to subsidize transit specifically to remove the mental barrier that the fare payment creates. Would free bus routes create the same sense of connection? It certainly doesn't seem that way, seeing as the bus system is free right now too.

Has anyone else noticed a radical change in their mental map of the city with the advent of ION service?

I know exactly what you mean.  The ION line just feels closer.  I do find it unfortunate, because the busses can be reasonably convenient, but often they don't feel that way.

Given that I bike most of the time, my feel of access to the city changes depending on the bike infra that gets built, as well as the weather. In winter, I feel very trapped, even walking outside DTK is dangerous feeling. I imagine the ION will help with this in the next winter.
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(06-27-2019, 10:03 AM)jamincan Wrote: I was thinking last night about how psychologically the various parts of the line feel far more connected now with LRT than with the bus.

Exactly this - I used to work in suburban Waterloo and would often tag along with a colleague who'd drive to Vincenzo's to pick up lunch. I've now been working in DTK for several years, and hadn't been back to Vincenzo's until this week - somehow it seems much more readily accessible with the LRT.
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(06-27-2019, 07:21 AM)neonjoe Wrote:
(06-27-2019, 05:57 AM)ac3r Wrote: Exactly. I don't understand why someone would drive their vehicle, just to park it in order to take public transit? Why not just take public transit to begin with - or drive? It's not like there are many neighbourhoods in the city without adequate service, including north Waterloo.
On Sunday we drove to Fairview park to hop on the iON for the multicultural festival to avoid the hassle of parking downtown. We live in a Sunday transit desert. The 33 doesn’t run on Sunday's and the nearest walk to another stop is over 40 minutes away. I can see a use case for people say in Conestogo or other north end exurbs using a park and ride.

Fair enough. For a one-off day out that makes sense. I guess I'm so used to transit, that I would not consider driving somewhere, just to finish a trip in a bus/tram.

That said, downtown parking is never really a problem here. There are so many parking spaces and many go under utilized. I believe that garage on Benton is rarely ever half full.
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(06-27-2019, 08:05 AM)SammyOES Wrote: I’m not sure you guys realize how many people not in KW are trying out the ION this week.  I know a bunch of people from Guelph that have come out and a few people from London as well. 

Good to hear. One of the many reasons I long hoped that our system would be built is that it would be an example. A lot of the anti-LRT rhetoric has been based on incorrect facts. While many are just denialists, I believe there are many people who could go either way and seeing what LRT is actually like will help people to realize that it is a good thing. If the debate can be on issues like where it makes sense to take traffic lanes for LRT and what is affordable rather than on bogus nonsense like how horrible it would (n’t) be to have a train drive past the patio of a restaurant or how dangerous it is (n’t) to board from the middle of the street, we will all be better served.

The restaurant patio example is straight from a ridiculous deputation given by a former mayor of Waterloo to Regional Council. She suggested that restaurant patios on King St. would be useless with a train right next to them. Absurd, of course, given the implication that it would be A-OK to have a regular traffic lane full of cars, trucks, and buses roaring by constantly, some of them driven by random idiots, but an electric LRV every few minutes would destroy the ambience. But there it is. You can probably still find it in the Region’s video archive from 2011.

I also remember an exchange in the Record letters. Somebody claimed people would have to load dangerously from the middle of the street like a streetcar. Leaving aside the question of whether streetcar loading practices are dangerous, as everybody knows Ion loads from a platform. So another person replied to the first letter pointing out that Ion would load from a platform. Then the first person doubled down! Apparently they thought their preconceptions, not derived from actual knowledge, took precedence over true facts. I don’t know how such a person gets through the day: what if they get it in their head that Zehr’s is poisoning them or something?

Quote:I don’t blame Conestoga Mall for not giving up their parking spots for free.  Although I think a better business decision would have been to embrace the free week.  Advertise to people they could come and park this week only and then make it clear that once regular service starts they aren’t a park and ride. 

That would have been a great idea. Avoid the negative headlines now but maintain control over parking longer term.
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(06-27-2019, 10:03 AM)jamincan Wrote: Has anyone else noticed a radical change in their mental map of the city with the advent of ION service?

Absolutely. So many things will be much easier/faster to get to. Before, our transit system operated using hubs. We had Charles and Ainsle Terminals as well as some minor hubs in malls. Certain places in the city would require you to take a bus to one of these places and then transfer to another bus and perhaps to yet another one, if you had somewhere specific to go. Now one has the option of taking a fairly arterial/linear tram route, jump off at a stop closest to where you wish to go, and then catch a bus to where your destination is. It feels much faster and logistically easier now.

Someone I know who lives here has been in the process of looking for work. She felt quite limited in regards to where she could apply, because to get from Fairview to Conestoga took well over an hour. Now she is able to apply to jobs as far as Conestoga and won't have to worry about getting up so early, because it's now a 40~ minute trip to get there.

Edit: Additionally, the tram comes by every 10 minutes, compared to a lifetime for the buses. So getting on to go grab lunch somewhere which would have taken a lot longer to get to is now an option.
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I actually got a seat for my morning commute! Not taking it as a definitive sign that the novelty is wearing off, but it was nice.

Also: when the Wi-Fi works, it's very good.
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