翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ West Vernor-Junction Historic District
・ West Vernor-Lawndale Historic District
・ West Vernor-Springwells Historic District
・ West Vero Corridor, Florida
・ West Tip
・ West Tisbury
・ West Tisbury, Massachusetts
・ West Tisbury, Wiltshire
・ West Tisted
・ West Tolgus
・ West Toodyay
・ West Toronto
・ West Toronto Collegiate Institute
・ West Toronto Diamond
・ West Toronto Nationals
West Toronto Railpath
・ West Torrens Baseball Club
・ West Torrens Birkalla SC
・ West Torrens Cricket Club
・ West Torrens District Football Association
・ West Torrens Football Club
・ West Torrington
・ West Tower
・ West Town
・ West Town Academy
・ West Town Mall
・ West Town, Chicago
・ West Town, Peterborough
・ West Towne Mall
・ West Township


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

West Toronto Railpath : ウィキペディア英語版
West Toronto Railpath

The West Toronto Railpath is a multi-use asphalt trail in Toronto, Canada, running from The Junction neighbourhood toward downtown Toronto. The Railpath was developed and funded by the City of Toronto for bicycle and pedestrian use by local area residents. It, along with the Beltline Trail, is an example of an urban rails-to-trail project. Phase 1 of the path opened up in 2009.
==History==
In 1868, the Toronto, Grey and Bruce Railway was incorporated to provide rail service connecting Toronto to Southampton and Owen Sound (and points in between).〔(TG&BR )〕 Sections of this railway in Toronto ran along the rights of way of other existing railways. As this railway was a different (narrower) gauge, a separate set of tracks was required along the right of way. Due to service problems associated with the narrow gauge, the line was eventually converted to standard gauge in 1881. By 1883, the Canadian Pacific Railway had acquired the line. Into the 1960s, the portion of the track around Dupont was known as "The Old Bruce". It served several industries, including the Viceroy plant and the scrapyard.〔
The City of Toronto Economic Development and Parks Committee and grassroots community support began for this project before 1990, but the project necessitated the purchase of land and negotiations with rail operators and other stakeholders. Organizations involved include the Evergreen Foundation and, although the Railpath is multi-use, notable advocacy by bicycling interests such as Toronto's Community Bicycle Network. The City of Toronto first authorized purchase of the land for the portion from Cariboo Avenue to Dundas Street West (known as the CP LEAD spur) in 1997. Funds to the amount of $920,000 were approved in 2000.
This land was acquired in July 2003 by the City of Toronto from the St. Lawrence and Hudson Railway. The purchase agreement demanded that the vendor remediate the soil to industrial standards. After acquiring the lands, the City of Toronto needed to terminate a lease that a salvage yard (M&S Waste and Salvage) had for a portion of the land, leased when the land was owned by Canadian Pacific.
Construction of Phase 1 of the path, running from Cariboo Avenue to Dundas Street West and Sterling Road, was designed by Scott Torrance Landscape Architect Inc. in conjunction with Brown and Storey Architects, and began in 2008 and was completed in 2009.〔()〕 The project combined the restoration of historical rail bridges with the installation of new public art pieces by artist John Dickson, all situated among indigenous planting. New entrance points at Dupont and Bloor Streets allow pedestrians to access the trail from the street and use the restored rail bridges that cross over these streets. Concrete plazas are located along the trail where existing streets intersect it, providing neighbourhood connections and gathering places.
The realization of Phase 2 will potentially be coordinated with the Georgetown South Project, a planned expansion of rail capacity along the line for GO Transit and the Union Pearson Express.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「West Toronto Railpath」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.