An expressway under Ontario’s Highway 401? Ford touts idea with few details

The Ontario government is announcing plans to explore whether tunnelling under a major highway, an idea Premier Doug Ford first mused about when he was a Toronto city councillor, is possible.

The government announced the concept at a news conference near Highway 401 in Etobicoke on Wednesday morning, pledging to conduct a feasibility study of whether a new expressway could be tunnelled beneath the existing route.

“Today’s announcement is the latest step in our nearly $100 billion plan to tackle this gridlock by building and expanding highways and transit, including Highway 401, the Bradford Bypass and Highway 413, so we can get people and goods moving across Ontario once more,” Ford said.

Ford said he wanted to get a “clear understanding” of “how this tunnel” can fight gridlock, promising the potential project would not include road tolls. The premier called his tunnel project a “serious plan to get people out of gridlock,” accusing his opponents of shooting down his transportation plans.




Click to play video: Toronto tosses around transportation solutions to constant gridlock

While the feasibility study is about understanding how the project would work, Ford repeated several times Wednesday morning that they planned to build the route whatever happened.

“This proposal is a strategic investment to help drivers get out of gridlock and get trade goods where they’re needed without costly delays,” Infrastructure Minister Kinga Surma said.

Experts have suggested the idea of either tunnelling under or building over major highways in Ontario is technically possible but logistically impractical, with prohibitive costs as the main barrier.

“In a lot of Asia, they’re doing decking projects. India is doing a lot of decking. They call them flyovers,” Matti Siemiatycki, professor of geography and director of the University of Toronto’s Infrastructure Institute, previously told Global News.

“The reality is that the cost of both of those initiatives is astronomical,” he said.

“What will happen is a pattern called induced demand where ultimately, over time, you’ll end up with those additional lanes also becoming congested.”




Click to play video: Toronto officials celebrate traffic efforts, getting Spadina congestion down

In bygone years, when he was a city councillor, Ford pitched creative ways to make the roads bigger but not wider.

In 2012, he mused about tunnelling below the Gardiner or adding extra layers above the city’s roads.

“I’m in favour of exploring: what is the cost of tunnelling, what is the cost of putting a double-decker, a triple-decker like they have in New York?” Ford said at the time, according to the National Post.

“Let’s find out the cost.”

The government is in the process of finalizing transportation legislation that will be tabled in the fall, including rules that will restrict bike lanes. The premier has said the ideas it will bring forward are “game-changing,” while his transportation minister hinted it could involve more construction.

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