10 On April 6, 2004, Pearson debuted its elegant new Terminal 1, a light-soaked mass of undulating ceilings, glass walls and grand whitewashed foyers punctuated by splashes of colourful modern art. The complex, part of a $4.4-billion airport redevelopment, wasn’t just more beautiful than its staid predecessor; it was also vastly bigger, with 4.2 million square feet of interior space, and they’ve since added another 1.8 million. Today, the country’s pre-eminent air hub handles some 1,100 flights per day.
9 23 Length, in days, of the strike 40 Percentage wage increase that TTC workers demanded $5 Maximum hourly wage for TTC drivers in 1974 ($26 in today’s dollars) 1 Number of hitchhikers then-mayor Mel Lastman picked up on day one of the strike 360 Number of privately owned school buses the TTC used as temporary taxis 5,700 Number of TTC employees on strike 2,161 Number of taxis in Toronto in 1974 600,000 Approximate number of TTC users in 1974
8 What started with a single line along the shore of Lake Ontario rapidly grew into a network of train tracks and bus routes criss-crossing southern Ontario. GO ushered in the expansion of the GTA, and the system now moves some 271,000 people daily.
7 On the afternoon of December 12, 1975, a TTC bus stalled on top of GO train tracks in Scarborough, the result of an electrical malfunction in the rear door that caused the brakes to engage. Before the driver could escort everyone out, a passenger train smashed into the bus, turning it to scrap metal, throwing bodies from the scene and killing 10.
6 Torontonians were so ambivalent about the Gardiner that by the time its easternmost section opened in 1966, there was hardly a whiff of fanfare. The highway was a concrete tribute to the car that came with a major cost: cutting off downtown from Lake Ontario. The head-scratching over what to do with it—bury, raze, jack it skyward or something else entirely—persists.
5 An expanded Island airport was pitched as the solution to downtowners’ desire to escape the city without trekking to Pearson. David Miller had other plans. He won votes and the mayoralty thanks in part to his vow to nix the bridge. And that same bloc rallied to stop Bob Deluce’s plan for whisper jets more than a decade later.
4 Uber offered Torontonians an efficient, cost-effective way to get around a gridlocked city. But instead of quickly innovating, the taxi industry sulked like toddlers, staging a string of traffic-snarling protests that drove customers into the arms of their rivals. Even if Uber gets chastened in the months and years ahead, Torontonians, having experienced a better option, will insist there’s no going back to the pre-Uber days.
3 On his first day in office, mayor Ford raged against his predecessor’s LRT-heavy transit plan, baiting suburbanites with a blunt classist message: if downtowners can have a subway, why can’t you? It distorted the facts, but that didn’t seem to matter. Council quickly fell in line, signing off on a subway extension to Scarborough, a flawed piece of planning that plagues politicians and bureaucrats today.
2 The Conservative government had long backed a north-south expressway that would snake from the suburbs to downtown. Then, in 1971, new premier Bill Davis withdrew support, and the project quickly crumbled, leaving a stunted Allen and an enduring symbol of the power of informed protest.
1 Perhaps fittingly, it began with a delay. On February 26, 1966, one day after prime minister Lester Pearson took the inaugural ride on the $156-million Bloor-Danforth line, the first trains to carry the public started a half-hour behind schedule. That came on the heels of a string of tragedies—nine workers were killed in separate incidents during construction. Still, the line, which originally ran from Keele to Woodbine, became a triumph, turning the subway into a viable commuter option, spurring development and putting Toronto on the path to modern ways of thinking about how its residents get around.
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