504 King

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504 King
CLRVs 4049 and 4090 Eastbound on King.jpg
Two 504 King cars push east of Yonge
during the morning rush hour
Overview
Type Streetcar Route
Locale Toronto, Ontario
Termini Broadview Station (East)
Dundas West Station (West)
Stations TTC - Line 1 - Yonge-University-Spadina line.svg King
TTC - Line 1 - Yonge-University-Spadina line.svg St. Andrew
TTC - Line 2 - Bloor-Danforth line.svg Dundas West
TTC - Line 2 - Bloor-Danforth line.svg Broadview
Daily ridership 53,100
Operation
Operator(s) Toronto Transit Commission
Depot(s) Russell and Roncesvalles[1]
Rolling stock CLRV, ALRV
Technical
Line length 13.97 km (8.68 mi) [1]
Track gauge 4 ft 10 78 in (1,495 mm) - TTC Gauge
Electrification 600 VDC Overhead
Route number 504
Route map
Transfer stop
Sunday-only stop
Carhouse
Route:Connection  00  Terminus  00 

Bloor–Danforth to Kennedy Station
Dundas West Station
BSicon BUS1.svg  40   168  BSicon CLRV.svg  505  BSicon SUBWAY.svg TTC - Line 2 - Bloor-Danforth line.svg
Bloor Street BSicon CLRV.svg  505 
Dundas Street 505 to Broadview Station
Dundas Street West
Roncesvalles Avenue
Boustead Avenue BSicon CLRV.svg  505 
Hewitt Avenue
Howard Park BSicon CLRV.svg  506 
Constance Street
↓ Geoffrey Street/Grenadier Road ↑
St. Vincent de Paul RC Church
↓ High Park Boulevard/Fermanagh Avenue ↑
Fern Avenue
Garden Avenue
Galley Avenue
Marion Street
Grafton Avenue
Roncesvalles Carhouse
Queen Street West
Roncesvalles Avenue
King Street West
BSicon CLRV.svg  501   508 
Wilson Park Road
Jameson Avenue
Dunn Avenue
Cowan Avenue
Spencer Avenue
Dufferin Street BSicon BUS1.svg  29 
Fraser Avenue
Joe Shuster Way
Atlantic Avenue
CN Weston Subdivision
Sudbury Street
Shaw Street BSicon BUS1.svg  63 
Strachan Avenue BSicon BUS1.svg  63 
Niagara Street
Tecumseth Street
Bathurst Street BSicon BUS1.svg  145  BSicon CLRV.svg  511 
Portland Street
Brant Street
Spadina Avenue BSicon CLRV.svg  510 
Blue Jays Way/Peter Street ↑
John Street
Simcoe Street
University AvenueSt. Andrew Station BSicon BUS1.svg  142  BSicon SUBWAY.svg TTC - Line 1 - Yonge-University-Spadina line.svg
York Street
Bay Street BSicon BUS1.svg  6 
Yonge StreetKing Station BSicon BUS1.svg  97  BSicon SUBWAY.svg TTC - Line 1 - Yonge-University-Spadina line.svg
Victoria Street
Church Street
Jarvis Street BSicon BUS1.svg  141 
Sherbourne Street BSicon BUS1.svg  75 
Ontario Street
Parliament Street BSicon BUS1.svg  65 
Trinity Street
Sackville Street
Sumach Street
501 & 502 to downtown
King Street East
Queen Street East
River Street BSicon CLRV.svg  501   502 
CN Bala Subdivision & CP Belleville Subdivision
Don River
Don Valley Parkway
Carroll Street
Queen Street East
Broadview Avenue
BSicon CLRV.svg  501   502 
501 to Neville/502 to Bingham
Dundas Street505 to Dundas West Station BSicon CLRV.svg  505 
Mt. Stephen Street
Gerrard Street BSicon BUS1.svg  506 
St. John's Presbyterian Church
Langley Avenue
Withrow Avenue
Bain Avenue
Millbrook Crescent
Wolfrey Avenue
Danforth Avenue
Erindale Avenue
Broadview Station
BSicon BUS1.svg  8   62   87   100  BSicon CLRV.svg  505  BSicon SUBWAY.svg TTC - Line 2 - Bloor-Danforth line.svg
Bloor–Danforth to Kipling Station

The 504 King is a streetcar route operated by the Toronto Transit Commission in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was grouped together with the 508 Lake Shore for accounting purposes until the latter was cancelled on June 19, 2015. In 2005-06, these routes carried 47,900 passengers on an average weekday (of which the vast majority were carried by 504 King), making 504 King the busiest TTC streetcar route in terms of number of passengers.[2] As of September 6, 2015, this route operates 24 hours a day seven days a week. During weekday rush hours, daytime and early evenings, average service frequency is 4 minutes or less. Saturday daytime services have an average frequency of 4–5 minutes with Sunday daytime service frequency averaging 6–7 minutes. During overnight periods, streetcars operate every 30 minutes.

The route provides primary service along King Street in Toronto's downtown core. 504 cars used to provide additional service to the 508 route along Roncesvalles Avenue and Broadview Avenue until June 2015 when the 508 streetcar line was decommissioned. Both lines interchange mid-route with the Yonge-University-Spadina line at St. Andrew and King stations. The 504 King interchanges with the Bloor-Danforth line at its termini, Dundas West and Broadview stations, which the route shares with 505 Dundas streetcars.

The line is operated primarily with Toronto's single-length CLRV streetcars, which is sometimes shared with the double-module ALRV streetcars (for instance: during rush hour periods). In 2006 the TTC briefly considered adding couplers to its streetcars in order to run the King route with trains of two or three units, as was common on busy routes until the opening of the Bloor-Danforth subway; the hope was that this would keep them from bunching and becoming stuck in traffic. This plan was rejected,[3] and the TTC is replacing the CLRVs and ALRVs with brand-new fully accessible low-floor Flexity Outlook vehicles, the first of which entered service on the 510 Spadina streetcar route in September 2014 and are scheduled to be deployed on the 504 King route in 2017. Since November 2014, streetcar shortage has forced the TTC to supplement some streetcar service with buses during peak periods.[4]

Proposed right-of-way

On March 22, 2007, the TTC proposed a pilot project for right-of-way dedicated lanes along the 504 King Streetcar in the summer of 2007. The proposal suggested there would only be a single lane available to cabs, cars and deliveries in that designated area in each direction. The street would have been closed entirely to through traffic and streetcars would run at ground level, not in a raised median. The TTC was trying to implement a trial transit mall on King from Yonge to University, with hopes of eventually closing King to cars from Dufferin to Parliament. It was also hoped that traffic on King would be partially alleviated by the proposed Waterfront West LRT and the planned network of streetcar routes for the Port Lands. The pilot project was not implemented. It was revived in 2016 when the city of Toronto's "King Street Visioning Study" proposed a transit and pedestrian corridor on King Street through downtown.[5]

Sites along the line (from east to west)

Overlapping routes

The 503 Kingston Road route overlaps 504 King from the intersection of Queen Street East and Broadview Avenue to King Street West and York Street. From Church Street to York Street, the eastbbound 503 runs along King Street but the westbound 503 runs 100 metres further south along Wellington Street. The 503 route runs only during rush hours.[6]

The 514 Cherry route, when it starts operation on June 19, 2016, will overlap the 504 King route from Sumach Street to Dufferin Avenue. The route will increase capacity to serve the growing ridership along the 504 King corridor through the downtown area, and to address accessibility concerns by introducing low-floor streetcars.[7]

Roncesvalles Avenue redesign

Bumpout on Roncesvalles Avenue serving as both a streetcar loading platform as well as a bicycle lane.

On December 19, 2010, 504 streetcar service returned to Roncesvalles Avenue after a service suspension in order to rebuild the street to a new design and to replace the tracks. As part of the redesign, a widened sidewalk "bumpout" was added to each stop to allow riders to board the streetcar directly from the curb. To accommodate a bike lane at a TTC stop, the bike lane gently rises from the main road to run on top of the bumpout. When the streetcar is boarding, cyclists are required to stop and allow riders on and off.[8][9]

Blue Night service

From 1987 to 1992, the 304 King provided overnight service on that route. After the route was eliminated in February 1992, the Broadview and Roncesvalles segments were replaced by portions of other night bus routes.

On September 6, 2015, overnight service was restored on this route as part of the expanded Blue Night Network services as part of a $95 million investment from Toronto City Council. Streetcars operate every 30 minutes during overnight periods.[10]

References

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  2. Ridership cost stats bus streetcar. Toronto Transit Commission
  3. Kevin McGran. All aboard for the King St. choo-choo. Toronto Star. April 15, 2006.
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External links