Gardiner traffic set to get worse
Toronto Star|February 14, 2024
Three years of lane reductions will be 'hugely frustrating'
CALVI LEON
Gardiner traffic set to get worse

The Gardiner Expressway will be reduced to two lanes from Dufferin Street to Strachan Avenue for the next three years to allow for construction.

Brace yourself, Toronto. Traffic in this city, already among the worst in the world, could soon get worse.

Beginning as early as late March, the Gardiner Expressway will be reduced to two lanes in each direction between Dufferin Street and Strachan Avenue to make way for construction.

“This will be hugely frustrating for people,” said Matti Siemiatycki, director of the Infrastructure Institute at the University of Toronto.

However, he said, the work is also “critically necessary” to prevent the highway’s infrastructure from falling into disrepair and to stave off emergency types of construction, which tends to be more disruptive.

The city said it awarded the contract to replace the elevated portion of that stretch of the expressway in October 2023. The work is expected to continue until mid-2027, though drivers will catch a break when the 2026 FIFA World Cup lands in Toronto.

The city said the lane restrictions will be removed between May and the end of July “to allow for full capacity” on the highway during the 2026 tournament, which could draw tens of thousands of fans and soccer aficionados from around the world.

Transit analyst and critic Steve Munro questioned how the city will reopen the full six lanes of traffic over those few weeks.

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