Louis-Hippolyte-La Fontaine tunnel | Mitigation measures not popular so far

The mitigation measures surrounding the Louis-Hippolyte-La Fontaine tunnel are currently low traffic. So far, barely a thousand people have taken the enhanced bus lines using reserved lanes, while park-and-ride facilities remain unpopular.

Posted at 1:21 p.m.

Henri Ouellette-Vezina

Henri Ouellette-Vezina
The Press

This is shown by the first “assessment of the use of mitigation measures” for the tunnel, released on Tuesday by the Ministry of Transport (MTQ). Such a report will also be produced on a daily basis until November 18, after which it will be “made available according to the evolution of the situation”.

In total, only 400 people used lines 61 and 461 of the Réseau de transport de Longueuil (RTL) and lines 520, 521 and 532 of exo, during the evening rush hour on Monday. Tuesday morning, this figure was up, 685 commuters having used these five lines, a figure which remains however well below the “3000 users” that Quebec says it can move in rush hour by public transport.

Moreover, Tuesday morning, only 1160 of the 2780 incentive parking spaces were occupied. The 325-space incentive parking lot at the Radisson metro station was full, but there were only 50 cars for 311 spaces in De Touraine. This is slightly more than Monday, when there were 1,030 cars parked in the incentive parking lots.

At the beginning of October, the authorities had suggested that the majority of motorists using the Louis-Hippolyte-La Fontaine tunnel, namely around 60% of them, will have to change their habits so that the imposing construction site does not don’t turn into a nightmare. This corresponds to approximately 72,000 of the 120,000 vehicles that use the tunnel daily.

Rising in the subway

The metro seems to benefit from the partial closure of the La Fontaine tunnel. Monday evening, Quebec recorded a 7% increase in traffic on the yellow line, towards Longueuil, and 13% at the Radisson station on the green line, where free passes are distributed to commuters.

According to the MTQ, there was “good fluidity at the Radisson terminus” and “good bus traffic around Sherbrooke Street East”. Overall, the service was “on time” and there was “no significant overload”, we also note.

No data was yet available on this plan for Tuesday morning, but the ministry says it is already recording a “marked increase” on the yellow line and “continuous” on the green line. The river shuttle between Boucherville and the Promenade-Bellerive park, meanwhile, totaled 220 individual trips on Monday, and 156 more on Tuesday.

On the second day of the megaconstruction site, traffic was fairly fluid again on Tuesday near the Louis-Hippolyte-La Fontaine tunnel. However, it was much less so on several key axes of the metropolitan area, such as Highway 15, Highway 40 or the Décarie axis.

The spokesman for the Ministry of Transport (MTQ), Louis-André Bertrand, specified that the day of Tuesday will once again be “not necessarily representative”, due to the pedagogical days in several schools in Greater Montreal, which probably facilitate partly traffic. There is also a break in some private schools this week. “Wednesday, the afternoon peak, is our biggest peak of the week, followed closely by Thursday afternoon. I think we will have a more reliable portrait in the coming weeks, but we expect that tomorrow, with the pedagogical days and Halloween behind us, people will perhaps take the road more, “said he mentioned.


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