‘Gardiner Expressway Reduced to 2 Lanes Each Way Until 2027 Due to Heavy Traffic’
A 700-metre stretch of the Gardiner Expressway, one of the busiest roads in downtown Toronto, has been reduced to two lanes in each direction for the next three years leaving many drivers frustrated.
The closures are already frustrating motorists with many taking to social media to decry the additional congestion on the busy expressway.
Another social media took to X to ask Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow to stop construction on the Gardiner.
“Cause it’s not just the Gardiner. There are lane closures on Lake Shore + 4 stalled streetcars on Parliament, that cars couldn’t get by ‘cause of on street parking. A real joy.”
“Public transportation or alternative routes (Lakeshore, Queensway) are also affected,” she said. “I wish the city had a better plan that comprehensively addresses the need to fix the infrastructure and mitigates the impact.”
The city’s Gardiner Expressway Strategic Rehabilitation Plan began March 25 with pre-construction work requiring intermittent lane closures. This work ran through April 14, with the exception of the Easter weekend.
Construction is now beginning in earnest with the highway reduced to two lanes in each direction between Dufferin Street and Strachan Avenue, the city said. The east on-ramp from Lake Shore Boulevard east of Jameson Avenue will also be closed and there will be other intermittent additional lane closures as required.
“This construction is urgently needed to keep traffic flowing and keep our communities connected,” Ms. Chow said in the news release. “The city is committed to completing this section of work to ensure a state of good repair for generations to come as we focus on getting Toronto back on track.”
The city said it will attempt to limit the impact of the construction on road users and neighbouring residents by using a “detailed congestion management plan that includes diversions, traffic agents and signal timing adjustments.”
Construction will primarily take place Monday to Saturday, from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., the city said.
The work will include the replacement of 700 metres of the elevated bridge surface on the expressway, the rehabilitation of the structures underneath that support the elevated part of the road, and adding a new traffic management system and streetlights.
Other work, including girder removal and replacement, shifting of traffic barriers between work stages, and the delivery of materials, may be required at night.