 
		        
Vaughan Metropolitan Centre transit  terminal breaks ground 
		    
Reminetwork.com
Jan. 25, 2017

An inter-regional transit terminal has broken ground at Vaughan Metropolitan  Centre, the largest urban mixed-use development in Canada.
The terminal,  designed by Diamond Schmitt Architects, will serve York Region Rapid Transit’s  bus network and have a pedestrian connection to the Viva Bus Rapid Transit line  and the new terminal station on the Toronto Transit Commission’s extended  Spadina subway line. Both the bus terminal and subway station are expected to  open at the end of 2017.
“The  conventional hierarchy of the bus terminal was inverted here, with pedestrians  playing the central role in defining circulation and the spaces around the  terminal,” said Mike Szabo, principal at Diamond Schmitt Architects, in a press  release.
The SmartCentres  Place Bus Terminal will be located within a pedestrian plaza and will feature a  43,000 square-foot horseshoe-shaped roof over two open platforms and a nearly  10,000 square-foot glazed pavilion. The pavilion will house the main waiting  area, staff and service areas, and an underground connection to the adjacent  TTC subway station.
“Bus traffic  is separated from pedestrian circulation by a permeable wooden canopy structure  and bus entry,” added Szabo. “The buses enter and exit from a single entry at  the north end of the site away from the primary pedestrian area, creating a  seamless transition between plaza and pedestrian entry to the bus terminal.”
The terminal  will feature nine bus bays with a central island decorated with  drought-tolerant landscaping and an ornamental screen to disguise the relief  shaft from the subway track below. Platforms will feature glass windscreens and  warming shelters to provide protection from the elements while maintaining a  sense of openness, according to Szabo.
Various levels  of government and SmartCentres, the developer of Vaughan Metropolitan Centre,  are funding the $32.1 million terminal project.