Design of two Ontario Line stations reaches halfway mark
Danish engineers COWI have announced that they have reached the halfway mark in the design of two new stations for Toronto’s Ontario Line subway project.
The company announced the news that the stations at King/Bathurst and Queen/Spadina and will move to the construction documentation phase shortly.
Key to the design process has been Scandinavian architecture firm, Arkitema, which itself is part of COWI Group. The company has particular expertise in metro station design and passenger experience, and has taken a holistic approach to create clean, sleek contemporary layouts with meticulous attention to detail, aesthetics and a welcoming atmosphere.
“This is an exciting project for our North American team,” said COWI North America president Thomas Dahlgren. “With the Ontario Line, the balance has been to translate the project requirements into the quality that we prioritize over in Denmark: simple, rational, and aesthetic solutions with inviting, open, and friendly spaces, creating simple, intuitive pathways. Our goal was to create modern layouts with a strong focus on enhancing the passenger experience.”
COWI was awarded the design and engineering contract for its first major subway project in Toronto, Canada in late 2021 by Ontario Transit Group, a joint venture between Ferrovial Construction and Vinci Construction.
The team is responsible for the detailed design of two new underground stations – King/Bathurst and Queen/Spadina, located in downtown Toronto. The stations will be situated within a 10-minute walking distance for around 50,000 residents and will create vital connections between popular transport routes.
The new Ontario Line is a 15.6-km rapid transit line – the largest single expansion in Toronto’s subway history – which will connect Exhibition Place to the Eglinton Crosstown LRT at Don Mills Road and Eglinton Avenue East, with 15 fully accessible stations and more than 40 new connections to GO train lines and existing subway, streetcar, and bus lines. It will run along the existing rail corridor in Riverside and Leslieville. Expected to accommodate around 388,000 passengers per day, the line will relieve crowding on popular transport routes throughout the city and bring transit to underserviced neighborhoods. Construction is now underway.
Central to COWI’s work on the project is safeguarding and future-proofing the cities heritage by seamlessly integrating the new stations into their urban surroundings while retaining the existing buildings historical attributes and character in the new station designs.