
TheUnion Station Rail Corridor (USRC) is a corridor of railway tracks that exist through and adjacent toUnion Station in downtownToronto. It is 6.4 kilometres (4.0 miles) long, approximately stretching from Bathurst Street (mile 1.1) in the west to theDon River in the east, making it the largest rail passenger facility inCanada.[1][2]
Union Station is the busiest passenger transportation hub in Canada, serving 250,000 people daily. It is a central hub for theVia RailCorridor intercity service, the central hub forGO Transit commuter rail service for theGreater Toronto and Hamilton Area, and the terminus of theUnion Pearson Express which connects to Canada's second-busiest transportation hub,Toronto Pearson Airport. It also provides connections to theToronto subway, municipal andintercity bus services, and other active transportation modes. More than half of all Canadian intercity passengers and 91% of Toronto commuter train passengers travel through Union Station. To serve all this rail traffic, the USRC has up to 14 tracks across its width and fourinterlockings that add up to a total of 40 kilometres (25 miles) of laid track. It also has platforms, over 180 signals, 250 switch machines, and various other associated infrastructure.[3][4]
The Toronto Terminals Railway (TTR), a joint venture of theCanadian National Railway andCanadian Pacific Railwayformed in 1906, directs and controls all train movements within the USRC at the John Street, Cherry Street, and Scott Street interlocking towers. The towers are staffed by train movement directors 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. The train movement directors control trains by route assignment, radio communication, track switching, and signals.[1][5]
North Bathurst Yard, to the north of the USRC east of Bathurst Street and Don Yard to the east by the Don River are owned and operated by GO Transit for storing trains and maintenance equipment, as well as light servicing of trains.[2]
On July 13, 1906, the Toronto Terminals Railway (TTR) was incorporated to "construct, provide, maintain and operate at the City of Toronto aunion passenger station". The TTR was jointly owned by theGrand Trunk Railway and theCanadian Pacific Railway who each held 50% of the TTR shares. During station construction, the Grand Trunk Railway went bankrupt, was fullynationalized by theGovernment of Canada, and merged into theCanadian National Railway which would assume the Grand Trunk's 50% ownership of the TTR (and thus the third Union Station).[5]
Union Station was opened on August 6, 1927 by the Prince of Wales, although it was not completed yet.[6] Four days later, the track network was shifted from the formersecond Union Station. To get to trains, passengers would walk from the south doors to the tracks located several hundred feet to the south while the new USRC viaduct, concourse and train shed was under construction.[6] Demolition of the second Union Station began almost immediately and was completed in 1928. The third Union Station was not fully completed until 1930 when construction of the train shed had finished.[5]
As GO Transit service increased in the 1970s, the junction between theLakeshore West line and lines using the then-Georgetown corridor (which included theMilton and then-Bradford lines) was becoming a bottleneck, with some trains experiencing up to 30 minutes of delay. The junction was controlled by hand-thrown switches. A major upgrade to fix the issue was completed on November 22, 1983, when theCanadian Transport Commission approved the opening of a flyunder. The grade separation structure allowed Lakeshore West trains to travel to and from the USRC's northernmost tracks, and trains using the Georgetown corridor to cross over Lakeshore West trains to and from the USRC's southern tracks.[7][8]
The TTR owned and operated the USRC until it was purchased by GO Transit in 2000. GO Transit was merged with the Greater Toronto Transportation Authority in 2009, and became a division of the authority under the nameMetrolinx, which assumed ownership of all capital infrastructure assets such as the USRC.[5] In 2014, Metrolinx began a major upgrade and modernization of the 80-year-old signalling system, at a cost of $365.5 million (equivalent to $459 million in 2023). This was in anticipation of GO Transit ridership doubling in the coming decades.[9]
TTR is contracted, and continues to operate and maintain the USRC.[5]
As part of Metrolinx'sRegional Express Rail initiatives, rail infrastructure in the eastern portion of the USRC will be expanded or modified to allow more trains. This will include increasing the number of mainline tracks, expansion of theDon Yard, and increasing train speed limits.[10] In addition, there are plans to create a new GO station in the proximity of North Bathurst Yard, near Front and Bathurst streets.[2]