yonge north subway extension

Yonge North Subway Extension is moving forward and here's what the map will look like

The Yonge North Subway Extension looks like it will be moving forward in what will be a boon of public transit action for Richmond Hill and Markham.

A preliminary agreement between the Ontario government and York Region was signed yesterday for a six-stop subway extension from Finch Avenue to Highway 7.

The new track will span roughly 7.4 kilometres and serve Richmond Hill, Markham and Vaughan, which saw its own stop open in 2017.

yonge north subway extension

The extension proposes at least six new stops and two connection hubs to the Yonge Street side of Line 1.

The extension is estimated to cost around $5.6 billion, 40 per cent of which the province is hoping the federal government will provide.

The entire project including planning, design and construction would be the responsibility of the province and overseen by Metrolinx with a completion date of 2030.

It would be one of four major GTA infrastructure projects, the others are the Ontario Line, three-stop Scarborough Subway Extension and the Eglinton Crosstown West Extension to Pearson Airport.

When asked yesterday if the province would scale back any of the its transit projects due to the pandemic, Premier Doug Ford said "absolutely not."

"Infrastructure is critical. And there’s no better way to get people back to work any time. You go back to the Depression, it's infrastructure," he said.

Lead photo by

Hamish Grant


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

What's open and closed on Victoria Day 2024 in Toronto

The breathtaking Mast Trail in Toronto follows a 200-year-old logging route

Moore Park Ravine is an escape from the city in midtown Toronto

The history of what was once Toronto's grandest mansion

This is how Toronto celebrated Victoria Day over 100 years ago

You can take in breathtaking valley views along the Vista Rouge Trail in Toronto

Downsview Park in Toronto is a massive urban park around an artificial lake

Canada is seeing one of the worst standard-of-living declines in 40 years