Art, to go
21 Wednesday Mar 2012
Posted in architecture, Canada, design, fun, montreal, photography, photowalking, trains, transit, Travel, urban
21 Wednesday Mar 2012
Posted in architecture, Canada, design, fun, montreal, photography, photowalking, trains, transit, Travel, urban
10 Saturday Mar 2012
Posted in Calgary, Canada, history, photography, trains, Trains & Transit
Tags
alberta, calgary, canada, Heritage Park, history, locomotive, photography, photos, pictures, steam engine, train, trains
09 Saturday May 2009
Posted in art, photography, trains, transit
Another oldie, this time from the start of my railfanning days.
This image was taken on a sleepless night, looking forward on the upper level of the Park Car (domed observation car) aboard the Ocean, Via Rail’s Montreal-Halifax overnight train. We were somewhere west of Rimouski, Que., at the time. What you see here is a long exposure, with passing lights reflecting off the fluted, stainless-steel bodies of the train cars.
This photo was once featured in the Gallery section of Trains magazine.
28 Wednesday Jan 2009
For whatever reason, my Calgary Sun column didn’t make it onto our website, so here it is for your reading pleasure.
Ricky Leong
Sun Media
It’s budget day in Canada and it’s expected to be one of the gloomiest budget speeches we’ve heard in a little while.
Its contents have been leaked to the public over the last few days. It was revealed yesterday some $7 billion would be poured into infrastructure projects, much of which is slated for already-approved provincial and municipal projects and so-called green infrastructure.
As we wait for the specifics of this massive — perhaps reckless? — spending to be sorted out, perhaps it’s time to re-examine that holy grail of Alberta infrastructure projects: The Calgary-Edmonton high-speed train.
For the last few decades, studies have been commissioned to evaluate the viability of linking Calgary, Red Deer and Edmonton by train.
They all tout the benefits of a high-speed train — downtown-to-downtown service, lots of room for passengers, productive use of time and fast and frequent service.
They note this corridor is populous and densely populated. They state the service would be profitable, given a properly priced, convenient product.
As attractive as such an ambitious project might be, and as much as I love the concept, this is perhaps too much, too soon.
The train used to stop here. Via Rail service from Calgary to Edmonton was discontinued in the mid-1980s and service to Vancouver, Winnipeg and Toronto ended in 1990.
For some 20 years, our medium- and long-distance ground transportation options have been limited to standard or luxury bus services, or just simply driving our own vehicle.
I never rode those Calgary-Edmonton trains. From reading passenger accounts from that time, the service was doomed by equipment prone to breakdowns, relatively slow running (at best, it was no faster than driving) and endless level-crossing accidents.
Therein lies the problem. A whole generation of Calgarians has grown up without having seen a regularly scheduled intercity passenger train pass through here.
Those who do remember the train probably have a poor opinion of it. The customer base must be rebuilt from scratch.
Building a new high-speed rail service would require a lot of funding. As much as governments appear to want to spend these days, some measure of private financing would be required for a project of this nature — just the kind of financing that’s so difficult to obtain as a result of the credit crunch.
More useful, to start, would be basic train service, using common conventional equipment capable of rolling at 160 km/h. (Most high-speed proposals call for 300 km/h service, with electrified equipment.)
The popularity of moderately fast trains can’t be underestimated.
Via’s Quebec-Windsor corridor trains are well used, even though they go no faster than 160 km/h.
In the U.S., Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor trains have enjoyed ridership gains since the introduction of
200-km/h service between Boston and Washington, D.C., at the beginning of this decade.
Turning our focus back to Alberta, we could build along existing rail rights-of-way while eliminating all railway crossings and re-aligning curves where necessary. This would keep train speeds high and costs low. It would also allow for smaller towns along the route to have train service, forming a backbone upon which we can graft true high-speed rail later.
Economic stimulus or not, Calgary and Edmonton need to be linked by rail again.
But just as a child is taught to walk before he’s taught to run, we should consider modest steps to rebuild intercity passenger rail service in southern Alberta before we take the plunge for true high-speed rail.
ricky.leong@sunmedia.ca
03 Monday Dec 2007
Posted in montreal, photowalking, trains, transit, urban
On my recent trip to Montreal, I took a bit of time to explore through the newest parts of the metro system, extending under the Rivière des Prairies to Laval. As an avid railfan with not much to see in the way of passenger rail in Calgary, this was pretty exciting.
This picture was the last I took before I was interrupted:

A janitor pushing his wheeled trash bin along the third platform at Henri-Bourassa station called out to me. He kindly told me photography was prohibited and that I’d better put away my camera before security showed up to give me a ticket — or worse.
I was very touched by his genuine concern — but unfortunately he was terribly misinformed.
Montreal Transit Corporation (MTC) regulations state a permit is required for commercial photography on its property. There are also bylaws governing passenger behaviour: If I decided to plant a tripod at the top of an escalator in the middle of rush hour, the MTC would be well within its rights to give me a ticket for obstructing traffic. But there are no specific rules regarding photography in the metro.
Luckily, I had a friend with me at the time. A few years ago, he had an unfortunate run-in with MTC transit cops and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police while trying to take photos at Sauvé station. Because of the darkness of his skin, it was presumed he was a security/terrorist threat. They held him for hours as they checked his background — they found nothing because there was nothing to find. He was eventually let go. He made a lot of noise about it in the media and eventually got an apology.
My friend, the janitor and I had a long conversation about just how wrong the janitor was. (My cousin was there, too, but he doesn’t speak French and stayed the heck out of it.)
“If we let anybody just take pictures anywhere, it could be dangerous,” the janitor argued at one point. “They could plant a bomb somewhere and hurt a lot of people.”
That assertion caught me off guard.
“What do bombs have to do with taking pictures?” I asked. “Someone could very well plant a bomb without ever having taken a photo.”
My friend chimed in: “What would you do with all the tourists at the busy stations downtown snapping pictures everywhere?”
This went on for a long while. We rehashed the same arguments over and over again. At some point I decided to shut up and let my friend do the talking. The janitor eventually went on his way and we continued our exploration of the Montreal metro. We were left wondering how many other misinformed transit workers are going around harassing photographers who discreetly take photos and do their best to stay out of the way.
30 Saturday Jun 2007

Just added a few photos to my train and transit photography website.
http://mediajct.homeip.net/railpix/
Please come on over for a visit if you have a moment or two.