Toronto streetcar system rolling stock


In 1921, the Toronto Transportation Commission was created to integrate and operate the Toronto streetcar system. It inherited the infrastructure of two separate streetcar operators: the Toronto Railway Company and Toronto Civic Railways. The TTC immediately embarked on a program to connect the TRC and TCR lines into one network. The TTC had to rebuild most of the track to provide a wider devilstrip so that the wider Peter Witt streetcars it was ordering could pass without sideswiping. Between 1938 and 1945, it placed five orders for air-electric PCC streetcars to replace the old, wooden streetcars of the TRC, and to address rising ridership. Between 1947 and 1951, the TTC placed three orders for all-electric PCC cars, with one order equipped with couplers for multiple-unit operation. Between 1950 and 1957, the TTC purchased PCCs from four American cities. By 1957, the TTC had more PCCs than any other city in North America. After the opening of the Bloor–Danforth subway in 1966, the TTC considered terminating all streetcar service in Toronto. However, in 1972, a citizens group led by Jane Jacobs and Steve Munro called Streetcars for Toronto persuaded the City to retain streetcar operation. This led to the development of the Canadian Light Rail Vehicle and its longer, articulated cousin, the Articulated Light Rail Vehicle, to replace the aging PCC fleet. The Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005 mandated that the next generation of streetcars be wheelchair-accessible. Thus, to replace the CLRVs and ALRVs, Bombardier adapted its low-floor Flexity Outlook model for the TTC to navigate the Toronto streetcar system's tight curves and single-point switches, characteristics set in the 1920s to accommodate Peter Witt streetcars.

Inherited streetcars

When the Toronto Transportation Commission was created in 1921, it inherited the facilities of its two predecessor companies: the Toronto Railway Company and the Toronto Civic Railways.

Ex-TRC streetcars

The Toronto Transportation Commission inherited 830 streetcars from the Toronto Railway Company. However, the TTC found that only 351 of them were worth retaining; thus, the TTC disposed of the remaining 479 by 1924.
The 351 streetcars the TTC chose to retain were single-ended streetcars built between 1906 and 1917 in the TRC's own shops. They were all even-numbered and retained their original TRC car numbers. The TTC modified these streetcars and reclassified them into four classes by sets of features.
The A- and A1-class cars were operated from the mid-1920s as six-motor trains with an A1-class car leading a coupled A-class car. These trains required a crew of three, two for the lead car and another for the trailing car. Six-motor trains lasted until 1933 when the A-class cars were retired due to a decline of ridership during the Great Depression. After the retirement of the A-class cars, the A1-class cars would pull a Class N or Q trailer until 1934.
The Class C cars had a Tomlinson coupler to pull a Class N or Q trailer, which in later years would be semi-permanently attached. The Class C cars were retired in 1949. The trailers were then reassigned. Class C-1 was a variation of Class C omitting the coupler. These cars required a 2-man crew.
The Class BB class was the largest group of ex-TRC cars. Twenty BB-class cars were transferred to other cities during World War II: 5 to Fort William, 10 to Ottawa and 5 to Quebec City. The Class BB cars were the last of the ex-TRC cars to be retired, the last forty being retired in 1951. Class BB car 1326 is preserved at the Halton County Radial Railway museum. These cars required a crew of one.
Between 1923 and 1933, the TTC modified all of its ex-TRC cars, at least once, often twice and in one case three times, each time converting the car from one class to another. A common second conversion was from C or C1 to BB class. All C1 cars and many C-class cars were converted to BB-class by 1933. The following tables reflect the classes of retained ex-TRC streetcars after the final modification. The table is in TRC class and year built sequence, and roughly in car number sequence.

Ex-TCR streetcars

The TTC inherited the TCR fleet in 1921, and renumbered the cars in May 1923. Many of the TRC stayed in passenger service in Toronto until 1948. All TCR cars were double-ended.
The TTC initially used the four Class I double-truck streetcars for temporary service on lines being converted from single to double-track. All were scrapped in 1936, with the exception of car 2120, which the TTC converted into a snow scraper and used on the North Yonge Railways until 1948.
The TTC used the double-truck Class H cars mainly on the Weston route and also on Spadina route until 1948. TCR car 109 was destroyed by fire in 1921.
The Class J double-truck streetcars, ran mainly on the Spadina route and also on the Weston route until 1948.
The TTC used the Class F, single-truck streetcars for rush-hour service until 1926 after which they were converted into snow scrapers. The only three survivors of the entire TCR fleet are from this class, and all three are preserved at the Halton County Radial Railway museum in Milton, Ontario. Preserved TCR car 55 was restored to its original TCR condition. The TTC had converted the other two surviving Class F cars into rail grinders and both are preserved as such at the museum. TCR 52 became subway rail grinder RT-7, and TCR 57 became streetcar system rail grinder W-28.
Class G consisted of single-truck, Birney cars which were used on various TTC routes, such as Davenport and Coxwell, until 1940. The cars were sold in 1927, 1940 and 1941 to run in Cornwall and Halifax until 1949, after which they were scrapped.
In May 1923, the TTC renumbered all the TCR streetcars with even numbers only. The year retired column refers to retirement from passenger service in Toronto; it excludes cars sold to other operators or retirements from work car service after conversion.
TTC
Class
BuilderDescriptionTTC
numbers
TCR
numbers
Fleet sizeYear acquiredYear retired
IMcGuire-CummingsDE-DT2120–2126120–123419121933
HNilesDE-DT2128–2144,
2148–2166
100–1191919131933
1948
JPrestonDE-DT2168–2192200–2121319181949
FPrestonDE-ST2200–221450–5781915–19171926
GBrillBirney
DE-ST
2216–226460–842519201927
1940–1941

Peter Witt streetcars

The Peter Witt streetcars were the first new vehicles ordered by the Toronto Transportation Commission; however, they required a major change in the trackwork before they could run. The new cars were wider than the older TRC cars, and the devilstrip between parallel tracks was too narrow at. The TTC had to relay track throughout the system to widen the devil strip to.
The Peter Witt streetcars, the first all-steel streetcars in Toronto, came in two versions: Large and small. The large Witts were long and had 60 seats; the small Witts, long and 55 seats. The large Witts had a slow speed but the strength to pull a trailer. The small Witts were faster in operation, could move along better in traffic but could not pull a trailer. Trailer-trains were used on heavily traveled routes such as Yonge, Bloor, College and Dundas.
A streetcar gets a "Peter Witt" designation if it was built using the Peter Witt fare payment design. With Peter Witt streetcars, passengers enter by the front doors and pay their fare as they walk past the conductor seated just before centre doors. Passengers must pay their fare when they pass the conductor either to exit the car by the centre doors or to access the rear of the car. This scheme was dubbed "pay-as-you-pass". Passengers could ride in the unpaid front portion of the car or in the paid rear portion. During the Great Depression, many Witt cars were converted to one-man operation eliminating the conductor's position and relocating the fare box at the car's entrance.
The "Peter Witt" trailers were not of the Peter Witt design because of their door arrangement. The Class N trailers had two narrow centre doors flanking the conductor's position, and were slow to load and unload. Thus, the three-door Class Q trailers were introduced with a double door on one side of the conductor's position and a single, narrow door on the other side. One of the doors had a gate so that it could be used as either an entry or exit.
Originally, all but the class P small Witts had a fully enclosed operator cab. Around 1940, the cab walls were removed.
The first major retirement came in 1938 with the introduction of PCC streetcars. All 60 class N trailers and 30 of the class Q trailers were withdrawn with PCCs replacing Peter Witt trailer-trains on the Bloor and Dundas streetcar routes. These were the first of the new cars purchased by the TTC to be scrapped after only 15–17 years of service. The next major retirement came in 1954 with the opening of the Yonge subway. All the remaining trailers and all of the large Peter Witt cars were retired. The subway replaced the Yonge streetcar line, which heavily used Peter Witt trailer-trains. The final major retirement, this time of the remaining small Peter Witt cars, came in 1965 following the opening of the University subway.
Motor cars are even-numbered; trailers are odd-numbered:
The following is the list of preserved TTC Peter Witt cars:
ClassDescriptionCar numberLocation
Klarge Peter Witt2300Canadian Railway Museum, Saint-Constant, Quebec
Klarge Peter Witt2424Halton County Radial Railway, Milton, Ontario
P1small Peter Witt2766Toronto Transit Commission; used for special events
P1small Peter Witt2786Halton County Radial Railway
P2small Peter Witt2894Halton County Radial Railway
P2small Peter Witt2898Shore Line Trolley Museum, East Haven, Connecticut
L2large Peter Witt2984Halton County Radial Railway

PCC streetcars

The TTC was among the first transit agencies to buy the then-state-of-the-art PCC streetcars, which were designed by a committee of public transport operators in the 1930s but were modified to the TTC's specifications. The TTC bought these cars to replace the Peter Witt cars and older vehicles inherited from the Toronto Railway Company. The TTC's first purchase was in 1938, and by the end of the 1950s, they operated a larger fleet of PCCs than any other agency in the world with 744 cars in service.
The TTC purchased 745 PCC streetcars in all, 317 air-electric and 428 all-electric, 540 new and 205 used. 175 PCCs had couplers for multiple-unit operation, and the TTC used them to assemble two-car PCC trains.
In 1963, with the opening of the University subway and the closure of the Dupont streetcar route, the last of the Peter Witt streetcars were retired resulting in a 100% PCC streetcar fleet.
The first major retirement of PCCs occurred with the opening of the Bloor–Danforth subway in 1966. The heavily used Bloor streetcar line plus four intersecting streetcar routes were abandoned. The all-electric PCCs from the Bloor route were moved elsewhere displacing the older air-electric cars, many of which were sold to Egypt.
In the late 1980s, as CLRVs were replacing the ageing PCC fleet, the TTC started to create a new class of PCC cars by rebuilding A8-class cars. By 1992, it had rebuilt 19 PCCs for use on the new Harbourfront streetcar line. However, in 1995, the A15 class PCCs were retired because the CLRV fleet could handle the ridership, which had declined by that time. The TTC retained A15-class PCCs 4500 and 4549 for excursions and special events.
The following PCC streetcars made up the TTC fleet:
ClassBuilderDescriptionFleet numbersFleet sizeYear builtYear retiredNotes
A1CC&FAir-electric4000–4139140193819664000 at Halton County Radial Railway
A2CC&FAir-electric4150–41995019401966
A3CC&FAir-electric4200–4259601941–19421971
A4CC&FAir-electric4260–4274151943–19441970
A5CC&FAir-electric4275–4299251944–19451970
A6CC&FAll-electric4300–4399100194719924386 at Halton County Radial Railway
A7CC&FAll-electric, MU4400–4499100194919924426 at Halton County Radial Railway
A8CC&FAll-electric4500–4549501950–1951199219 cars rebuilt to become class A15;
A9St. LouisAll-electric4550–45742519471982Ex–Cincinnati Street Railway
Purchased 1950
A10St. LouisAir-electric4575–4601271939–19401975Ex–Cincinnati Street Railway
Purchased 1950
A11PullmanAll-electric, MU4625–46745019461982Ex–Cleveland Transit System
A12St. LouisAll-electric, MU4675–46992519461982Ex–Louisville Railway Company
Ex–Cleveland Transit System
Purchased 1952; 4684 at Halton County Radial Railway
A13PullmanAll-electric4700–4747481946–19471983Ex–Birmingham Electric Company
Purchased 1952
A14St. LouisAll-electric4750–4779301946–19471977Ex–Kansas City Public Service Company
Purchased 1957
A15TTCAll-electric4600–4618191986–19911995Rebuilt from A8 class cars
Two remain in TTC possession for historical use, charters or special events
4600, 4611 and 4618 are at Halton County Radial Railway
4612 is at Edmonton Radial Railway Society

CLRVs and ALRVs

In the 1970s, the Urban Transportation Development Corporation, an Ontario Crown corporation developed the Canadian Light Rail Vehicle which would replace the PCC in Toronto. The UTDC hoped to sell CLRVs, or variations of it, to other streetcar and light rail systems in North America. Subsequently, in the 1980s, the UTDC developed the Articulated Light Rail Vehicle, the longer, articulated version of the CLRV.
The first six CLRVs were built by Schweizerische Industrie Gesellschaft, and were tested in Switzerland serving as prototypes. The remaining 190 CLRVs were built by Hawker Siddeley Canada Limited in Thunder Bay. The CLRVs went into revenue service on route 507 Long Branch on September 30, 1979. The vehicles were originally equipped with couplers, but these were removed between 1984 and 1988, and shields were placed over the empty coupler pockets to protect pedestrians.
In August 1982, the UTDC delivered an ALRV prototype, number 4900, which the TTC operated in revenue service for several months. Prototype 4900 had features that were not implemented on either CLRVs or production ALRVs such as hand controls instead of foot controls, and electronic destination signs instead of linen rollsigns. The prototype had couplers while subsequent production units did not. After sitting in storage at the St. Clair Carhouse since early 1983, prototype 4900 was returned to the UTDC's Kingston facility in 1987 where a year later it was damaged in a test track collision. It was scrapped in 1997.
ALRV 4200, the first of the 52 production ALRVs, arrived in Toronto on June 11, 1987; ALRV 4204 began revenue service on route 507 Long Branch on January 19, 1988. Unlike the CLRVs, none of the production ALRVs was equipped with couplers, and shields covered their coupler pockets.
In 2006, CLRV 4041 was modified for air conditioning with a visibly distinctive air conditioning unit installed on its roof. It was a prototype for a proposed refurbishment project that was shelved.
The passage of Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act in 2005 affected the high-floor CLRV/ALRV fleet because the act mandated all public transport to be fully accessible by 2025. In 2006, TTC staff explored ways to make the old fleet wheelchair-accessible, including constructing installing wheelchair lifts and attaching wheelchair-accessible trailers, but concluded that these options were impractical, and recommended replacing the old fleet with new low-floor streetcars.
As the CLRV/ALRV fleet aged, its reliability declined. In later years, the propulsion control system became unreliable and difficult to maintain as obsolete electronic and electrical parts became difficult to source. By 2014, the old fleet became vulnerable to extreme cold snaps resulting on January 3 in a breakdown of 50 out of the 195 streetcars required for rush hour service; water vapour had frozen in the pneumatic air lines preventing brakes and doors from functioning.
During an extreme cold snap between January 20 and 21, 2019, the TTC withdrew all CLRV/ALRV streetcars from service due to the high risk of breakdowns in the cold weather. Streetcar service during this period was provided by the Flexity Outlook streetcars and supplemented by buses.
Starting in 2015, the TTC rebuilt 30 CLRVs and 20 ALRVs to extend their service life because of delays in delivery of the new Flexity streetcars. The TTC had expected to use some CLRVs and ALRVs to supplement the Flexity streetcars until 2024 to address increased ridership. However, by November 2018, the ALRV fleet had so deteriorated that only two or three of the 20 refurbished ALRVs were available for service on any one day. The TTC decommissioned all ALRVs by September 3, 2019, and followed suit with the CLRVs on December 29, 2019.
ClassBuilderDescriptionFleet numbersFleet sizeYear acquiredYear retiredNotes
L1SIGCLRV4000–4005619772015–2019Prototypes for the CLRV, built in Switzerland
4001 remains in TTC possession for special occasions
L2HawkerCLRV4010–41991901977–19812009–2019Air conditioning added to car #4041 in 2006
HawkerALRV4900119821997ALRV prototype. Tested in Toronto but never owned by TTC.
L3HawkerALRV4200–4251521987–19882015–2019Longer, articulated version of the CLRV
One remains in TTC possession for historical use, charters or special events

Flexity Outlook

By 2007, as the CLRV/ALRV fleet was nearing the end of its service life and becoming less reliable, the TTC began looking for a manufacturer to build new streetcars. In 2009, the TTC announced that it had chosen a customized version of the Bombardier Flexity Outlook as the model to replace the old fleet. The TTC had required Bombardier to modify its Flexity Outlook design to handle the legacy system's trackwork, the standards for which mainly date back to the Peter Witt era of the 1920s. Specifically, Toronto's new streetcar had to navigate single-point switches, a minimum curve radius of, and a maximum 8% grade. Light rail vehicles typically require double-point switches, a radius and a maximum 5% grade. The minimum radius requirement was the most challenging for Bombardier. The TTC estimated that it would have taken ten years to widen the curve radius throughout the system.
Unlike the CLRV/ALRV, the new vehicles feature a low-floor design, a loading ramp for wheel-chair access, air-conditioning, a doubling of the passenger capacity, an interior bicycle area, a separated enclosed driver/operator cab walled off from the passenger area, on-board automatic fare vending machines, and electronic destination signs at the front, side and rear of the vehicle. They were also the first streetcars which had two audible warning signals, featuring both an electronic gong and a horn, as opposed to the CLRVs and ALRVs, which were originally delivered with physical gongs only but had been retrofitted with horns in the late 1990s. The first two Flexity streetcars entered revenue service on August 31, 2014, on the 510 Spadina route.
Each Flexity streetcar is equipped with both a trolley pole and a pantograph for electrical pickup. Flexity streetcars operate with pantographs on routes where the electrical overhead has been converted for pantograph use. The introduction of Flexity streetcars is leading to the gradual phase-out of the trolley pole on the Toronto streetcar system.
During the manufacture of the Flexity streetcars, Bombardier experienced manufacturing and quality control problems mainly with welding at one of its plants. This resulted in major delivery delays, in that by the end of 2017, only 59 streetcars were delivered when about 150 were expected. In addition, in 2018, Bombardier requested the gradual recall of 67 vehicles to correct welding problems. With the delivery problems, and the retirement of many CLRV/ALRV streetcars too worn out to repair, a streetcar shortage occurred resulting in temporary bus replacements along some streetcar routes. Bombardier expects to return all recalled Flexity streetcars by 2023., Bombardier is still expected to deliver the remainder of the 204 vehicle order by the end of 2019.
On January 24, 2020, the TTC took delivery of the last of 204 Flexity Outlook streetcars ordered from Bombardier. Streetcar 4603 was delivered by rail to the Hillcrest Complex from Bombardier's Thunder Bay plant. The last streetcar was a little over three weeks late, as Bombardier had promised to deliver the last car by the end of 2019.
BuilderDescriptionFleet sizeYear acquiredNotes
BombardierFlexity Outlook2042012–20204400–4402 were prototypes for testing requiring modification for TTC acceptance.

Work cars

Excluding rubber-tire vehicles with extendable rail wheels, the Toronto streetcar system no longer has any rail-based work vehicles. The last such vehicles, rail grinding cars W-30 and W-31, were retired in 2002, their last assignment being in 1999. Except for rail grinders, all other types of work vehicles were retired before 1980.
Work cars had specialized duties. Besides rail grinding, there were work vehicles for snow clearing, construction and deliveries for carhouses. All these cars were self-propelled, taking power from the streetcar overhead wire. Some work cars—such as dump cars, track plows and snow sweepers—were purchased from outside rail equipment manufacturers. In some cases, the TTC inherited a car built in the shops of its predecessor, the Toronto Railway Company—for example, crane C-1 and the fare box car. In many cases, cars such as rail grinders and snow scrapers were former passenger streetcars that the TTC converted to work cars. Old cars used for such conversions were usually inherited from the Toronto Railway Company and the Toronto Civic Railways. However, in one case, the TTC used a pair of PCCs to create rail grinding cars W-30 and W-31.
Rail-based, snow clearing cars were retired in the 1970s when City of Toronto Public Works department trucks took over that function. To clear light snow, the TTC purchased 12 snow sweepers in 1940 from the Third Avenue Railway System and numbered them S-30 to S-41. These cars were built by Russell Car Company in 1920–1921 and were double-truck, double-end vehicles. The TTC scrapped two of the sweepers in 1966; the remainder remained active until 1971 and were retired in 1972. After retirement, one sweeper was sold to a transit operator in New Jersey. For heavier snowfall, the TTC acquired two snow plows, TP-10 and TP-11, from National Steel Car. Both cars are preserved at museums.
The following table lists work cars preserved at museums, a few of which are pictured above:
Car numberCar typeBuilderYear builtYear retiredNotes
C-1craneTRC19111968Preserved at Halton County Radial Railway, Milton, Ontario
C-2craneTTC19211971Preserved at Ohio Railway Museum, Worthington, Ohio
S-36snow sweeperRussell19201973Acquired by TTC in 1948; ex–Third Avenue Railway System, ex–Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway
Preserved at Shore Line Trolley Museum, East Haven, Connecticut
S-37snow sweeperRussell19201973Acquired by TTC in 1948; ex–Third Avenue Railway System, ex–Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway
Preserved at Halton County Railway Museum
TP-10snow plowNational1945late 1970sPreserved at Canadian Railway Museum, Saint-Constant, Quebec
TP-11snow plowNational1945late 1970sPreserved at Halton County Railway Museum
W-3flat motorTTC19221966Originally built as snow scraper W-9 in 1922, converted to plow W-3 in 1942, converted to flat motor in 1966
Preserved at Shore Line Trolley Museum, East Haven, Connecticut
W-4flat motorTRC19041972Preserved at Halton County Radial Railway
W-28rail grinderTTC19541976Converted from TTC 2214, ex-TCR 57
Preserved at Halton County Radial Railway
W-30 & W-31rail grinderTTC19761999Former A11-class PCC streetcars
Preserved at Halton County Radial Railway