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Managing Trees, Vegetation and Habitats

Our approach

The Greater Golden Horseshoe is rapidly growing, and Metrolinx is committed to building a sustainable transit system. As part of the largest transit expansion in Canadian history, trees and shrubs need to be removed to make room for safe construction and operation of new transit lines. To offset this, Metrolinx follows a science-based approach to ecological restoration.

Overall, our practice is to plant more trees than we remove as we build new transit.

Metrolinx has developed a Vegetation Guideline that specifies how many trees need to be planted when any tree is removed.

Our goal is always to keep the number of trees we remove to a minimum and we strive to replace them in areas where they are being removed as early as we can.

Learn more about the Metrolinx Vegetation Guideline

Since 2020, Metrolinx has:

Planted over 97,000 trees and shrubs

- 36,000 trees

- 61,000 shrubs

Installed 168 bat habitats

Across the region to support local wildlife

Sourced all plants locally

From nurseries including Kayanase Greenhouse — an Indigenous-owned business associated with Six Nations of the Grand River

Distributed over 3,000 native plants

Shared with community members through tree and shrub giveaway programs

Planting more trees

Metrolinx commits to ensuring more trees are planted than removed across our network. For every tree removed, we plant as many as 50, depending on the size, location and health of the tree.

The Metrolinx Vegetation Guideline outlines our approach to restoring ecosystems impacted by the work we’re doing.

Protecting ecosystems through sustainable practices

Metrolinx incorporates our existing practice of prioritizing avoidance of impacts to sensitive environments in the 2025 Vegetation Guideline update. When tree removal is necessary, we minimize disruptions, mitigate effects and replace losses only as a last resort. This Guideline update means going forward impacts to wildlife habitats – like meadows, wetlands and forests – are replaced at a 1:1 ratio to maintain ecological services and wildlife habitat. Beyond tree planting, Metrolinx also focuses on rebuilding habitats for at-risk species like bats, birds and fish.

Additionally, we repurpose removed vegetation as mulch or use for community projects, habitat restoration or art — reducing waste while supporting local ecosystems.

Learn how Metrolinx helps Ontario's endangered bats

Partnering to improve ecosystems 

Our approach involves collaborating with Indigenous communities, municipalities, conservation authorities and environmental organizations across the region to enhance local ecosystems. We ensure that tree and vegetation replacement efforts align with local environmental goals and contribute to long-term sustainability. By collaborating with these groups, we go above and beyond municipal regulations to protect and restore green spaces.

Incorporating Indigenous community input

Metrolinx has updated its Vegetation Guideline based on engagement with Indigenous communities, supporting the inclusion of Indigenous worldviews and knowledge to guide our planning and restoration efforts.

Guided by recommendations from Indigenous communities, our environmental restoration efforts now include: 

  • increasing tree replacement ratios; 
  • expanding efforts to replace butternut trees; 
  • extending the duration of restoration monitoring;
  • taking a more holistic approach to restoration planning; 
  • minimizing environmental impacts, where possible; and,
  • considering climate change and using emerging and advanced restoration methods to support the long-term health of ecosystems. 

Frequently asked questions

Get in touch

If you have questions about how Metrolinx compensates for trees and vegetation removed to accommodate transit construction, please contact the Community Engagement team in your area: