Showing posts with label MARTA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MARTA. Show all posts
Friday, May 18, 2018
A Tour of the New Sections of the Atlanta BeltLine
If you’re curious as to what the new sections of the Atlanta BeltLine look like, here’s a tour I wrote up on LinkedIn.
Thursday, January 22, 2015
Will Bikes Eliminate the Need for Big-Ticket Highway & Transit Projects?
I like innovation. Creative thinking to me reflects
intellectual vigor. When we become afraid of change, we age all too quickly.
Miami, a beacon of youthful vigor in a state with the
opposite reputation, is the site of an idea that takes poorly-used space and
makes room for one of the most sustainable transportation modes available:
bikes. The proposal, which unsurprisingly comes from consultants from the Dutch Cycling Embassy, is to build a linear
park and bike path under Metrorail elevated transit in the southwest corner
of town. This Metrorail line already has a pockmarked, bumpy, sorry excuse for
a path underneath it called the M-Path. However, like so many similar asphalt
afterthoughts built by DOTs in the latter part of the 20th century,
it’s hardly used. The new path, entitled the Underline, would seek to recreate
the same allure and excitement that the High
Line created in Manhattan in these early years of the 21st
century, except the addition of a proper bike route makes it far more useful.
A usable, attractive corridor is bound to attract economic
growth. Witness the sustained boom taking place in the intown
areas of Atlanta, particularly near the still-unfinished Beltline. The
Beltline may seem to be a bit grandiose, with its promise of light rail
transit, redeveloped neighborhoods, and multiuser paths. Expensive light rail
projects are getting harder to fund as infrastructure spending throughout the
US withers under conservative pressure. For
example, Arlington, Virginia, surrendered to such antipathy when it chose to
kill a streetcar project in a low-income corridor after strenuous objections
from right-leaning county board members, Libby Garvey and John Vihstadt. Luckily for Atlanta, the economic benefits of
the Beltline are already coming in with only multiuser paths in place in some
areas.
That raises a rather unsettling question for transportation
and city planners: is the key to neighborhood vigor and economic growth a
combination of low-impact, low-cost transportation infrastructure and parks? If
the High Line, Underline, and Beltline are all successful in injecting vitality
into close-in neighborhoods, with the latter two offering new connectivity, should
we re-task funding away from elaborate road and transit projects designed to expensively
move people between outlying areas and the central cores of metropolitan areas?
If a rail transit system is too much for Arlington to stomach, for instance,
should the county look to a long corridor of bike paths and parks paralleling
the route of the defunct streetcar as a replacement?
Some signs of a new trend in this direction are starting to
appear. In the early 1990s, the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) finally
realized its collective dream of building an expressway
through the heart of north Atlanta after years of opposition during Atlanta’s
Freeway Revolt. Georgia 400 was initially built as a toll road with an
expensive MARTA heavy rail line in the center. The road recently lost its tolls
(cue
massive backups).
In a glaring oversight, GDOT
chose not to include a bike path alongside the new road, as Virginia’s DOT
had done years earlier along I-66 inside the Beltway (the Custis Trail). GDOT is now going a little way towards
rectifying that error by
donating right-of-way along part of GA 400 to Atlanta’s PATH organization.
PATH is part of a consortium constructing a multiuser path through north
Atlanta’s Buckhead community that will connect to the Atlanta Beltline. The
beginnings of a citywide bike network are starting to form.
That this is occurring in Georgia is positively
earthshaking. This is the same state that gives
no money at all to Atlanta’s MARTA transit system. That’s not to say that the
Republican governor, Nathan Deal, has turned his back on that most traditional
of congestion relief measures, the widening of urban expressways. Years of repeated
failures of such projects to alleviate congestion have yet to have an
impact on the governor’s transportation policy. However, big changes often have
small beginnings.
In this era of diminishing budgets, more regions should look
to these innovative ideas from Miami and Atlanta. It’s better to build
something cheap that will keep its full functionality many years after
completion than waste time on projects that will never get off the ground
(Arlington Streetcar) or will ultimately fail to relieve congestion (any given
urban highway expansion). If the Underline and Beltline can be completed and
grow in popularity, as well as economic impact, the consultants at the Dutch
Cycling Embassy will get a lot busier.
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