via ATL Urbanist

Atlanta: Don’t Accept Drive-To Urbanism! Connect Great Communities With Great Streets

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7 Last Things: #4. A few final thoughts on Atlanta as I retire the ATL Urbanist blog. The Atlanta region is famous for its car-centric sprawl, which separates houses and destinations from each other – via distance and street configuration – in a way that demands car trips. We often think of this type of built environment as being exclusive to the outer suburbs, but that isn’t true. When it comes to mobility options there’s good and bad to be found in both the burbs and the city. Just as there are wonderfully walkable places in the outskirts of the region (check out downtown Woodstock), elements of car-dependency can can end up marring even our best intown efforts at walkable urban development. A mixed-use, compact place like Atlantic Station (below) can be a pleasure to walk through once you’re inside. But approaching it on foot or bike from another neighborhood is a challenge – and the streets themselves are at fault.Writer James Russell noticed this phenomenon, which I call ‘drive-to urbanism’, when visiting Atlanta recently. After checking out the string of mixed-use density around the White Provisions complex on Howell Mill Road, he wrote a post that ends up being overly harsh, but that has good insights nonetheless: “Sprawling Atlanta Tries to Be a City”:“There are sidewalk fragments along Howell Mill Road, but you wouldn’t call it walkable. The area itself is isolated from the rest of the city, as so many neighborhoods are, by highway and other infrastructure corridors.” The affordability factor Those challenges for pedestrian and cycling mobility on roads like this make for a situation where builders likely expect that people will drive to communities – even mixed-use, compact ones – and understandably provide a lot of parking. But all that parking raises the cost of rents, exacerbating what is already a growing affordability problem intown.  A study shows that the average dollar amount that a parking space adds to housing costs is $225 per month, but keep in mind that this number falls in the middle a a really wide range of values. In a place with really high land values and construction costs – such as Midtown Atlanta for instance – this monthly costs would be much higher.So there’s a lot to be gained from building better connections to our new communities. Walkability and affordability can both be improved by making our streets more attractive for trips outside of a car. To get some insight on what the city can do to address this need, I spoke with Tim Keane, Atlanta’s head of planning. ——–Interview with Tim Keane, Commissioner of Planning, City of AtlantaHow can the city address the problem of what I call “drive-to urbanism,” where you have little pockets of walkable density that aren’t connected to each other or to the rest of the city by any means – at least not in a comfortable and safe way – other than car?The step that will address the issue you’re raising is a complete rethinking of the streets. Not in a small way but in a big way. Not, “should we repair the sidewalk and put in the ADA ramp,” but to utterly think of the right of way as a different thing.The streets in Atlanta, with very few exceptions, are completely maxed out for the car. We’ve scraped out every bit of the right of way, over many years, for cars. And for cyclists and pedestrians it’s a bit unnerving. That’s something we’re really going to need to face over the next few years, having to carve out space from our streets – from the cars and for the others.The quality of life in our city, going forward, is completely dependent on the way we can remake our streets for something other than cars – for walking, for cycling. Whereas before we thought the only way to get our quality of life higher was to get the congestion down and get the cars through the intersection faster, now it’s the opposite of that. And not in the suburbs, where you’ll probably want to still eke out every bit of space for cars; but in the city.The city can’t be a better suburb than the suburbs. All we can do is be a better city. We’ve got that market. We’re the city. Well, what does it mean to be a better city? What it means is that you can walk and ride your bike and get on a bus or a train for some things. Let’s take Marietta Street and Howell Mill Road. Those streets could be remade into streets where you’d love to ride your bike or go for a walk.And this includes people who drive everywhere and never get out of their car. We all share this. This is not an us versus them thing. You might drive to every single thing you do. You might drive two blocks to the drug store.The issue, though, is that your trip two blocks to the drug store is going to get more difficult whether we remake the streets for bikes and peds and transit or not. As a matter of fact you might argue that it’ll get even worse if we don’t because not only you – who wants to drive two blocks to the drug store – but everybody else who’d rather walk or bike has to drive. It’s as simple as that.Do you think that’s something that has to be sold to Atlantans as far as winning over hearts and minds on this issue?Oh my gosh, it’s a huge job. I mean it’s just been proven so many times. This is not something we made up.And what we’re really talking about is you’ve got in places like West Midtown or in lots of places like Ponce City Market where things are getting denser – but what about the urbanism? That means the streets. Yeah, we’re getting denser, but is it becoming an urban place?I would argue that the private sector in many cases is doing a fantastic job. If you look at Atlanta compared to other places just in the south – because in every city people are building stuff like this to some degree – but if you compare Atlanta to what’s going on in Charlotte or Raleigh or other fast growing areas, the quality of the private sector [here] is high, comparatively. Everybody’s trying to innovate architecturally.The issue is the public side of it – the public realm and coming to grips with that kind of remaking. I mean, you’ve got the private realm remaking former industrial properties and commercial properties, remaking them into denser, more urban style forms of living. But what about the public realm?And by “public realm,” you’re mainly talking about the right of way of streets?I’m mainly talking about streets. The reality is that streets are the most prevalent and significant public spaces we have. The city is pursuing the remaking of Martin Luther King Boulevard on the west side. And that should become a great public space.And when it comes to these things I’m not necessarily talking about big streetscape projects where you’re really fancying the street up. That’s not the point. It’s not to be tricky about the streets. It’s to be meaningful about how you allocate space on our streets for everyone. And I mean the cars, the pedestrians, the cyclists, the transit vehicles. Inevitably, what that means, is that the pure right of way that has been devoted to just cars goes down. Perhaps significantly.Chicago has done a great job on some of their streets in downtown. They are carving out space for bikes and transit for this very reason: “We can’t beat the suburbs of Chicago on driving but we [meaning downtown Chicago] can beat them on everything other than driving.” It’s an economic development issue for them. They’ve invested in their bike infrastructure so that jobs would come there.We’ve gotta be really aggressive about bikes because people who are moving to cities, they expect to either not own a car or to not use it that much.

Today’s Headlines

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  • Georgia DOT Postpones Roadwork Over Federal Funding Uncertainty (Atl Biz Chronicle)
  • Cobb Commissioner: Pedestrian Bridge to Stadium Is “Common Sense” (MDJ)
  • UGA Transit Tests Electric Buses (Red & Black)
  • Miami Commissioners Set Aside $3 Million for Transit Trust Fund (Miami Herald)
  • All Aboard Makes Land Deal With Miami to Expand MiamiCentral Station (Real Deal)
  • Wilton Manors Still in Running for Tri-Rail Station (SFGN)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

Today’s Headlines

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  • State Panel Rejects Proposed Baton Rouge Tolled Loop (Sun Herald)
  • Biloxi Increases Coast Transit Authority Annual Funding (Mass Transit)
  • Murray-Calloway Transit Hopes to Expand Service Using Solar Panels for Cost Savings (WPSD)
  • Nashville Moves Forward With Public Comment on Transportation Plan (WSMV)
  • No, Taxis and Non-Existent Robocars Are Not a Substitute for Transit (MNN)
  • Coral Gables NIMBYs Say Coral Gables Doesn’t Want TOD, Transit, or Accessible Streets (Herald)
  • Sun Sentinel Asks: Why Aren’t Presidential Candidates Talking About Coastal Flooding?
  • Knight Foundation Grants Prove Transit Has a Role in Shaping Cities (Mass Transit)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

Today’s Headlines

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  • Floridians to Florida DOT: We Want Transit, Not More Highway Lanes (Mass Transit)
  • New Report Highlights Potential Light Rail Corridors for Nashville (Nashville Biz Journal)
  • Nashville MTA’s CEO: We All Have a Stake in Middle Tennessee Transportation (Wilson Post)
  • Bristol, Tennessee, Transit to Host Passenger Appreciation Day (Bristol Herald Courier)
  • Birmingham Transit Users Have Suffered Decades of Dysfunction and Under Investment (Weld)
  • SunRail Phase Two Construction Delayed While Contract Is Awarded (Orlando Biz Journal)
  • First Week of Valdosta Pilot Transit Already Has Passengers Asking for More Stops (WALB)
  • Savannah CAT Hires Lobbyists to Begin Work Ahead of Legislative Session (Savannah Now)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

via Broken Sidewalk

Q&A: Walking College Fellow Pamela Sutton

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Pamela Sutton is a Early Childhood instructional assistant in the Head Start program at Louisville’s McFerran Elementary School. Every day she either walks or pedals her bike from her home in Shively to school in the Algonquin neighborhood, a habit she picked up six years ago. Sutton leads her school’s walking club, the One Mile Walkers The post Q&A: Walking College Fellow Pamela Sutton teaches big lessons in taking the first step in her Louisville classroom appeared first on Broken Sidewalk.

Today’s Headlines

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  • NOLA: Streetcar Construction on Schedule (Times-Picayune)
  • Times-Picayune Has Time-Lapse Video of Rampart-St. Claude Streetcar Track Installation
  • GPB Examines How Race and Racism Shaped MARTA
  • Saporta Report: Turn Atlanta’s Northside Drive From a Moat to a Complete Street
  • After 12 Years, Middle Georgia Reaches Air Quality Attainment Standards (MDJ)
  • Lake Sumter MPO 20-Year Plan Includes Bike/Ped Safety Upgrades (Daily Commercial)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

via ATL Urbanist

Atlanta: Fix the Streetcar and Auburn Avenue; There’s More Riding on This Than Passengers

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One of the major tests for Atlanta’s streetcar line is whether or not it can revive long-troubled Auburn Avenue. Doing so would help to fulfill the transit route’s goals, as stated in the application for the federal TIGER grant money that funded half of the construction.If you ask the city, you’ll hear that all is well – that the streetcar has produced hundreds of millions of dollars in investment. From the City of Atlanta website:“If you want to get a look at revitalization in the making, hop on the new Atlanta Street Car.  At every stop along the 2.7 mile route, you will see how over $300 million in development has infused new life in Atlanta’s historic neighborhoods.”But on the ground, particularly on parts of Auburn Avenue, it can be hard to see changes. Despite being the location of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center and birth home and having had a new streetcar track built into it, Auburn looks as blighted as it has since the 1970s in many spots (See this AP piece from a couple of years ago for a good history of the street’s struggles).Atlanta, please don’t mess up this opportunity to revitalize Auburn Avenue and turn it into the grand city street that it should be. We’ve been mourning the sad decline of Sweet Auburn for decades, with only limited improvements to show for our efforts. This 1987 piece in the Chicago Tribune about the need for a revival in the area could have been written today.Realizing Auburn’s potential and unding shameful stagnationThe potential for greatness on Auburn Avenue is undeniable. As the birthplace of Martin Luther King Jr., and as the place where black business owners achieved success even in the face of segregation, it has major connections to the history of the city. It has old commercial buildings and churches, providing the kind of human-scale authenticity that makes a city feel like a city. It connects Downtown to eastern neighborhoods like Old Fourth Ward and also to the Beltline.Auburn has a chance to be the east-west version of what Peachtree Street is as a north-south route: a showplace for urban achievement in the city. And yes, any new growth on the street will have to be sensitive to history and to current structures; but we should absolutely not allow the need for sensitivity to serve as a rationaization for inertia. The time for stagnation is over.That this stagnation and decline is what people see while visiting the King Memorial area, that’s something we should be ashamed of as a city. Rebecca Burns wrote a piece for Atlanta Magazine titled Atlanta’s neglect of the Sweet Auburn district is a civic shame that addresses this issue well. Here’s a quote:…image-focused Atlanta should preserve [Sweet Auburn] for the pragmatic reason Atlanta has done so many other things: the way it makes us look to the rest of the world. When those tourists who visit the King crypt and historic Ebenezer walk a few blocks west, they will see that Atlanta is treating this corner of town with neglect that is far too close to the attitudes of a century ago. For a look at the neglect, I’ve created a separate Tumblr blog that features photos of properties on Auburn Avenue, beside the streetcar tracks, that are disused. Parking lots, empty lots, abandoned buildings – all of the things that prevent the streetcar from being as successful as it should be as street-rail transit.Residential growth (or lack thereof)While modern streetcar lines in other cities have attracted a lot of new residential development, this hasn’t been the case in Atlanta – a big disappointment, since new residents could be a huge benefit for Downtown. It’s been over five years since federal TIGER funding and a local matching fund were announced for the Atlanta Streetcar. Total amount of new non-student residential housing units delivered within two blocks of the route since then: two. Not two buildings…two apartments. Those belong to the Atlanta Daily World Building.At the bottom of that building, below the two apartments, are two stores. One is an Arden’s Garden juice shop, and the other is Condesa Coffee. To get some perspective on the streetcar from the point of view of a business operator on the route, I spoke with Octavian Stan, co owner of Condesa. —————–Interview with Octavian Stan, owner of Condesa Coffee on Auburn Avenue:“I came here in 1995 from Romania. Coming from a place where you have a walkable lifestyle – I was really frustrated because you couldn’t walk anywhere.”This was in the Georgia Tech area?“Yes, Midtown. Which is now the most walkable and pedestrian friendly region.“The reason I think that we’re still not there yet [in terms of good urbanism] is because you can walk and it’s possible to live without a car, but it’s still not a complete experience. And this is the biggest problem: most people still drive from different places and park there, and they’ll walk around a little like it’s some sort of theme attraction.“With the streetcar, I don’t think people get it. I have the privilege to be someone who gets it because I lived in Bucharest [where Stan grew up]. We had streetcars going everywhere. We had buses, trolley buses, subway; we had everything.“When I was a child, most people had a car as a family but you mostly would keep it in the garage because you don’t drive it in the city. You use it like it should be used – to go to the mountains or something like that. In the city you just take transit and walk. I didn’t have a driver’s license when I came here.“That’s why I think with the streetcar a lot of people don’t get it. I talk to a lot of people, even the ones who are progressive and who are pro-transit, and they’re still like, “why are we building this streetcar when we could be investing these funds into extending MARTA into the suburbs?””Do you sense that there’s a culture of change since you’ve been in Atlanta; that there’s more of an acceptance of the benefits of walkable places?“I think that people, if you explain to them what the streetcar is about… if you’re eloquent and kind of show them what the streetcar is meant to do – instead of what they think it should do – a lot of people understand; because they know that they want the walkable urban lifestyle, but they initially don’t understand what a streetcar can do for that.  “This is one of the things that government should do because I think that even they don’t get it.”You think the City of Atlanta government lacks an understanding of what the streetcar can do?“I start to think this. People who are against the streetcar see it as a boondoggle. The people who build it see it as another attraction. They see it like the Ferris wheel. Like the streetcar is just supposed to get people from Centennial Park to the MLK memorial and then back without even stopping on the way.“People ask how many people we are getting from the streetcar? None! Because they are so scared to even get off the streetcar in between. They don’t even see what’s around them.”The stop closest to you is the one at Piedmont and Auburn. You don’t see people getting off there…“And getting to my shop? No.”You think that could happen, though?“I want this to happen. I opened that shop with the hope that this would happen. But I think that as long as the city government does not get it, they won’t be able to educate the general population, who will continue to see it as something other that what it should be. They need to get a campaign for educating people on what the streetcar is about.“If you don’t the general population on board, then you’re not going to get developers to understand. You build a streetcar; you’re supposed to build streetcar-friendly development around it.Do you think that empty properties like the Atlanta Life Building are hurting the existing businesses like yours on the streetcar route?“It’s not inviting to get off the streetcar and walk [around the empty properties]. There’s just a perception because of the way they look blighted that it’s scary. I can see people on the streetcar with a little bit of a petrified smile.“But there is some good stuff happening. There’s the 200 Edgewood apartment project [ed.: this is a new student housing development]. I really respect what GSU is doing with basically keeping downtown alive, but we need more than students. We need to get other kinds of residents here. That’s what downtown’s supposed to be. It’s supposed to be a 24/7 type of neighborhood. Instead it’s a 9-5, Monday through Friday, when students are in session kind of place.” Photo of Octavian Stan outside Condesa during Parking Day, 2015.

Today’s Headlines

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  • Gwinnett Residents Want Better Transit But Elected Leaders Are Out of Touch (GPB)
  • Atlanta BeltLine Moves Forward With Southside Trail (Curbed)
  • Cobb County Commissioner: Maybe We Should Bury Interstate for Braves Stadium Access (MDJ)
  • Officials Want to Use Special Tax Districts to Spur Growth in Downtown Albany, GA (Herald)
  • Miami CEOs: Transit Would Solve Our Traffic Woes (Palm Beach Post)
  • Miami Driver Intentionally Hits Child, Stops to Steal Bike (News 96.5)
  • St. Louis Metro Looks to Charleston CARTA as Industry Leader (Post-Dispatch)
  • Mormon Church Plans Massive Development in Rural Central Florida (Tampa Bay Times)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

via Broken Sidewalk

Theater Square Leveled for Kindred Healthcare’s New Office Building

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Well, that was fast. In less than two weeks, the entire Theater Square complex on Fourth Street has been reduced to a pile of rubble. The complex of retail, office, and public space is being cleared to make way for Kindred Healthcare’s suburbanized headquarters expansion.   The $36 million expansion project, designed by Louisville’s K. Norman Berry The post Theater Square has been leveled to make way for Kindred Healthcare’s new office building appeared first on Broken Sidewalk.
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