Atlanta Needs Population Density for Efficient Transportation
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A new report from ARC shows that Gwinnett County’s population growth leads the Atlanta region, but that it’s happening in a carpet of sprawl. Read about it here:atlresearch.tumblr.com/post/126447942228/populationestimatesaug2015snapshotHow this county continues to boom in population growth without creating dense urban centers is astounding. In the full ARC report you can see that multifamily housing is growing in the City of Atlanta at a fast clip, while the new housing in Gwinnett is 93% detached single-family. I’m guessing that this carpet-of-sprawl growth pattern is going to hinder their efforts to expand transit service. Here’s a chart of population Atlanta growth from 2010 to 2015. That top row shows the count for the entire region, and the bottom row (I’ve highlighted in orange) has the count for the City of Atlanta, where the population steadily remains at about 10% of the region’s.I’m happy to see pop growth in City of Atlanta, but with the region as a whole booming at this level, we should do better. Why? Because rail transit is centered here and taking full advantage of that transit type will require the city to have a greater population density (along with walkable streets). To illustrate the relationship between development style and transportation…
These were posted by Tumblr urbangeographies, who notes: “The images of density types in developers show the intermediate type – the
suburb – as the site of greatest conflict.” when it comes to serving the environment efficiently with transportation. Conflict is right. How do we expect, as urbanists, to get people out of their cars and into alternate transportation modes if we don’t make major changes to the spaces around us that were built in many places for automobile travel and not much else? As Brent Toderian recently tweeted: “It’s a recipe for failure to design a city for cars, & then ask people to walk, bike & take public transit more. Design a different city.”For the record, I think the word “suburb” is best used to describe a location rather than a built environment. I say that because anyone who’s seen the landscape of intown Atlanta in full will know that even in the city, our level of density and amount of car-centric roads matches that middle image closely in most places.