via ATL Urbanist

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.

Today’s Headlines

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  • Ten Years After Katrina, NOLA Unveils Resilience Plan (Times-Picayune)
  • Charlotte Streetcar Exceeds Ridership Expectations (Charlotte Observer)
  • Charlotte Republican Mayoral Candidates Argue Over Streetcar Funding Support (Charlotte Observer)
  • Florida Drivers Could Learn From Hospitality of Boulder Drivers for Cyclists (BikeWalkLee)
  • Atlanta’s New Motto: Sidewalk Closed (Saporta Report)
  • Valdosta Chamber Members Support Creating Transit System (Valdosta Daily Times)
  • Falcons Stadium Naming Rights Deal Kept Quiet Due to Anger Over Use of Public Funds (Atlanta Mag)
  • Durham Orange Light Rail Line Releases Environmental Impact Statement (News Observer)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

Today’s Headlines

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  • Boca Raton Resident: All Aboard Won’t Stop Here, But We’ll Still Benefit (Sun Sentinel)
  • Mobility Fees Help Florida Fight Sprawl (CityLab)
  • AAA Launches Back-to-School Campaign for Pedestrian Safety (WWSB)
  • Will Disappearing Louisiana Wetlands Turn New Orleans Into a Modern Day Atlantis? (Guardian)
  • Atlanta Suburbs Becoming More Diverse Than Atlanta Itself (Atl Biz Chronicle)
  • Cobb County Shuttle to Braves Stadium Will Cost $2 Million First Year (AJC)
  • Georgia DOT Kicks Off Education Campaign About Roundabouts (AJC)
  • Hobson Mayor Plans to Start Bike Club and Provide Bikes to Engage Youth (Anniston Star)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

Today’s Headlines

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  • Charlotte’s Apartment Development Boom May Not Be as Rosy as It Appears (Charlotte Observer)
  • But the Market For Charlotte Homes With Fallout Shelters Seems to Be Doing Well (Curbed)
  • The Feds Provided the Funds, But New Orleans Saved Itself (Daily Beast)
  • Rural Jacksonville Transit System Sees Ridership Double Since Service Began (Daily News)
  • The Orlando Sentinel Asks If All Aboard Florida Can Deliver Its Promised Boom
  • Okaloosa County Commissioner Wants to Improve Public Transit (NWF Daily News)
  • MARTA to Roll Out New Breeze Cards, Current Ones Will Stop Working in 2017 (WABE)
  • Mercedes-Benz Purchases Naming Rights for New Falcons Stadium (Curbed)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

via The Naked City Blog

What in the World Is Wrong With North College Street?

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Street view, from Google Maps, of North College at Eighth Street, which tops the city's high-accident listThis year's list of high-accident intersections in Charlotte is up, and guess what. Once again one-way streets uptown are atop the list. Here's the Charlotte Observer's article. Notice, in the photo, the pedestrian ambiance (or lack thereof) along North College Street at Eighth Street, the No. 1 high-accident intersection.See complete 2015 list as well as previous years. Note: it's computer-generated and factors in the amount of traffic as well as the number and severity of accidents. My observation this year is the same as two years ago, when I wrote about this report: One-way streets in and near uptown dominate the list. Is that a reason to switch more to two-way streets?But Charlotte Department of Transportation officials disagreed with my thinking. Engineer Debbie Self, in charge of CDOT's traffic and pedestrian safety programs, pointed out in 2013 that of the 150 intersections in uptown Charlotte, the majority involve at least one one-way street and most are not on the high-accident list. About North College Street in particular, in 2013, Self wrote: "College Street in the areas of 7th, 8th & 9th Streets has been on the HAL [high accident list] for many years. It’s been hard to pin point a single underlying cause. Angle crashes account for about half of the crashes at College and 7th, 8th and 9th. CDOT will likely consider reflective back plates at the signals as a mitigation given our successful reduction in crashes at 5th/Caldwell."   [CDOT had attributed the 2013 decline in accidents at Fifth and Caldwell to the installation of the back plates.]A peek at recent years' high accident lists prompts these questions: Why keep this as a high-speed one-way street through the heart of your downtown?  And since its high-accident intersections have comparatively light traffic, what is going on?Some observations:  I walk along North College a lot, going to and from the UNC Charlotte Center City Building, and the rest of uptown. (At least, I did. Ninth and Eighth streets have been blocked for almost a year from construction of the light rail tracks.) So where are the cars involved in 2014 accidents coming from, especially at Eighth Street? My guess is they're going to and from surface parking lots near the rail line, which have not closed. If you're pulling in or out of a parking lot, you are not driving quickly. So it's likely some accidents are caused by speeding drivers on North College Street mixing with motorists turning into lots or onto Eighth Street.North College is a major, one-way artery through uptown just one block from, and parallel to, the main uptown street, Tryon Street, where flocks of pedestrians, bus and delivery trucks as well as some timed-to-slow-you traffic lights combine to make speed impossible. But North College comes to us from the street-as-highway school of traffic design. Head north (the only direction you can) from the light at Seventh and you go down a slight hill, encouraging you to speed up. There is no light at Eighth Street, because it is a tiny little street -- actually I love its narrowness, which adds a sense of historical quaintness -- with little traffic. In a car one might just blow past it altogether. I imagine a lot of motorists do just that.If you're on Ninth Street, it's hard to see what's coming on College. If you're tempted to turn right on red, ignoring the sign banning it, you might well get slammed into by a car zipping up College Street.The No.3 high accident intersection is one block north, North College at Ninth Street. (Google Maps)Meanwhile, with the opening of the UNC Charlotte building and growing numbers of uptown residents, plus more bars and nightlife, more people are walking even on this rather unpleasant street -- a street decidedly not designed for pedestrians.Further, this area is only a block from two light rail stops (Seventh Street and the to-open-in-2017 Ninth Street). The area should be notably more pedestrian friendly. But with back-of-curb sidewalks, a lack of street trees for several blocks and surface parking lots way too prevalent, it isn't.Solution? CDOT can't alter property lines or force land owners to stop tearing down older buildings and replacing them with surface parking lots or force them to develop the property if they don't want to. So CDOT is left with the standard toolkit for traffic-calming: traffic humps (not bumps, but humps you can glide over at 20 mph but not at 40), stop signs (ugh), traffic circles, more on-street parking. What about a bike lane? No, the cars will not be able to travel as fast. But this is one block off main street in a city of 800,000. Slower is OK.Or, might I suggest, turning it back into a two-way street?
via The Raleigh Connoisseur

Downtown Apartment Buildings in 2015

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Earlier in the week, I highlighted the next downtown apartment building to open, The Lincoln. Today, I wanted to step back a bit and share some thoughts about the general downtown apartment landscape and the market around them. Here are some quick thoughts on the state of new developments that cater to the rental market. […]

Today’s Headlines

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  • Cobb County Pol: We’re Spending a Ton of Money to Facilitate Braves Traffic (WABE via @atlurbanist)
  • Fascinating: Atlanta Studies Traces City’s Parking Addiction to 1953
  • Grant Will Help Replace Fort McPherson Road Lost to Tyler Perry (Atl Biz Chronicle)
  • Cape Coral City Council Adopts Complete Streets Resolution (BikeWalkLee)
  • University of Tennessee Adds New Transit Route to Connect Colleges, Oak Ridge (TN Today)
  • University of Tennessee Launches Late Night App-Based On-Demand Transit (Daily Beacon)
  • Cutler Bay News Asks If Now Is the Time to Extend Metrorail
  • It Isn’t Cheap to Live Near Transit, Even in Miami (RadPad)

More headlines at Streetsblog USA

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