ATL Urbanist
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Paving in a Silo: $1 Billion for Atlanta Interchange
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The plan to subsidize car commuters in Metro Atlanta’s north side — by way of a $1 billion project at the 400/I-285 interchange to ease congestion and increase capacity — is on track to start in 2016, according to Curbed AtlantaReducing massive car congestion (and the resulting pollution from emissions) is a perfectly valid goal, but working toward that goal merely by increasing capacity is the wrong method for this situation. Here’s why: the induced-demand effect will render this only a temporary form of congestion relief, making this a waste of money and resources in the long run. We’ve seen it happen over and over for decades in Atlanta: as highway capacity is increased at great cost, only to get choked again every weekday at peak use times. This is particularly true in a metro that’s filled with car-centric
land use and that is continually growing in population; adding car
capacity to interstates is a band-aid in that it will only provide
temporary relief. Afterward, added demand will fill the new
capacity and the process starts again, with us chasing our tail at a
great expense. Read about the induced-demand effect here.Without a greater set of goals that concurrently addresses issues directly
related to highway use — reducing the use of personal cars for
commuting, boosting transportation alternatives, and correcting the
mistakes of overall car-dependent land use in the metro — this kind of
highway-capacity project is one that exists in a silo and is bound to
fail like others before it.By saying this exists in a silo, I’m referring to the lack of other components that could reduce car congestion in a more sustainable way. Where is the added network of bike lanes that would connect cyclists in this area to the new PATH 400 as a commuting option? What about bus routes and lanes as an alternative to solo car commutes? Those should be in the project. Once again we’re narrow-mindedly focusing on “level of service” improvements for cars alone, stuck in a 1950s mindset. If the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over
and expecting different results, our sanity is highly questionable for spending $1 billion in
precious transportation dollars on a single interchange for car
commuters. We have plenty of examples to look at in the metro of the shortcomings of this type of planning and the need for something more
comprehensive.

Women and Children Riding Transit in Atlanta
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A great post at CityLab explores an interesting stat — the majority of US public transit
riders in the US are women. They account for 55 percent of overall
transit ridership, with some wide variations within specific transit
systems.I did an American Community Survey search on commuting
habits in the City of Atlanta (2013 data) and saw that, indeed, women make up the majority of public transit riders here as well.Why
is this? And are there things we can do to specifically cater to the
needs of women who ride transit? According to the article:"One of
the reasons that women predominate on transit, researchers believe, is
that they are most often the caretakers of children and responsible for
many of the household errands. Better accommodations for strollers as
well as other measures to increase the ease of traveling with children
could no doubt dramatically improve their lives."That last point hits home with the experience of my own family. Above is a photo of my wife and our kid getting on a train. Over the years of riding MARTA, we’ve had to deal with many problems during the transit experience, some of them inevitable but others solvable: riding on pee-smell elevators at rail stations with a stroller, keeping a spastic toddler from getting too close to the edge of a train platform, having earphones and media on hand to drown out loud conversations on buses and trains unsuitable for kids. But, as the CityLab article also mentions, women have had particular trouble with Metro Atlanta’s
car-centric environments when it comes to just getting to and from transit
stops safely with kids. There are the tragic incidents of Raquel Nelson in Cobb County who’s child was killed while they walked from a bus stop in a particularly harsh situation for pedestrians, as well as the recent case where a mother was struck by a car and killed while legally crossing the road to get her child to a bus stop next to a MARTA station in Dekalb County. And there are also cases like the one above, outside the West End MARTA station. I saw this and had to snap a photo. Imagine a mother pushing a stroller (or a person in a wheelchair) getting from the curb ramp in the foreground, across the crosswalk toward the MARTA station. Once at the other side, a yellow curb with no ramp greets you and forces you to navigate around it — while you’re stuck in a car lane. I would like to see MARTA and other metro transit agencies partner with local city and county governments to identify and solve pedestrian challenges like these that occur around bus stops and rail stations. It’s something that would benefit the safety of current transit riders while also potentially boosting usage of those transit systems. It’s a pretty logical conclusion to draw: if getting to buses and trains is safer, more people will ride.

With MARTA Poised for Success, Can Transit Be Cool in the ‘Burbs Too?
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There’s an an excellent article on MARTA in the new issue of Atlanta Magazine, from writer Rebecca Burns: “Can CEO Keith Parker make MARTA cool? Amid its first major expansion in 40 years, MARTA faces a bigger challenge: convincing Atlantans that they want to ride.”MARTA has struggled with cutbacks and declining ridership in recent years during a time when other US transit systems have had big gains in riders. But as the article points out, some recent numbers on ridership are promising. A quote from the article:Last year, ridership inched up, increasing by 1 million trips a month in July, August, and September…Usage boomed at the Buckhead station and along bus routes in the northern suburbs.In addition to this rise in use, other good things are on the way such as upcoming transit-oriented developments at several stations, plus the recent addition of Clayton County to its service area (and tax base). There’s cause to believe that the agency is facing a future that’s much brighter than it’s past. Riding the bus and the train in Atlanta could very well become accepted as “cool” by a much larger group of people as time goes by, and not just for the current pro-transit crowd. But what about the suburbs beyond the MARTA service area? Is there any hope for transit to be cool in those outer counties?Challenges & successes in the suburban environmentThe Atlanta Magazine piece notes that one of the things that seems to be a determining factor in transit ridership in the metro area is the availability of both rail and bus, rather than just bus service. In regard to ridership of the various metro transit agencies: “use is highest in counties that offer bus and rail service, such as DeKalb and Fulton. In areas with only a bus system, like Cobb County, ridership is anemic.”This kind of anemic usage is not necessarily a reflection on attitude towards bus service or transit in general among people living in the suburbs (in fact a 2014 survey found support for new public transit options throughout the metro). The culprit is the existing built environment in places like Cobb County — as I know well from having lived in Cobb for the first 25 years of my life — is very much focused around cars. These days, engineering
standards demand sidewalks for many new arterial roads in car-centric parts of the metro, but
use of them (from what I’ve seen) is sparse, given the sprawling nature of the surroundings that
are built specifically for long-distance car travel and not pedestrian
connectivity. Not many people are going to feel “cool” walking to and from bus stops in a setting that makes pedestrians feel so second class. Many people over the years have complained that “MARTA doesn’t go anywhere.” But it only seems like that because the metro goes everywhere — it sprawls in a low-density pattern in all directions, creating environments that are inefficient for any mode of transportation other than personal cars. When you build environments specifically for car travel, you exclude other options from being retrofitted into them later on, barring a large-scale redevelopment effort with compact infill. The good news: some of those large-scale redevelopments are happening. Downtown Woodstock, GA, in the northern metro, is a great example of mixed-use infill. Just recently it was announced that Kennesaw would be getting $38 million worth of new mixed-use development in its downtown. And Mark Toro, the developer behind the Avalon project in Alpharetta, touts MARTA-bus access to it as being a big benefit. Why suburban views on transit should matter to intownersInterstates and highways that lead to the city center were designed to serve suburban commuters driving in to get to Atlanta offices, events, colleges and more. Pedestrian activity is directly affected, in a negative way, by the streets leading to and from these highways that are made to accommodate heavy car traffic above all else.Much of the center of the city through Midtown and Downtown is marred not only by these car-centric roads but also by the enormous amounts of parking infrastructure built to serve drivers. This creates urban landscapes like the one below:This is Peachtree Center Avenue in Downtown Atlanta. I took this photo during the end of the work day when people were headed to their cars from offices. The area is covered in these monumental parking facilities with blank walls that create dead spaces with no “active” uses at the street level — meaning no restaurants or stores at the bottom to create a lively urban scene. Instead we get a grim situation where people are dwarfed by concrete car housing. It’s not a place where good urbanism is going to happen.The more people, all across the Atlanta region, who can come to view public transportation as “cool,” the better off we’ll all be. But we need people in both the city and the ‘burbs to live and work inside built environments that can efficiently accommodate transit lines and that can provide safe, attractive experiences for walking to and from them — thus reducing the amount of infrastructure needed for cars. Otherwise, the pedestrian environment in the city center and elsewhere will continue to have major challenges when it comes to offering a cool experience around transit stops.All photos by me

Walking With a Family on Forsyth Street
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Walking with a family on Forsyth StreetSometimes when talking about the fact that we live in Downtown Atlanta’s Fairlie-Poplar district, people will ask questions about how we deal with parking and groceries and everyday needs. It’s interesting to think about what a different sort of life this is for a family with a kid versus the one that I (and my wife) grew up with in suburban houses.I took the above pic of Forsyth Street while walking home from the Peachtree Center MARTA station. We also have a family car that we park in a public garage near that station. It’s about a four block walk home from either of those.One of the things that makes the distance between our home and MARTA or parking seem short is the activity on the way. If we were walking past a boring set of blank walls or a monotonous series of structures with little street activity, it would be drudgery. Instead, we pass through a vibrant area with a mix of uses.Due to the glare of lights and the viewpoint of the photo, you can’t quite see all the good things that are happening in the four blocks worth of Forsyth Street above. Here’s a list of what we pass by on this walk — all contained in this photo:Services: Central Library, FedEx store, Cleaners, Florist, Brite Creations clothing, a hotelRestaurants: Dunkin Donuts, Quiznos, Landmark Diner (open 24 hours), J Crickets, Mini Choo ChooEvents: Rialto Theater, Theatrical OutfitTransit: streetcar tracks cross Forsyth about halfway down this viewOffices & GSU: Equitable Building, Court of Appeals (kinda counts as an office), GSU student center and music building,Residential: our condo building, a.k.a home sweet homeThat’s a lot to take in — and it’s fun to view and hear all the activity on the street while walking to and from destinations, carrying groceries, hauling school projects and more.

Atlanta Interstates: Good Intentions, Bad Results
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The top image shows the result of two inches of snow on the interstate highway going through the center of Atlanta in January of 2014. The snow and resulting ice were paralyzing to the entire interstate system of the metro, at first leaving motorists stranded overnight then putting the entire local economy in a shut down mode, with roads, stores and offices empty. Read a great story about it here. The bottom image shows what happened this week, in February of 2015. What was (as far as we know at this point) a student art project built from a soda can that was taped to an interstate bridge, caused a bomb scare. The interstate was shut down completely for hours, once again stranding motorists. Once by snow and once by art — who knows what it will be next time. Interstate highways: not what was intended The images of the empty lanes are haunting and strangely beautiful, but they are reminders of how strong our reliance is on these highways for personal mobility. Urban issues writer Kaid Benfield wrote a piece a couple of years ago about the origins of the US interstate highway system and the fact that President Eisenhower — who pushed for the system after having seen in WWII the need for routes that push troops and equipment quickly from one location to another — never intended for these to become roads for regular commuter traffic in teh middle of cities. A quote:A memorandum of a 1960 meeting in the Oval Office, available in the archives of Eisenhower’s presidency, makes this crystal-clear:“[The President] went on to say that the matter of running Interstate routes through the congested parts of the cities was entirely against his original concept and wishes; that he never anticipated that the program would turn out this way … and that he was certainly not aware of any concept of using the program to build up an extensive intra-city route network as part of the program he sponsored.”Benfield goes on to point out that, though the interstates were originally well intended, putting them through cities as a means of conveying daily traffic for all car drivers was a bad idea — these things just aren’t efficient as transport in densely populated areas, as we in Metro Atlanta have found out the hard way.The origins of interstate planning in AtlantaIn the 1946 Lochner plan and the 1952 Up Ahead plan — both containing designs for Atlanta’s transportation future that heavily informed the form of roadways for decades afterward — the interstate highway system was envisioned as a means of transportation and also as an urban growth boundary (also worth noting, the highways were thought of as counterparts to an expanded public transportation system in that Lochner plan).From the 1998 report “Consequences of the Interstate Highway System for Transit”:Originally, it was thought that the beltway would define the limit of urbanization, but this has not been borne out. by the time the beltway was completed in the late 1960s, suburban development had spread well beyond it in several directions, eliminating the possibility of using it for an urban development boundary.That’s right: Atlanta’s I-285 perimeter highway may have served as a growth boundary that could have helped to shape a more compact urbanized area instead of the “poster child for sprawl.”The reasons that the plan didn’t pan out as intended were, I’m sure, many; included are most probably white flight, a hunger for the quick return of sprawl development in suburban counties, and the federal subsidies for home ownership that benefited suburban middle-class families most heavily. It’s a series of events that has produced a built environment that has come to be accepted as normal by the generations that have grown up within it. But this isn’t particularly normal for human habitats and it isn’t written in stone in Atlanta. We can move beyond dependency on interstates and the sprawling, car-centric places that they help to support.For a region that is constantly growing in population and that is regularly hindered by the current interstate-focused transportation system, the need is clear for an increase in walkable nodes of density, connected by a more balanced range of transportation options that includes cars, bikes, pedestrian infrastructure and mass transit.

Will Atlanta Have a Grand Passenger Terminal Again?
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Other cities are renewing the use of their historic rail terminals as bus hubs, but Atlanta’s grand...