Anyone else see Holt go on Twitter about MAPS4? Seems to me he really lets some of the comments on this site and others get to him. He’s getting as bad as Trump on Twitter.
Anyone else see Holt go on Twitter about MAPS4? Seems to me he really lets some of the comments on this site and others get to him. He’s getting as bad as Trump on Twitter.
I am 100% against streetcar extension. We need to go 2-3 years with current one to see how it pans out first. And it adds to infrastructure costs. Plus its supposed to be “last mile” so no need to extend. We need to fix bus system first, and decaying roads.
We are almost at the point we want to spend money just to spend it without a clear need or concensus on what we need. I have no problem with upgrades to Peake it adds much more value for more of all citizens whereas SC is a pet project serving only a very few in downtown. We’ve spent over 20 years focusing on downtown and its doing great. Time to start speading the taxpayers dollars around.
I'm divided on streetcars as I wish the money would be sunk into a grade separated transit system that would likely induce more riders than a streetcar. I am also very skeptical the streetcar has spurred a single penny in private development. That said, I think in order for the streetcar to be successful it needs an expansion to nearby neighborhoods. Capitol Hill, Paseo, Innovation District, Wheeler District, Linwood, OCU, NW 23rd, Plaza, Deep Deuce, Film Row, and MLK Boulevard are all good candidates for a streetcar extension. This would help boost ridership.
I think that is a deeply unfair characterization of it, it was pretty standard fare public figure twitter use.
For reference, the twitter thread: https://twitter.com/davidfholt/statu...34485446205440
ON this point you are wrong. There are hundreds of millions in private development already spurred by the streetcar, some of which is publicly available information, such as the streetcar being a catalyst in the new Heartland corporate HQ among others. Unless you believe the people saying it swayed their development decision are lying.
No offense, but you're wrong about that. They're clients of mine and we've actually discussed it.
In addition, the Oklahoma Contemporary, The Edge, and Lift all cited the streetcar at various times as a primary motivating factor as to why they felt comfortable moving ahead with their projects even though none of them are directly adjacent to the downtown core. I'm sure Gary Brooks and Milhaus didn't think it would take this long to design and build when those statements were made. I certainly didn't. Regardless, those perimeter high-density and pedestrian projects can be directly attributed to positively responding to the track alignment chosen.
How many of their employees will use the streetcar for commuting purposes?
I’d be willing to bet it’s an extremely small percentage of their total workforce. I really don’t care what they told you, I am not buying that the streetcar was the deciding factor of them relocating to downtown. That makes zero sense. They know this as they are including a large amount of parking for their employees.
Maybe I am wrong, but I just don’t see the streetcar spurring any development or rather being the sole reason any development has occurred where it otherwise wouldn’t have.
I have no idea how many. I am responding directly to your specific quote which is not factual.
You have no way of proving it wrong other than a conversation you had with them?
BTW, I updated my reply to add more.
You substantively edited your commentary. I didn't state that the streetcar was the motivating factor for them to move downtown. It was a motivating factor in the specific site they chose downtown. I believe this is documented in several newsok articles and chats. And yes, as a seasoned, longtime poster and an actual public official, if I write on here that something happened, it happened.
Cool. The streetcar has not spurred a single penny in development that wouldn’t have happened without it.
To me, this discussion/debate would be more accurately framed around density, pedestrian accessibility, and our built environment. PluPan, I think that saying it has or hasn't spurred development is a technical unknown. Presumably, The Oklahoma Contemporary would have been built somewhere. What the streetcar has done is to give developers confidence about lots and sites that are more inconvenient to access on foot from where most people currently are. If we think about parking garages, garage locations, land use, and improved public transit overall, it's easy to see the streetcar as a catalyst to a much broader downtown and with the potential to be built in a much more sensitive and efficient way.
After working on this for many years, I think any expansion should be very carefully considered and be directly related to better land use. The question is, what are the measures that qualify as success? Is it just land use and more densification? Is it ridership? I personally think that ideally, it is both. In a city as suburban as ours, I think there are very few corridors in which we would see success in both metrics for streetcar expansion. Any expansion should directly involve the Planning Department and incorporate redevelopment mechanisms to maximize the impact.
There seems to be a movement to spending more money on the Thunder practice facility as well.
The place is already an absolute palace, with private covered parking, an outside pool, etc.
IMO this is another dubious hand-out.
I find his approach refreshing and engaging. He read or heard (via our threads, or elsewhere) some initial push back on a select few MAPS4 items. He addressed it clearly and summarized by suggesting that an individual may not love every item but should love enough portions of MAPS4 to support it. Take the lukewarm with the great.
I've not seen a public figure so invested and transparent.
Trump throws out divisive and hateful comments on twitter. This is not that. This is governance evolved.
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