The City recently installed a couple of big gates on either end of the north parking lot at Wheeler Park. I think they have had ongoing issues with donuts/racing and may be trying to cut down on that activity, but I'm not sure.
The City recently installed a couple of big gates on either end of the north parking lot at Wheeler Park. I think they have had ongoing issues with donuts/racing and may be trying to cut down on that activity, but I'm not sure.
Yes, a portion of the improvements will go to reducing that activity. Concession stand, connectivity improvements for pedestrians and bikes along Western, and pedestrian connectivity from the fields to the concession stand are other areas of focus for the upcoming improvements.
Something called the Honeymoon Rock Festival is scheduled for Sept. 18-19 at Wheeler Park:
https://honeymoonfest.com/
The city has submitted plans for improvements to Wheeler Park:
Project will provide a new concession stand and toilet structure to the existing tournament field and site improvements to the existing roads, parking lots and storm water drainage in the park.
This seems to indicate this location will not be selected for the MAPS 4 multi-purpose stadium.
Wheeler Park has a softball stadium that could use some attention like chair back seats more concessions and restroom accommodations.
It will likely never happen, but it would be so cool if we could turn everything south of I-40 and North of the river, cap I-40, and turn some of the south of the river sections into an absolutely massive park. You could keep some small developments with parking garages, restaurants, and other amenities. The big thing would be connecting scissortail, wiley post, wheeler park, and regatta park together into a massive park to be the centerpiece of OKC.
For the sake of discussion capping I-40 would cost multiple billions of dollars, with a B, depending upon how much was capped, of course.
By capping, do you mean running it underground?
Yeah, connecting north and south scissortail turning a portion of I-40 by the Scissortail bridge into a tunnel. It is completely improbable, but it would be really cool. The fever dream would be making a giant park/riverwalk on both sides of the river from like Portland to eastern and having a real riverwalk. Obviously, that is not going to happen due to a variety of things.
At the very least, I would like them to do a "bridge" on each side of the Skydance bridge for the purpose of putting vegetation up there to put more distance between the railing and the drop off to I-40 below--the Gathering Place in Tulsa gives a good example of how to make a road crossing that feels like a green space (granted, it's over Riverside Dr. and not a large interstate highway, so inherently going to be quieter). A full-on cap between Walker and Robinson would be a pretty nice addition to the park for those reasons too, if it ever was economical.
I do see more river developments in the future--it may be a decade or two, as I think the area around Lower Scissortail needs to get developed (I did see a 3-story townhouse going up a tad west of the lower park, so there are signs of it starting). But get some more developed neighborhoods (like Wheeler is doing) and sites like OKANA on the river, as well as development between Scissortail and Wiley Post, and you have potential nucleation points for some expansion up and down the river. So who knows, maybe someday we will be talking about the current Pull a Part site becoming a cool mixed development spot right on the river.
It's not so much as digging it into a tunnel as much as it is would be to make a land bridge over the corridor like they've done in Tulsa, Riverside Drive just south of I-244 if I recall correctly. They would need to construct some support columns and beams that would allow for an even weight distribution over the corridor between Scissortail Bridge and Walker Ave. Then they can build a covering with electrical installations accommodating the ceiling, insulation for the ceiling to prevent water from dripping through, and raise the elevations for both sides to make them into a hill covering the the lid in place. It's a bit too late to do the tube installation method seen in Tulsa, but that would be a hypothetical method you could do while minimizing the amount of traffic you interrupt.
GoldenHurricane22 - Check out 5th St over I-85/75 in midtown Atlanta. It is exactly what you described. It connects Georgia Tech to the midtown area. You can't even see the interstate as you cross over. If you didn't alread know it was there you never would.
I've never understood the desire to cap I-40 in the downtown area. Downtown okc has experienced a lot of changes and growth in the last 20 years. Driving I-40 is the only glimpse some people get of that change. But for some reason people keep wanting to stick those travelers in a tunnel and remove any chance that they might want to exit and see what okc has to offer.
I agree with this. I like elevated urban freeways because it’s mesmerizing to drive through cities on them. Trains and busses aren’t the same. Cars are much better with wider freeways and I wish we would’ve kept urban elevated freeways in SF, Boston, and Seattle. Tunnels are cool but not as cool.
Creating a vibrant, walkable city is far more important than the views of skylines for cars on the highway or national broadcasts. If it is at all economically feasible to cap a highway (which it sometimes isn't) then you do it. Highways views of the city skyline wouldn't probably be in my top 50 considerations.
You really get it, Plutonic Panda . . .
Definitely mesmerizing to drive thru a city on an elevated freeway. If the freeway isn't elevated it helps to have tall structures visible like those in Oklahoma City and Tulsa skylines.
Most major cities, your skyline is the most memorable impression left on those who drive through.
My relatives are impressed (Wow, this place has grown) when they drive thru our city especially at night and the lights on Skydance Bridge immediately grabs their attention as well as Devon Energy, BancFirst, First National (Color) & BOK Park Plaza (Crown) towers keep them spell bound.
A walkable city is desirable; however IMO people walking around on ground level is not going to catch your attention like impressive tall structures.
That's why IMO when you have Thunder games (DT) the cameras focus on the CBD, Bricktown activity and crowds gathered in mass, entering the arena. An impressive exterior new arena and Thunder Alley development will be a 'big plus' for OKC.
^^^ yep. +10000
I’d rather have a city people want to visit, live, and invest in. Cities function long before and well after someone drives by at 60 mph or once the broadcast transitions back to a game. What use is all the structures in New York City, London, Paris, Hong Kong, Tokyo, if they sit underutilized or vacant so people driving through have something cool to look at? Are they still world class cities once you take out the investments made at the human level to build a city worth living in or visiting? Is there anything worth getting off the freeway to go to? Do those cities even have cool skylines if their fabric is for passing through them or viewing from a distance or on a broadcast?
Cities have to exist for the people that live in them, they can’t simply be about what looks the coolest. San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, Boston, etc. aren’t worse off or less “cool” because their freeways are now parks or promenades. Freeways will always exist, especially in America, but we should build cities that entice people to get off the highway to explore more of rather than cities that look neat for the few minutes they’re in sight before that vehicle is on to another community.
Such fascinating viewpoints and opinions on urbanism and walkability on this site.
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