Normally I'd stop here and not go much further, but this does say "General Urban Development Thread" so not sure what exactly on-topic would be lol..
As for the Kilpatrick Tpk, yeah there's infill potential, but there's infill potential virtually everywhere in the entire metro. There's also TOD potential everywhere along a rail line. I think too often you tend to suggest things that are randomly starting from scratch, often when very nearby there are better cases where a fledgling district is doing just what you want to recreate a mile over. In downtown Edmond, where the train also goes, there is some awesome TOD potential. Farmer's Market, Jazz Lab, tons of stuff on Broadway in downtown Edmond, good neighborhoods, etc.
As for the Fairgrounds, it's just really far out and separated by a whole lot of nothing at this point, being the main problem with that. Plus the people that go there are very far from the target train demographic, and that's not the end all be all, but that is important. Furthermore, Red Earth is a joke, the State Fair now is, and the day that the Festival of the Arts is out there at there will be an extremely sad day.
The AICC alone doesn't justify a rail line. Rail is expensive. The AICC is also very expensive and not even open yet, who knows what kind of an attraction it will prove to be.
As for MWC, I agree with your assessment that the station couldn't possibly directly serve the base. So what's the difference in putting it in a field on one side of I-40 or in a big development on the other side? The Town Center is actually a decent project, I want say really good, but it's pretty decent and it's also being expanded now. It opens up to a neighborhood in the back, where the expansion is also taking place. As for Heritage Park, sometimes you have to just be willing to let buildings go. That's going to be a huge abandoned building and unless someone turns it into a factory or an office building, which still wouldn't justify a station all its own, maybe the best we can hope for it is that it gets leveled or it burns down on its own. Same for Crossroads...
Looks like I managed to get enough off topic to split the thread into another discussion.
Spartan - I think you missed every point I was trying to make. Not every site along the rail is good for TOD. TOD doesn't only have to make sense for rail, it has to make sense for other modes of transit around the site.
Let's start with the Kilpatrick Turnpike stop. The site I picked is the first place I-40 is close enough to the tracks to make it a viable park and ride for I-40 commuters. It is also at an exit ramp for the Kilpatrick Turnpike. It is the last place that is not industrial in nature until you get to downtown and it has direct access to Mustang. Finally, it has existing vacant land.
Fairgrounds - if you think activites at the fairgrounds don't match the demographics of the average person in OKC you're crazy. Frankly, I am more than a little put-off by the elitist position you seem to be taking with rail travel. People from every walk of life will be riding the rails, not just the upper-crust and those of us from the middle class that the upper-crust will tolerate. I am more than sure people from Edmond, Norman, and Midwest City attend events at the fairgrounds. If there is a reliable mass transit system they can use it will even increase attendance. Also, I never said Festival of the Arts would be at the fairgrounds. I said over-flow parking could be at the fairgrounds. In fact, over-flow parking from any downtown event could be done at the fairgrounds.
The stop at the AICC is only because the train is going right by it anyhow. If there isn't demand then the train doesn't stop there.
Now, having said all of that, I suggest you start laying some lines on Google Earth and see what you come up with. I think most of us would be interested to see what you come with.
I didn't say that the Fairgrounds wasn't an average OKC demographic. I don't really want to go there, or get into the nuances of defining on OKC demographic..probably not possible to do, probably not a worthwhile endeavor. But I do think there is value in determining who will ride the rails. It has nothing to do with elitism, populism, or any ism that politically-charged people like to think in terms of. I don't think it's unfair to say that the fairgrounds attract a large ag-oriented demographic, and I don't think it's elitist (but rather reasonable) to conclude those guys aren't going to ride the rails. Who will? Commuters who live in suburbs and work downtown. People looking to go to a shopping hub. People going to Thunder games. People going clubbing/drinking downtown. College students at OU/UCO. I see all of those as much more solid bets for ridership than the Fairgrounds, I mean, why ride the rails, when you can overcompensate for all your shortcomings with a big Hemi pick-up truck? Lol..I don't mean to be offensive, I'm just offering pragmatic, possibly blunt, opinions on how this could go. Consider it my way of contributing to the discussion..I don't do it to be an arse, I mostly just mean for most of these remarks I make like this to come off with a few laughs, but there is a lot of truth buried under some of these juvenile wise-cracks I make. Let's not deny that or get too bent out of shape with the way I often phrase things in jokes and sarcasm.
OK, fair enough--the way you phrased it suggested that it was its own line in your vision, and I was a little puzzled by that.The stop at the AICC is only because the train is going right by it anyhow. If there isn't demand then the train doesn't stop there.
Oh, I'm definitely more than happy to do that. I've been toying around with a few maps that I've kept to myself for the past few months, since Jeff invited me to a streetcar subcommittee meeting. My personal outlook on it is that the service area needs to be broken up into a streetcar zone, where street does not leave, and a LRT/commuter zone. LRT/commuter rail doesn't serve the streetcar zone, and vice versa. So to that end, I'm not sure there should be a MetroRail or whatever stop in the inner city unless it is heavily interfaced with the streetcar and other modes of transit.Now, having said all of that, I suggest you start laying some lines on Google Earth and see what you come up with. I think most of us would be interested to see what you come with.
I can post a few of the things I've been working on. I've been thinking in a few of my own directions on this, and it's mostly streetcar-based just because of how comparatively cheap that is, whereas other modes might be more prohibitively expensive, and would involve cross-governmental jurisdictions. For instance, there is no point in constructing a commuter line that ends at the Kilpatrick (and I don't know if you intended this, but it is fairly cunning at first glance) that is obviously intended to serve the Edmond area. It could be construed at first as a way of getting Edmond ridership without having to seek involvement from the City of Edmond. But then that's serving them without them paying for any of it, because we know the ridership won't support it, unless tickets are considerably more expensive for Edmond residents. You might as well get funds from Edmond and go all the way to downtown Edmond.
If Edmond is not interested in paying up, then no commuter rail for the north metro. That simple. Same goes for Moore/Norman. I think it's 100% certain that Norman is interested in paying up, at least as long as Rosenthal is mayor. Moore probably wouldn't care because they're so flush with what used to be everyone else's sales tax revenue right now.
Thanks for the reply Spartan. In retrospect the stop at the fairground probably is not a good idea. Maybe that stop should be reserved for events only and not part of the regular scheduled service. As for service to Edmond, I agree it should go right into downtown Edmond. The goal of rail should be to increase TOD at every station and it only make sense that if you are going to increase density, it be done in the downtown areas. Stations in Norman, Yukon, Edmond, and Moore would be downtown (yes - Moore has a downtown). Eventually I would like to see places like Norman and Edmond introduce their own local streetcars.
For the record, I am not a big fan of Park and Ride lots because they only contribute to sprawl but hopefully those stations would develop high density TOD. Of course, this is not possible with Tinker/Town Center station becasue of the runway issues but that station also serves the largest employer in the state so I guess in that case it is okay.
A report on identifying potential future development of metro transit had one near the fairgrounds for a special event station.
A map is on page 31 of this document.
http://www.gometro.org/Websites/gome...hapter%205.pdf
Document TOC
http://www.gometro.org/fgp
Kerry:
Well I must agree with your overall suggestion that these lifestyle centers proposed around the metro (yet to see a good one actually get built though) be a little more than a pig with lipstick in terms of functional urbanism. I agree that TOD is the way to go, the way of the future for OKC. I also agree that in the area around Kilpatrick and Broadway is great TOD potential, with potential synergy with what's going on at other stops. One of the things about TOD though is that we are going to discover opportunities that we didn't realize existed, like with Tyson's Corner, or the Panorama Village thing in Denver that Blair Humphreys worked on. I can see something like that happening around 63rd and Broadway, also along the BNSF tracks--right between Chesapeake and Broadway.
When you think hard about it, there will be a lot of these potential nodes. You have to just design the system and the TOD will happen where it happens, for the most part--though there is nothing wrong with making sure the main stations develop as planned. I think Norman and Edmond downtowns just have so much TOD potential, especially how the area along the tracks in Norman between Boyd and Main is so ripe for infill, on the edge of both Chautauqua, Campus Corner, and Downtown Norman.
Snowman:
The FGS is already severely outdated and the timeline has already ran out for it to have any bearing in my opinion. Plus, what it proposed was pretty conservative (and proposed phases that took forever, and for instance, a commuter line between downtown and Crossroads Mall is going to have ZERO riders, not now or ever, so that's a big FAIL). We've taken our time with the goal of building a more comprehensive system as soon as we can get ready, in terms of funding. I think we all understood though that streetcar would be first, and we're going to knock that one out of the ballpark. OKC will be a streetcar city once again.
I still laugh to myself everytime I see the site plan for Village Verde. It is classic segreagtion zoning; residential over there, commerical over here, retail in that spot, etc. The only thing that makes it 'urban' is it's size but it isn't sustainable.
This is more urban than Village Verde and it is in the Yemen desert. It is also sustainable as it has been there for 500 years in its current form.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shibam
That would be Village No-Verde.
Some might find this interesting, architecturally.
Brick and Mortar: Tallest buildings of each U.S. city, 1950
Per request of Doug, this image is for those that think we are becoming more "urban".
New York in 1905
Look Ma! No corporate plazas
Look Ma! No incredibly ugly buildings like the ones SandRidge tore down
Is that Wall Street? Or, at least, the financial district?
Broad Street.
Most of those buildings as far as I can tell, are replace with more modern ones or they changed the face of them.
I only see two trees in the last posted picture. Not environmentally friendly. I hope Devon paved the way for change in how downtown will be built/changed in the future by spacing out the skyscrapers and allowing more grass, trees, and landscaping. We don't want to just limit it to a central park nearby. We want it everywhere.
I would rather Downtown be urban with the buildings pushed out to the street than have skyscrapers in the middle of a block with trees and grass surrounding them. There's plenty of grass and trees outside of the CBD. Not to mention Myriad Gardens and hopefully the new park.
Can I get an AMEN! LOL!
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