Re: MAPS III??? Light Rail???
Originally Posted by
Kerry
Name one. I did a quick search for intermodal stations and trasit hubs and I can't find one that is not located downtown (execpt for park and ride stations). Penn Station and Grand central are located on Manhatten for a reason. In fact, I can not think of a single multimodal facility that is not located in a downtown district.
Technically, Union Station would be called downtown in most cities as it is only seven or eight blocks from Main Street. What I was getting at is that a location which is a few blocks one way or another isn't the most imortant piece of a transit hub, infrastructure is.
Originally Posted by
Kerry
This is how I see it. OKc has two historic train stations, Santa Fe and Union. One is located in the urban core and one is not. One has train service today and the other doesn't. One is being replace by a freeway and one isn't. If location isn't the reason for these differences please explain what is.
One has train service because Jim Brewer is a smart dude. He bought the station and made deal with Amtrack. He used all kinds of tax credit money to help finance the rehabilitation. It still doesn't have a parking lot; short term or long term. It still isn't on the most important rail corridor. It has no rail connection to the airport, Union Station does. How important is that?
One is being replaced by a freeway because the Oklahoma Department of Transportation thinks mostly in terms of highway construction and there is a very strong highway builder's lobby.
Politics as usual combined with connected, fat, middle aged white guys scratching one anothers backs till we bleed.
But I don't need to make this argument. There is so much written about this, it would sink the Queen Mary. Thoughtful papers by Professors at OU, the Mayor of Denver, transit people from Texas; must be arguments in the hundreds by more qualified people than me.
But we will probably miss this opportunity unless lighting strikes.
The Old Downtown Guy
It will take decades for Oklahoma City's
downtown core to regain its lost gritty,
dynamic urban character, but it's exciting
to observe and participate in the transformation.
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