I'm going to put you down in the No column Spartan.
I'm going to put you down in the No column Spartan.
OKC doesn't have a traffic problem yet.
Our symptoms are the result of poor interchanges and bad drivers.
Bad drivers do not use the road efficiently...waiting until the last second to accelerate to get onto the highway, merging at incredibly slow speeds causing others behind to slow down and compact, slowing down for turns on interstates, coming to near complete stops when turning from a street to a driveway, blocking intersections, blocking the 'fast' lanes at 5mph under the speed limit, etc.
If we had better interchanges and more efficient use of our roadways by having better drivers we would be a lot better.
I know some of the ones on the one line in Austin are that way but most were slated to have TOD development and some did have developers signed up and the August 2008 happened. We had a few projects terminated that were TOD related in Austin because of the credit crisis. Most of those still haven't started back up because the land has been tied up in bankruptcies. For the most part Austin's system is run on former freight track so it wasn't exactly as well directed as the Denver system which was more carved out of highway right of way than existing rail lines. I do agree that if it is located near existing density it makes it a better solution for everyone.
I'm with Plutonic, you really have to have both and all. You can't only put in density related stations because then you're forcing the outliers to drive to get to density to then get on the train. You really need to have all options available, from the most dense station downtown (or wherever you chose to have the lines cross the most) to a remote station with the large lot.
D.C. is a great example of how a system can work in a diverse environment....and across state/district lines, which requires a LOT of cooperation. You've got the large lot stations in places like Bathesda, MD where the "locals" drive and park and then ride into the core. Then you've also got the stations with zero parking like on the Mall. The same system is also above and below ground depending on where you are in the system. It's fast, reliable, CLEAN, and safe.
It isn't that I hate cars but I believe they are an enabler of things that have had a bad impact on our country, society, and environment over the last 60 years. We have simply become so dependent on them that everyone has to own one to participate in life. Kids can't walk to school or walk to a corner market, teenagers struggle to get to work, the poor have to resort to spending hours on buses, the elderly get abandoned and survive on "meals on wheels" programs, parents spend hours commuting, road rage, aggressive driving, and drunk driving kill 10,000+ people a year (not to mention all the people who are injured and don't die), people spend almost as much on transportation as the do on housing (and in some cases more), we have to maintain a global military to keep the oil flowing at affordable prices, sprawl has divided us by race and income at levels of precision previously unthinkable, many of our cities have air quality so poor that people can't go outside for days at a time, we build entire disposable neighborhoods, etc... etc... etc...
You know, maybe I do hate cars . Al Gore called them the most destructive force on the planet and being a good right-winger I dismissed that as crazy talk from a loon, but I think now he was right about that.
Anyhow, let's not try to get to far off the topic at hand (a lot of that is going around lately).
Missed this the other day. Sooner Express runs from Campus through Norman and then runs as an express to DT OKC. It has stops inside OKC from DT into HSC and on to State capitol area before returning into DT and over to the transit Center. It then is express back to Norman and on to Campus. While inside either community, a tug on the rope signals driver you want off at next stop. That may be a marked stop or it may be just past an upcoming intersection.
Departing Norman, I only board at the Homeland off NW24 / W Robinson. Most times I step off at the first DT OKC stop and stroll to where I am going. On return trips, I pick it up at the Transit Center and either pop off at the Homeland, or if I did not have my car awaiting, I'll pop off in DT Norman, say W Main / Webster and stroll to somewhere nearby to eat, the Library, Post Office or pop in on a friend who offices near the P.O.
Using the Homeland Stop as the focal point:
Norman to OKC buses depart at 6:35, 7:00 and 8:30 a.m. with afternoon runs at 2:05 and 4:35.
OKC to Norman buses depart transit center at 9;25 a.m. and afternoon runs at 2:55, 4:55 and 5:30
If there was a noonish bus and later eve service or weekend service, I'd gladly make use of it. There are times I drive to the city because it is unlikely I'll be done in time for the 9:25 return bus but I know I'll be done long, long before the 2:55 bus. Wrapping up at 10-11, and having 3-5 hours to kill or find a spot to work out of isn't often practical.
However, I admit some days it does make for a leisurely visit to the library, a nice stroll and ample time to enjoy lunch, DT or otherwise if on/near a bus route. Fortunately, a decent amount of what I do involves a laptop or a cell phone. So as long as I can find a quiet private location and have battery power, work can proceed.
Main route - major points (but note: South Oval is presently closed and buses in Norman terminate at a Brooks Street transfer point not shown on the map, but adjacent to south oval on the east side at the ROTC/Armory building if I recall correctly.)
http://gometro.publishpath.com/Websi...e%2024_web.pdf
Thanks Kevin - I was trying to line up the stops on the route guide with the timetable but I couldn't find an entry for Sooner Express Parking lot which on the map looks to be at the corner of Robinson and 24th.
This story was on our local Jax news a few nights ago. I am at a loss for words to explain it. Why can people not see the obvious cause and effect right in front of them?
Local|Action News - Jacksonville News, Weather & Sports - ActionNewsJax.com
^
Ha! Oh, the hyperbole of local news stations: MAJOR! problem; TRAFFIC NIGHTMARE TO GET WORSE!
And always interviewing one random person on the street like that is in any way remotely relevant.
How long after widening that road (looks a lot like NW Expressway) before traffic clogs it again?
I can tell you from first hand experince the traffic in that portion of Orange Park is some of worst localized traffic I have ever seen. The off-ramp backs up 5 miles across the St Johns River everyday between 3PM and 7PM (that is not a joke - the off-ramp lanes start just after you get on the Buckman Bridge and the bridge itself is just over 3 miles long). Once you are on Blanding forget it - it goes nowhere.
We have lived in Jax for 11 years - that area has always been under construction. As soon as they get done they have to start again. When we first started looking to move here we found lots of homes in that area the were very affordable and big. We drove over on a Saturday and traffic was mind blowing. We didn't even make it to the model home in the subdivision. I just turned the car around and we looked in a different part of town.
The sad part is there is an exsiting railroad right-of-way that travels through the area, passes the largest employer in Jacksonville (NAS JAX) and goes right downtown while passing close to several historic high density neighborhood. It would be perfect for commuter rail. Sadly, we were told last night that The Better Jacksonville Plan which was supposed to pay for that kind of stuff was broke. We have 9 years left on the temporary tax and the money has all been spent.
I timed it today leaving work. It took me 6 minutes from when I got in my truck until I was on the interstate, almost to the second. That's not bad for "rush hour" traffic. From then on I was able to speed on the interstate.
I travel I-35 northbound between Norman and South OKC each morning around 6:30-7. From 19th steet in Moore to i-240 it's pretty much constant stop and go during this time frame. A couple of years ago I could travel this and not run into any stops. Now it's pretty much an everyday occurence and I've had to adjust when I leave my house to get to work. I know OKC don't really have "bad" traffic problems compared to other cities but has anyone else noticed the volume of traffic has increased greatly in this corridor in the last year or so?
This thread has more traffic than okc...pft...
No traffic to speak of in OKC. I just got back from Paris, they have 18 different rail lines (subway and above) and still have a traffic problem. It took almost an hour to get to the airport from the Arch of Triumph during NON rush hour this past Monday. They have a traffic problem, we don't. They also have an estimated 10 million people.
That is proof again the rail doesn't solve traffic congestion - for those that choose to sit in traffic.
We would have taken the train to the airport, but were told that it takes a couple of hours because of all the stops. It would have been much cheaper though, we paid 80 bucks for the taxi. Ouch
We did take the Blue Line in the Tube from Heathrow in London, that wasn't bad at all, and much less than a cab. But I hate dragging bags up and down stairs in the connections.
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