Zuplar, I mean no offense by this, because you're a good poster and downtown is for everyone in the city to enjoy, but if your hoped-for vision of downtown is that in 20 years you'll be able to drive down there in no traffic and park in the Bass Pro Shop parking lot for free like you can today, then I hope your vision never comes true.
The streetcar that is currently funded and about to be built will look like this:
You'll be able to park at Bass Pro, or whatever your chosen location is, and ride the streetcar all over downtown. Want to see a Thunder game, then go to Midtown to eat at a new restaurant, then go to Automobile Alley to shop at some of their cool unique stores, then back to Bricktown to try one of their cigar bars? Take the streetcar. You can travel several miles through downtown and never have to get back in your car or look for a parking space. Just leave it parked where it is. The biggest advantage to the streetcar is that developers know where the tracks are, they know they aren't moving tomorrow. This raises property values along the streetcar line and encourages developers to build more stuff. If I put a restaurant 50 feet from a streetcar stop, I know that I'll have people going by regularly.
You're thinking of light rail, which (hopefully) will get built at some point in the future.
If downtown ever gets to the point where you have to park out by the fairgrounds and then take the train into Bricktown, then that's going to mean there is a LOT of stuff to do there. The number of people there, and the number of things to do, will be so great that it will be almost unrecognizable compared to how it is today. Now it may not be a place for
you -- my dad moved out to the boonies as soon as he retired and I think I can probably count the number of times he's ever been downtown on one hand. You might be like him. But the fact is, the more we get
good urban development, the better our downtown will be, and the better our city will be.
It would take 50 years of solid growth, with massive public transportation spending, to turn OKC into some parking-free urbanist dream. That's not going to happen. People in OKC, for the foreseeable future anyway, will use cars, a lot. But you are right, we do need balance. The streetcar is the very first step.
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