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Originally Posted by
hoyasooner
Hoya's MAPS plan
The purpose of MAPS, as I see it, is to 1) improve the quality of life for citizens, 2) improve the economic health of the city, and 3) to move OKC forward to make it the city we want it to be in the future. Ideally every MAPS project should do all 3 of these. At a minimum, it should accomplish 2 of the 3. But at every step, we should keep in mind the third goal -- we should be constantly moving forward towards remaking the city into a better place to live. Every thing we do should make OKC of 30 years from now a much better place than OKC today.
With that in mind, here's my proposal for the next big MAPS. This doesn't necessarily have to be MAPS 4. We could allow the tax could lapse, we could use a MAPS 4 for some incremental improvements (expand streetcar to Chesapeake, tear down crappy apartments on 10th, build some sidewalks, etc). But this is my plan for the big one, the one that transforms OKC in a major way.
It is a combination of the traditional MAPS system, an agreement with neighboring cities, a set of municipal bonds, and a set of TIF programs. It would probably be the most aggressive capital spending project the metro area has ever undertaken. It is primarily transportation oriented, with funding and requirements for TOD.
The Plan:
A Regional Transit Authority has already been formed (in real life, not just in Hoyaworld), bringing OKC, Moore, Norman, Del City, MWC, and Edmond together to cooperate on this. Each of the cities would hold a MAPS-style election to get their share of money for the regional mass transit system. This is the plan that the city already seems to be moving forward on. We've seen the drawings with the colored lines going around the metro area, showing rail systems and rapid streetcar, etc. My plan adds on to this one.
Where mine goes farther is a series of bonds and an aggressive TIF program to ensure that these areas get the maximum benefit possible from the mass transit investment. Let's reinvest in our cities, and do it right. The bond money and the TIF money would fund building quality transit-oriented development at each rail stop. We don't want park and ride systems there. You shouldn't arrive at the Midwest City rail stop and see a massive parking lot there. Some structured parking would exist, but primarily we want a walkable area with shopping, housing, entertainment, offices, etc. These do not have to be incredibly large to begin with. Each city will set aside a certain area at each stop that will be dedicated for TOD.
So, each new stop will have the area within a certain distance (say, a 5 minute walk) rezoned so that it follows form-based codes. This will make sure that future development in the area creates the most benefit for the community. When private development takes off (and it will), there should be guidelines in place so developers know exactly what to build, and how to do it. Most suburban developers in this area really have no idea what we're looking for here. It will be a brand new experience for them and they need to have guidance and support.
Bond money will be used to install sidewalks, bike paths, and other types of infrastructure to connect existing neighborhoods to the train station, to help prepare the cities for the development that will follow. There are a lot of people who already live in these cities, and we should make it as easy as possible for them to get to the station without using a car. So any neighborhood within a mile of the station should have improvements to it that maximize the abilities of the people in it to get to the station. This might mean putting in pedestrian bridges over a creek that runs through the neighborhood. It might mean putting in street signs directing you to the station, with walk times and bike times listed. It might mean putting in better crosswalks on busy streets, or putting in a lot more sidewalks.
Bond money and TIF money will also be used to create, perhaps in partnership with a private developer, the first TOD along each stop. This does not have to be massive, but it has to be done right. I'd like to see at least 5 or 6 high-quality buildings (no EIFS) at each stop, each building 3 or 4 stories tall, in a small area around the stops, with shopping and offices, but primarily housing. This has the advantage of showing people exactly what they've paid for, exactly the type of development they can expect to see. In the coming years, all new construction within the 5 minute-walk area will follow the pattern. Each city can have its own architectural style and its own feel.
The point of all this is to push the city towards quality development as fast as we can. Slow progression puts the city at an economic disadvantage. For some areas, like Del City and Midwest City, this will be a big boost for them, raising the perception of the cities and bringing new, quality development. If living in the Del City TOD area means you can live in a cool townhouse that is a 2 minute walk from a lot of amenities, and you are right next to the streetcar that brings you to downtown, it elimnates some of the stigma that has come to be associated with that city (and as a Del City boy, I want that). It makes the city, at least the new TOD part, much more desirable. For Moore, Norman, and Edmond, it ensures that at least a portion of their growth will be in a small area, improving the tax base and reducing future tax burdens that come with sprawling growth.
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