I'm trying to imagine how many people will be crossing that in August at 6PM versus December at 6PM? 95 degrees and 25 MPH south wind or 30 degrees and 25MPH north wind?
I'm trying to imagine how many people will be crossing that in August at 6PM versus December at 6PM? 95 degrees and 25 MPH south wind or 30 degrees and 25MPH north wind?
I've averaged 4.4 miles a day for a year and a half; I document on a big spreadsheet. I may miss one day a month due to my schedule, but not the weather.
You can walk any day of the year in OKC if you dress appropriately.
For residents yes, but the heat and humidity can be overbearing for tourists (which I fully realize is a small percentage of any pedestrians in OKC). I am coming to town next week, and I can remember that the last time I was in OKC, it felt like a belt was wrapped tight around my lungs because of the humidity and air pressure. Of course, I am coming from an elevation of over a mile (6k feet) and a near-desert environment. So the relative weight of the air and humidity levels in OKC vs Colorado can feel like drowning in a pressure chamber. I was completely out of breath climbing the hill at Scissortail park on a mild 70-degree day. So, that is certainly a factor, but again I realize I am in the minority of walkers. I agree with Pete with one caveat, dressed appropriately while acclimated to the weather conditions is entirely possible to do.
And, to be completely fair to OKC I feel that this is something any out-of-towner should expect when traveling to any city in a different elevation and climate zone. I feel the same way in Chicago or Portland - the air feels like a ton of bricks on my chest.
That's a great picture, Pete. Really makes me wish something could be done with that way-too-large highway exit ramp. That just smothers connectivity like a weighted blanket.
Really that ramp in particular should just be removed.
The one thing i wished they did for this area was build a reinforced lid over the interstate from one bridge to the other, it would've made nice for a small highrise to sit on it, that or house some commercial developments, maybe a park for this area. But i guess they'll take their queues from Atlanta prior reluctance.
I was wondering about that exact thing, Rover. There's certainly room inside that one cloverleaf between the highway and Convergence for a building that could be connected to Convergence via a skybridge.
In St. Louis I can think of one example where an off ramp was built to encircle an existing building but I don't know if I have seen it happen the other way where the ramp came first. It would seem that the state/ODOT/whomever could make money selling that prime real estate? I don't know. May be too "out there" of an idea.
That whole Harrison Ave exit needs to be eliminated. So much land could be opened up for use along 235
Isn't that a prime entrance for emergency vehicles accessing the OU hospital? I can't remember what street the ER is on. But otherwise, I agree.
Some photoshopping fun I did with this area. Took out 3 of the cloverleaves and extended Walnut Ave and Russell M Perry/Stiles Ave north over/under 235. Also photoshopped in more buildings and houses throughout.
We need to go back and revisit this: https://www.okctalk.com/content.php?...Science-Center
A massive infrastructure bill was just passed and has billions available for this sort of thing
^DITTO^
But unfortunately it's the Oklahoma way to draw up renders and concepts of modern grandeur and finalize plans much more diluted and significantly inferior to what was originally proposed. For example: Oklahoma Boulevard, the downtown OG&E complex, Producers Coop, the OU Medical Tower, this project, the State Fair Arena, the OMNI to some degree (that brutalist concrete facing on the east side), and a number of others. The only reason why I don't share that same attitude with OKANA is that the Chickasaw Nation is pretty firm on putting out what they have drawn out, but the DREAM hotel proposed for the UHaul lot rings out to me quite definitively (I hope I am wrong).
Yep. It’s par for the course. OKC downscales more projects than any city I’ve seen. It’s sad and it sucks.
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