OrangeXtreme
The Mayor of Dewitt
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2011
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The two lanes are dumb, but roundabouts are awesome.Uggh from 3 lanes in each direction to 2 in the heart of the city with a roundabout?
Uggh from 3 lanes in each direction to 2 in the heart of the city with a roundabout?
The viaduct currently only has two lanes, so why should the boulevard have more? People flipped out that the Erie Blvd redesign took it down from 3 lanes to 2 in the city and yet I haven’t seen any noticeable difference in traffic/congestion there.
The viaduct currently only has two lanes, so why should the boulevard have more? People flipped out that the Erie Blvd redesign took it down from 3 lanes to 2 in the city and yet I haven’t seen any noticeable difference in traffic/congestion there.
Isn’t that one of the big problems currently with Rte 81 and Rte 690 coming into the city - that 3 lanes of traffic from both routes in each direction entering the city get squished down to 2 lanes on 81 with exits and entrances off one side of them through the heart of the city backing up traffic and creating traffic hazards especially with breakdowns and car accidents? We currently encourage traffic entering the city viaduct with 3 or more lanes and then suddenly reduce it to 2 lanes inside the city, the target destination.
Not many use Erie Blvd other than local traffic because it has so many stop signs, traffic lights - it’s not currently a highway to really move traffic, but more like a city street like West Genesee or James but with a nicer looking median for local travel. Most everyone heading East- west takes 690 and gets off an exit on one of the numerous cross streets like Teall, Thompson, Midler, Bridge St to drive the block or 2 on Erie Blvd if they need to get to a specific Blvd or off Blvd location.
I’m confused looking at that video of the community grid, how is that pedestrian friendly? The grid appears to have what I imagine are sound and visual barriers isolating it from much of the surrounding downtown area whose goal seems to be exactly the purpose of a limited access highway - to move traffic. Not trying to be argumentative but it’s what I see. From that video, with just 2 lanes, what happens when a car is disabled or there’s an accident especially with entrances Into that 2 lane thoroughfare? I was looking for an innovative improvement dealing with the issues we have had for decades with the old rte 81 not the same old same old. Just my opinion.The community grid won’t be a highway meant to move traffic either. Replacing 81 with a 6 lane boulevard would do nothing to encourage more pedestrian-friendly traffic patterns downtown.
Insurrection?! You see the real beast within emerge during the daily commute.Downstaters are taught to merge like a zipper. Upstaters inexplicably think merging is a battle of egos.
Looking forward to the morons navigating a high congestion roundabout in the middle of the city.
I’m confused looking at that video of the community grid, how is that pedestrian friendly? The grid appears to have what I imagine are sound and visual barriers isolating it from much of the surrounding downtown area whose goal seems to be exactly the purpose of a limited access highway - to move traffic. Not trying to be argumentative but it’s what I see. From that video, with just 2 lanes, what happens when a car is disabled or there’s an accident especially with entrances Into that 2 lane thoroughfare? I was looking for an innovative improvement dealing with the issues we have had for decades with the old rte 81 not the same old same old. Just my opinion.
The only issue I see is that there is soooooo much empty space. It's still car-centric.View attachment 203572
No sound barriers. Crosswalks. Protected bike lanes. Tree lined median. I don’t see the issue with this, other than for people who want to drive through the center of downtown at 65 MPH so they can get to the mall or the truck stop.
Agree, but at least it's progress. If I see a new floating roadway idea from Salina dude, I'm going to just start drinking.The only issue I see is that there is soooooo much empty space. It's still car-centric.
The viaduct currently only has two lanes, so why should the boulevard have more? People flipped out that the Erie Blvd redesign took it down from 3 lanes to 2 in the city and yet I haven’t seen any noticeable difference in traffic/congestion there.
I’m confused looking at that video of the community grid, how is that pedestrian friendly? The grid appears to have what I imagine are sound and visual barriers isolating it from much of the surrounding downtown area whose goal seems to be exactly the purpose of a limited access highway - to move traffic. Not trying to be argumentative but it’s what I see. From that video, with just 2 lanes, what happens when a car is disabled or there’s an accident especially with entrances Into that 2 lane thoroughfare? I was looking for an innovative improvement dealing with the issues we have had for decades with the old rte 81 not the same old same old. Just my opinion.
I agree its main goal is traffic but it is still a huge improvement aesthetically over the current solution. That and nicer walks/bike paths along with plantings will certainly improve things for pedestrians too. It won't be perfect but I think it will be very nice and improve downtown.You're right. NYSDOT's traffic engineers came up with a traffic engineer solution. There's time to refine it, but I agree: if they build what's in those plans, it won't improve the ped experience and the promised development won't happen.
I agree its main goal is traffic but it is still a huge improvement aesthetically over the current solution. That and nicer walks/bike paths along with plantings will certainly improve things for pedestrians too. It won't be perfect but I think it will be very nice and improve downtown.
I hope the conversation about it it is not like the dome roof one. There, we had many chicken littles who though they knew enough to say it was a poor design and would never be build on time, etc.. Turned out great and on time/budget.
I mean, right now as a near-daily pedestrian I'm looking at a ~45-foot crossing distance on Almond Street. Turning radii are fairly tight for a street designed in the '60s. The Parsons plans from last week show crossing distances of over 100 feet and huge turning radii. None of their designs conforms to NACTO's recommended design standards for urban streets. If it's built like this, and I hope it isn't, it's going to be a much worse pedestrian experience.
It's the 1990s lipstick on a pig approach to transportation design: built it for cars to move as fast as possible, then drop down some out-of-context plantings and pavers in order to say alternate uses have been taken into account. Then everyone will act shocked when it's still a dead zone. For these projects to be successful, attention to detail (and best practices), is important. The design's got to encourage development that will activate life on whatever sidewalks are built.
What's the solution? Single lanes aren't going to cut it there. Remove the median?
You're right. NYSDOT's traffic engineers came up with a traffic engineer solution. There's time to refine it, but I agree: if they build what's in those plans, it won't improve the ped experience and the promised development won't happen.
Nah. People will be asking how the hell the dopes built the raised one in the first place. Sure, some flunky spelled Bouie incorrectly but they put a new roof on the dome without altering a single basketball/football game on budget.Come on its Syracuse, you knew the promised development was as likely to happen as SU getting the names of retired players jerseys spelled correctly at halftime ceremonies.
The best part of all this is going to be a year or two from when its all finally built (probably 15+ years away at this point) and 75% of the people start bitching that they liked the previous raised highway better and want to go back to that. Kudos to the govt for trying but they would have been better off just replacing what we have now, this will inevitable end in disaster.