Traffic & Transportation
A region’s transportation network is its skeleton and its veins, providing the structure and framework for people to live and circulate. This network can encourage smart and sensitive development, or it can foster living habits that cause unsustainable and environmentally harmful development patterns.
Transportation networks for most metropolitan areas in the country changed dramatically after the Federal Highway Act of 1956, which appropriated $41 billion to construct 41,000 miles of interstate roads. This sparked a sudden transformation of the urban landscape, with more and more people moving out of the city and into low-density suburban developments.
Today, we are a suburban nation, and the automobile has become the only way to travel for most Americans. Roads continue to expand, people move further away from places of work and commerce, and cities continue to struggle because of shrinking populations and tax bases. Metro areas have become so decentralized away from cities that auto congestion is significantly increasing, even as our federal government transportation dollars are predominantly dedicated to widening our road systems. Attempts to ease road congestion by building more driving lanes have had limited success, as the street-widening often brings more drivers onto the roads. Such street designs makes alternate transportation methods impossible, as walking or biking are too dangerous and sprawl communities are too spread-out and disjointed to support a public mass transit or bus system.
With President Obama’s “economic stimulus” bill, there has been a new focus on dedicating federal dollars to alternate transportation projects such as public transit. In fact, the two largest transit stimulus projects are occurring in Philadelphia: the renovation of the Girard Avenue and Spring Garden Street stations along the Broad Street Line ($25 million).
Many cities change their land use planning and regulations to encourage development around important road intersections or public transportation centers using a model known as Transit Oriented Development. Such smart growth ideas will be the model going forward, especially as we get closer to costing out the true cost of driving individual automobiles everywhere.
NoLibs development picks up | Ninth National Bank a goner | Airport expansion deal | Philly’s parks are tops
Neighbors rally to fight crime in Strawberry Mansion, River Wards | Seal the Divine Lorraine | OCF and Point Breeze | SEPTA cops strike | fund the Free Library
Spring Garden station is awash in color
A new artwork called Six Places in Motion was recently installed on the platforms of the Broad Street Line’s Spring Garden station. Does the pixelated floral abstraction strike your fancy or is it garish?
On Beyond I-95: Nothing lasts forever
Amid renewed calls to reimagine I-95, an expert panel gathered in Philly last week to talk shop about highway removal. Here are my takeaways.
Furness at Mt. Sinai, reprieve for Catholic high schools, public school closure hearings March 3, PHA to stay under HUD control, $24 million garage for Zoo
Manayunk Towpath reopened, McPherson Square’s tree problem, SEPTA’s expensive safety system, PIDC gets $50m in fed tax credits, Mac fonts Philly history
Grocery shopping at SEPTA stations?
What if you could take care of your food shopping while waiting for the train? Look out for it on a SEPTA platform near you.












Recent Comments