Open Thread 37

A little open thread while the editors are working on six pending articles.

International District/Chinatown Station has spiffy new next-arrival displays. They only have room for two short rows like “Angle Lake 10; Angle Lake 20”, but the text is large, the font and icons are contemporary but elegant, and the whole thing looks like a real subway display.

Also, at the exit there’s an overhead yellow stripe saying to tap out and that your fare depends on the distance you traveled. This complements the other things ST has been doing since 2023 to make the fare-paid areas more visible, like moving the Westlake TVMs on the north side in front of the escalators, and putting yellow stripes on the floor leading to the ORCA readers.

A call for statewide rent stabilization. ($) House Bill 2114 would limit rent increases to 7% for renewals (not new leases). It would exempt new buildings for the first ten years, and has other exceptions and tax breaks for maintenance and rising property taxes. The article says that similar measures have not led to mom-n-pop landlords exiting the market en masse as some have claimed.

Homeless politics in Burien. ($)

The movement to replace water-starved lawns ($) with the native plants most missing in the local ecosystem. I was impressed by the range of suggestions on how front and back yards can help partially restore the ecosystem that was lost when residential neighborhoods were built.

This is an open thread.

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Open Thread 36

Link is back to normal. ($) Is it, Comment Section? Mike Lindblom says the next planned closure will be June 1-2, for electrical/signal work at CID station. New escalators for CID station should arrive in late 2024, followed by other stations over this decade. There will doubtless be other disruptions to renovate 34-year-old aging tunnel.

ST has a survey on how well it did during the disruption. Beware that the first several screens don’t have a “Back” button to change your answers.

Ballard Link will have a South Downtown Hub workshop February 28, 4-7pm, at Union Station. It looks like a joint effort by ST, Seattle, and King County to refine the CID/N and CID/S station areas.

The second edition of Human Transit goes on sale today. It’s an introduction to transit-network planning by Jarrett Walker. STB editors will be rushing to buy copies. The second edition has three new chapters, and new sections and edits in almost every other chapter. Jarrett grew up in Portland, and now helps transit agencies in several countries restructure their route networks.

More below the fold.

Continue reading “Open Thread 36” | 295 comments

Metro Connects Concepts

We found Metro’s long-term Interim and 2050 network maps that were published in 2016 but taken offline in 2020. These are part of Metro Connects, a long-term vision last revised November 2021. The Interim network is what Metro planners think would be best in the ST2 era (to complement Lynnwood, Redmond, and Federal Way Link). The 2050 network is for the ST3 era (to complement Ballard, West Seattle, and Issaquah Link, and Stride 1, 2, and 3). Since Metro is King County, its scope is between Shoreline and Federal Way. Community Transit and Pierce Transit have their own long-range plans for Snohomish and Pierce Counties.

A full buildout of the two phases would require additional funding that hasn’t been identified yet. King County has talked about a Metro Connects levy but hasn’t put it on the ballot yet. In the meantime all restructures are revenue-neutral — like the upcoming Lynnwood Link, East Link, and RapidRide G restructures — so they borrow some features from the Interim network but can’t implement all the new routes or frequency. All restructures go through a subarea-specific reevaluation and public input, so the route concepts here are preliminary. Some routes have been superceded by subsequent events, but the network as a whole is the closest we have to knowing Metro’s planners’ ideals and recommendations, so it’s a useful starting point for whatever network we might want to make.

More below the fold.

Continue reading “Metro Connects Concepts” | 141 comments

Open Thread 35

The Link 1 Line reduction continues through February 4th. Sound Transit has a progress report with photos of the maintenance work. There’s a list of bus alternatives. Metro routes 49 and 70 have extra service Four more days to go.

The Swift Orange Line starts in March connecting Lynnwood Station to Edmonds College, Alderwood Mall, Ash Way P&R, Mill Creek, and McCollum P&R. Scroll down to the “March 2024” section for cascading changes to other Community Transit routes, and further changes in August and in 2025/2026. The 202 will also be rerouted in March to serve an Amazon fulfillment center in the Marysville-Arlington industrial center. Thanks to commentator Jordan for this.

A West Seattle article profiles businesses that will be displaced by West Seattle Link, and deliberates what appropriate compensation should be. It contains a quote by STB’s Martin Pagel.

A Kenmore affordable-housing project was canceled ($) due to opposition from residents that it would serve homeless people. It would have contained 100 units. “Based on state projections, Kenmore needs to build 559 units of permanent supportive housing and 1,063 housing units for people earning between zero percent to 30% of the area median income in the next 20 years to meet the region’s rate of growth and fill its housing gaps.”

Westneat on downtown Bellevue’s free demand-response shuttle ($).

How many city departments does it take to install a public toilet ($) in San Francisco? Eight. One to install the toilet, and seven to approve it and be coordinated with. The toilet in Noe Valley is expected to open in April.

Why light rail isn’t the solution for New York. (RMTransit video) Riffs on Link at 0:44 and 14:41.

How to actually get the US to build transit. (RMTransit video) Riffs on Link at 7:00 and 11:17.

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Open Thread 34

The Link 1 Line reduction continues through February 4th. The 13-to-26 minute headways continue to stretch to 30 or 45 minutes at times, and platforms and trains continue to be crowded. Sound Transit has a list of bus alternatives. Metro routes 49 and 70 have extra service during the reduction. Nine more days to go.

A ped-bike bridge at Overlake Village Station ($) over Highway 520 has opened. It has a green tile pattern reminiscent of a forest, Pong, or the Crocodile Cafe. It’s not to be confused with the ped bridge at Redmond Tech Station, or the one at Shoreline South/148th station.

Adjacent homeowners won a court case over the ownership of shoreline land along the East Sammamish Lake Trail ($) in Sammamish. There’s now a continuous series of trails from Golden Gardens in Seattle to the Issquah-Preston Trail. Although what’s that gap in Woodinville where it goes to a residential street for a few blocks?

Why to get buses out of traffic. (Not Just Bikes video)

A ride on the Empire Builder train between Spokane and Chicago. (Noel Philips video)

If the Link reduction has gotten you down, never fear, there’s still time to stop a douchebag. Protecting Moscow sidewalks from car intrusions. It’s unbelievable how many cars drive on the sidewalk there. When I was there in the 90s that wasn’t an issue because few people had cars. (StopXam video, “Twice is a Coincidence”)

This is an open thread.

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Open Thread 33: Link Meltdown

The Link 1 Line reduction continues through February 4th. At times the 13-to-26 minute headways continue to stretch 10 minutes longer, with crowded platforms and trains. There have been additional outages and single-tracking in Rainier Valley every couple days, sometimes making the 13-minute segments run at 30 minutes. Click the link for the weekday and weekend operational plan. There’s also a list of bus alternatives. Sound Transit suggests traveling off-peak or taking an alternative if you can. We suggest taking an alternative. If your trip is long like to Snohomish County or the airport and the alternatives are too time-consuming, good luck with Link. The busiest times are 4-6 pm. Metro bus 70 has extra service between downtown and the U-District. Bus 49 has extra service and serves both those places and Capitol Hill.

The East Link Starter Line began operational testing on the 22nd. Expect trains every 10-15 minutes, including at level crossings in Bel-Red and south Redmond. Passenger service is expected to start in March.

Upcoming Link opening dates 2024-2026, as compiled by Al S from a capital progress report. These haven’t been announced, so I’d view them as goals rather than certainties.

Costs soar again ($) for the City Center Connector streetcar segment.

The state is considering two bills to loosen zoning for housing, HB 2160 and SB 6024.

Malls are back. ($) Generation Z, who had a smartphone in grade school, prefers to shop in-person.

10 suburbs that have become more city-like in the past fourteen years. (CityNerd video)

This article is brought to you by the numbers 49 and 70. This is an open thread.

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Open Thread 32: Rail Roundup

This article is brought you by the 1 Line, ST Express, Sounder, and the SLU streetcar.

The Link 1 Line reduction is ongoing through February 4th. Weekdays downtown service is 26 minutes; north of UW and south of SODO is 13-minutes. However, actual service has had some gaps that are 10 minutes longer than that, and have lead to crowded platforms. ST suggests traveling outside peak hours if you can; the busiest times are between 4 and 6pm. Weekends the downtown tunnel is closed, and a shuttle bus runs between Capitol Hill and SODO. See the link for the full (nominal) schedule and bus alternatives. STB commentators have seen workers replacing the next-arrival displays downtown, and single-tracking, while ST does track refurbishment and other maintenance in preparation for Lynnwood Link and Line 2.

The SLU Streetcar will be closed this weekend. Use buses C, 40, or 70 instead.

Sound Transit is proposing an interim ST Express restructure for Lynnwood Link this fall. It wants to continue route 510 between Everett and downtown Seattle peak hours, and add a new route 515 between Lynnwood and downtown Seattle every 10 minutes peak hours. This is to alleviate potential overcrowding on Link until Line 2 opens in 2025. Link will be “8-10 minutes”. It’s unclear whether that’s still less than current service (8 minutes peak, 10 minutes off-peak, not counting the reduction above), or if they’ve solved the train-storage issue. The 512 and 513 may be truncated at Lynnwood, and the 511 deleted, but that’s not certain yet. ST is taking email comments about this proposal until January 30th at servicechanges@soundtransit.org.

The results of the Sounder South expansion survey are out. It currently runs between Tacoma and Seattle peak hours, every 20 minutes in the peak direction, and 3-4 runs reverse-peak. In the survey, 90% of respondents prefer additional trips over longer trains. 81.6% want weekend service; 57% want more weekday service. 75.3% support reducing peak-hour service to shift runs to other times (“contingent on BNSF approval”). That’s a strong majority for the changes STB authors want to see.

Tokyo’s urban-renewal mistake was a 1972 tower of detachable capsule apartments ($). It looks like a beehive of front-loading washing machines. “Erected on the edge of the upscale Ginza district, Kurokawa’s capsule tower reimagined minimal modern living. Each capsule was just large enough for a bed, closet, workstation, bathroom and a porthole window. Deluxe versions came with a built-in Sony stereo, [reel-to-reel] tape deck, color TV and digital clock.” It was intended that each capsule could move with its owner to another location as needed, and capsules could be replaced every 25 without modifying the tower. Now the tower is demolished, and 23 of the tiny apartments have been refurbished and distributed as museum exhibits, airBnB’s, or work/art spaces. The airBnBs are $1,400 a night, so start saving for the 4-capsule cluster or the future 5-capsule village, both outside Tokyo.

This is an open thread.

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Add Bike Lanes Away from Buses

The Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) deserves a lot of credit for adding bike lanes and various bus improvements throughout the city. They may not be building them fast enough, but they are building them.

Unfortunately, far too often, the bike lanes are built right where the buses run. Quite often this limits the ability of SDOT to then add bus improvements (like bus or BAT lanes). The street just isn’t wide enough. While this is inevitable in some cases, whenever possible bike lanes should be added where they won’t conflict with buses.

For example, consider Fremont Avenue in the north end of Seattle. At North 110th Street it connects to the Interurban Trail — a major bike route that extends all the way to Everett. From 110th to 77th, Fremont Avenue is a Greenway. Work has been done to make the route more pleasant and safer for riders. Much of the work is quite extensive. At major intersections bicycles are allowed to go straight, but cars are not. It has practically everything you want in a bike route — except bike lanes. To the west there is a similar street: 1st Avenue NW. It isn’t quite as good (cars are allowed to follow 1st on major intersections) but it is close. It wouldn’t take that much effort to reach the same quality as Fremont Avenue. In both cases it needs bike lanes. Instead, the bike lanes come and go on Greenwood Avenue, a street with a major bus route (the Metro 5). There are additions to the bike lanes being considered as part of improvements to the 5. These are all well and good, but they create a needless conflict with buses and bus infrastructure. In most cases, there is a limited amount of street width. You can’t add bike lanes and bus lanes (or BAT lanes) in the same place. Quite often we are simply putting the bike lanes in the wrong place.

In some cases these conflicts are inevitable. Eastlake is a great example of this. It is a critical bike path. It is a very important transit corridor. There is only so much room. The end result is a plan that largely favors bikes, which I believe was the right call. It is too important a bike corridor, and there is no good alternative. While it took a while, SDOT has managed to come up with a plan that should allow the buses to avoid the worst congestion, while maintaining good speed and safety for bicyclists.

But quite often, we don’t have to make that choice. More recently, SDOT started planning around the NE 130th Station. Most of the riders will come from buses to the east and west via the 130th/Roosevelt/125 corridor. It is essential that the buses avoid congestion, and offer riders a fast connection to Link. But it is also a significant bike corridor. There are only a handful of crossings of I-5, and 130th is one of them. Between the station and 1st Avenue NE, there is no alternative but to travel along (or right next to) 130th. But west of 1st NE, there are two very good alternatives for bicyclists. North of 130th, riders could take Roosevelt to Meridian and then either stay on Roosevelt (to Aurora & 145th) or go west on 137th. South of 130th, there is 128th. This would require a new traffic light at 128th & Aurora, but it would completely replace the dreaded crossing of Aurora at 130th. It will prove very difficult to make 130th & Aurora safe, let alone pleasant for riders. There is a pedestrian overpass, but it doesn’t work for bikes. Everyone else has to deal with cars and trucks making turns from one major street to another. In contrast, while it would require some money to add a traffic light (and beg buttons) at 128th, it would be remarkably safe, similar to the excellent crossing at 92nd. Once riders crossed Aurora at 128th, they could easily connect to the aforementioned Interurban trail, or continue west toward Broadview. The result would be an excellent set of bike paths that serve both sides of 130th. Riders looking for a bike lane would be able to avoid having to go all the way north or south to 130th, while also avoiding the nasty crossing of Aurora. This is a great opportunity to create a system that is ideal for bikes and buses.

These opportunities are not everywhere. In many cases we have to make tough decisions as to whether to prioritize bikes or buses on a corridor that is important for both. But whenever possible, we should move bike lanes onto streets that don’t conflict with buses.

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The Link Reduction Can Start

The Link reduction starts Saturday and runs three weeks (January 13-February 4).

  • Weekdays end-to-end Northgate-Angle Lake trains will run every 26 minutes; this will be the only downtown service. Additional short runs will offer combined 13-minute service (instead of 8-10) Northgate-UW and SODO-Angle Lake.
  • Weekends the downtown tunnel will be closed. A bus shuttle will replace it every 10-15 minutes between Capitol Hill and SODO. North of Capitol Hill and south of SODO trains will run every 15 minutes (instead of 10).

A full Link reduction schedule is here. ST has a page of bus alternatives for various trip pairs, and tips for navigating the disruption. The reduction is for several maintenance projects, including track maintenance.

In our experience with past reductions, the frequency may change after the first couple days, and it may return to normal a few days or a week early.

Other transit news and open thread below the fold.

Goran Sparrman has been named interim CEO of Sound Transit. ($) We covered his candidacy a few days ago. It looks like his first job will be managing the reduction. Here’s a suggestion: in the last reduction in August, Julie Timm went personally to Pioneer Square Station to observe how well the transfer was working and to talk with passengers. Sparrman should do the equivalent.

Monday is the Martin Luther King holiday. Metro, ST Express, Sounder, Pierce Transit will run as normal (Weekday). Link will be on the Weekend Reduction schedule. The T Line will be on Saturday schedule. Community Transit and Everett Transit don’t say on their website so they’re probably Weekday (?). Everett Transit has a reroute on routes 3 North, 6, and 29 due to an MLK parade, and warns that real-time arrival information may be inaccurate then.

In case of snow, Metro has a Winter Guide. In the past it had a map with colors showing each subarea’s status: all routes normal (green), some snow routes (yellow), all snow routes (red), or the Emergency Snow Network (blue). Hopefully it will bring that back if needed. If snow is predicted, check your agency’s home page or sign up for alerts. Sound Transit says this about snow.

This article is brought to you by Erich Kästner. Chapter 3 of Emil and the Detectives is titled “Die Reise nach Berlin kann losgehen”. The translation is “The Trip to Berlin Can Start” (May Massee, 1929). The German wording is normal; the English wording is not. The novel has a train trip from a provincial town, a streetcar, a horsecar (horse-powered streetcar = Pferdebahn), a boy who’s fascinated by automobiles but rides transit, and a girl who’s proud of her bicycle.

This is an open thread.

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Focus on SLU and Ballard

The Ballard and SLU light rail segment is expected to get up to 57,000 riders. That’s higher than any of the other Link projects planned for ST3 (Everett, Tacoma Dome, West Seattle, or Issaquah). Construction cost rise faster than Sound Transit’s income, transit ridership has dipped, and rush-hour peaks have flattened. In this environment Sound Transit should focus on the Ballard line, and postpone the others until demand justifies the construction and operation.

With the departure of Sound Transit’s CEO, the beginning of the year would be a good opportunity for the Board or an interim CEO to reassess their construction priorities. When ST3 was envisioned a decade ago, the largest job center was in downtown Seattle. Now growth has spread out to other parts of the city and the Eastside. Amazon, Google, and Facebook have offices in both downtown and the Eastside. Since the pandemic many of those offices are often empty. Work schedules are not as rigid anymore, reducing the demand during the morning and afternoon peaks. While midweek demand in general has dropped, demand on the weekend has increased, some Saturdays have seen higher ridership than on a weekday. Some people have switched from transit to e-bikes or back to their car as bus services had become less reliable due to staff and maintenance parts shortages. It seems the shortages are now getting addressed. If we are not careful and ignore all these changes, we may end up with light rail lines with low ridership and less frequent service which would make transit even less appealing. We may be better off with high frequency bus lines until the ridership supports construction of high frequency rail. The demand along the Ballard line corridor seems to be the only line which meets these criteria besides some of the lines already under construction.

Continue reading “Focus on SLU and Ballard” | 149 comments

Sound Transit Board considers Goran Sparrman for interim CEO

With Julie Timm’s departure as Sound Transit CEO, the Board today announced that they will be considering Goran Sparrman to serve in an interim capacity. The Board will hold a special meeting this Thursday, January 11th. From the press release:

“Goran is well-respected for his skill and knowledge in transportation and infrastructure projects,” said Sound Transit Vice Chair and Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers. “He’s a trusted regional leader who would bring a steady hand to an agency with which he is already familiar.”

“In my years of experience working with Sound Transit, I know the staff to be dedicated professionals committed to building and operating the transit system our region deserves,” Sparrman said. “I’m looking forward to collaborating with them as we build on the successes that are coming this year and look for solutions for the challenges that lie ahead.”

Sparrman is well known and has been around the block in local transportation circles. He is currently a VP at HNTB and previously worked both for Seattle and Bellevue in their respective transportation departments. Most notably, he directed BDOT during the Bellevue city council’s tussle with Sound Transit over East Link alignment planning.

Sparrman has a civil engineering background and is a licensed PE, which could bode well for an agency that has struggled from recent construction and engineering challenges.

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Reroutes on First Hill

The fire at 9th & Madison ($) has caused several bus reroutes and road closures, and impacted RapidRide G construction. From SDOT’s email alert:

  • Route 12: The eastbound Rt 12 is detoured off Marion St at 3rd Ave. Eastbound buses are traveling on 3rd Ave to James St, Boren Ave, and returning on Madison St at Boren Ave. The westbound Rt 12 is detoured off Madison St at Boren Ave. Westbound buses are traveling on Boren Ave, to James St, to 3rd Ave, and returning to Madison St at 3rd Ave.
  • Route 60: The eastbound Rt 60 is detoured off 9th Ave at James St. Eastbound buses are traveling on 9th Ave to James St, Boren Ave, and returning to Madison St at Boren Ave. The westbound Rt 60 is detoured off Madison St at Boren Ave. Westbound buses are traveling on Madison St to Boren Ave, James St, and returning to 9th Ave at James St.
  • Other reroutes on routes 193, 302, 303, and 322.

RapidRide G construction: “We’re working with the contractor to review the remaining construction schedule, adjust the timing of some construction activities, and identify other areas where we can continue safely working to manage any potential delays caused by the fire response.”

Madison Street and its sidewalks are closed between 8th and 9th Avenues. 9th Avenue’s sidewalks are closed between Madison and Marion Streets, although the street is open. Pedestrian access to buildings is maintained if safety allows it.

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ST Board 2024 Begins to Take Shape

Three new members are joining the Sound Transit board: Dan Strauss, Seattle councilmember representing Ballard; Girmay Zahily, county councilmember representing south Seattle; and Angela Birney, mayor of Redmond. The West Seattle Blog and The Urbanist have coverage. In the latter, Doug Trumm highlights the Link issues in their neighborhoods. Another board position in Pierce County has not been announced yet.

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Open Thread 31

Sound Transit has published a full Link-reduction schedule for January 13-February 4. All train runs are listed. although the weekend down bus shuttle is still just “every 10-15 minutes”. There are also regular bus routes that may help avoid the gap for certain trip pairs.

Seattle Transit Map has released a night owl update (1-5am). The regular Seattle map with all transit services graded by frequency is also available. These maps are free and are produced by STB’s Oran Viriyincy.

ST explores fare gates ($) at Link stations. “Consultants said retrofitting the five busiest stations — Northgate, University District, Capitol Hill, Westlake, and International District/Chinatown — for $31 million would break even within one to seven years, and reap $88 million-plus over 20 years.” That’s just one concept, and the article cautions that the cost and revenue would have to be verified. The ST board will get a detailed staff briefing on fare gates sometime this year. The Urbanist analyzed the last report in 2022.

An Uptown lowrise ($) may be the first Seattle office building to be converted to apartments. Stream Real Estate has filed a plan with the city to convert the 4-story building to 68 one- and two-bedroom apartments, and add a 5th story on top to leverage the Elliott Bay views. The building would have a small “urban farm” in the outdoor amenities area.

The second edition of Human Transit will be published February 6th. The preface and table of contents are available online.

Amsterdam has a Pruitt-Igoe like urban-renewal failure called the Bijlmer. It’s a cluster of highrise tower-in-the-park apartment buildings connected to highways with a strict separation of uses. The honeycomb-shaped buildings look like the Pentagon unrapped. Many Amsterdam residents refused to live there, and it became a ghetto. Ultimately several buildings were demolished and the remainder were modified. (Hoog video)

RMTransit reflects on the past and future of his transit video channel.

This is an open thread.

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Free Transit New Year’s Eve

This article is brought to you by the numbers 3 and 2023 and the city of Montreal.

Transit is free New Year’s Eve all day — from 3am Sunday to 3am Monday — on Metro, Sound Transit, Community Transit, Everett Transit, the Seattle Streetcar, Seattle Center Monorail, King County Water Taxi, and Metro’s van services. Pierce Transit is not listed and its website has nothing about it. Link will extend its late-night service every 15 minutes until 2am, and the T Line every 20 minutes until 12:40am. ST Express will have unspecified additional service. Metro, CT, and ET buses will be on Sunday schedule. The Monorail will run northbound until 11pm, and southbound between 12:30am and 1am.

On New Year’s Day (Monday) fares will be required, and transit will run on Sunday schedule. Everett Transit will have no service Monday.

The Link reduction January 13 to February 4 is still on. I saw a sign about it at Roosevelt Station last Tuesday with a nice diagram of the service. On weekdays trains will run the full length between Northgate and Angle Lake every 26 minutes, and that will be the only downtown service. Additional trains will run Northgate-Capitol Hill and Stadium-Angle Lake for combined 13 minute service in the tails. On weekends the downtown tunnel will be closed, and shuttle buses will run between Capitol Hill and SODO (not Stadium).

Small is beautiful in train stations? Pedestrian Observations thinks the 125th Street station is oversized on New York’s Second Avenue Subway, and it’s not for grand iconic architecture but to give each department a separate staff breakroom paid by external money.

Meanwhile RMTransit got a construction tour of the Grand Paris Express metro expansion and says it’s awesome. And Lima, Peru, opened an automated line.

An in-depth look at Montreal transit and land use by Not Just Bikes. The first part of the video is the positives. The negatives start at 17:13 and go on for 30 minutes.

Canada and the US are the only two countries in the world where 4+ story narrow buildings aren’t allowed to be built anymore, and it’s because of staircases. But Seattle is an exception. (About Here video)

This is an open thread.

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Open Thread 30

This article is brought to you by Colman Park.

One Saturday this month I decided to visit Colman Park by only frequent transit (so not the 27 or 14). I’d been to Colman Park a few times before, taking the 27 to the end and and using the pedestrian underpass under Lake Washington Blvd to the park. I found the park extends quite a way and has several different parts. This time I decided to see if I could get there by frequent transit. I took the 8 to the I-90 trail, which has a cluster of parks around MLK. The bus stop was at South Massachusetts Street at the south end of that cluster. Immediately I had to walk up a very steep hill from 27th to 31st. 31st is where the 14 runs, and overlooks the park, and has a park entrance. The entrance had a big stairway down. I didn’t want to go down those stairs and back up after I’d gone up a steep hill that I’d have to go back down again, so I settled with just looking down at the park. It was a sea of bare trees with whitish bark. (Birch trees?) And beyond that, beautiful Lake Washington and the Cascade foothills.

Continue reading “Open Thread 30” | 232 comments

Open Thread 29

It’s a Link kind of week.

ST has new West Seattle Link station area concepts, reviewed by The Urbanist and the West Seattle Blog.

The Link reduction January 12-February 4 is still on.

Othello Station will get “variable information signs” installed starting December 15th. There have been announcements about these at other stations. I assume they’re like the TV monitors installed at Westlake this year? The Westlake ones have messages about ballgame dates, tourist attractions, and pop trivia. Has anyone seen new displays at other stations in the past couple months?

The cost of car dependency. (CityNerd video)

Tracing a 1904 Stockholm streetcar map. (ASMRctica video)

This is an open thread.

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Julie Timm leaving Sound Transit

Sound Transit CEO Julie Timm has announced her resignation, effective January 12th:

Sound Transit CEO Julie Timm announced today she will be leaving the agency in order to return to the East Coast to take care of family matters. Since joining Sound Transit in September 2022, Timm has overseen a renewed emphasis on the rider experience as Sound Transit approaches the opening of several new extensions, starting with East Link next spring. Her focus and leadership in centering current and future riders in the agency’s capital and operating programs will benefit the region for years to come.

Timm’s time as ST’s CEO was not long but saw its ups and downs. The Tacoma Link extension to Hilltop opened on her watch and her tenure was also characterized by working around East Link construction mishaps, Link service disruptions, and evolving fare policy. We wish her the best as she moves on and for Sound Transit to quickly find a qualified replacement.

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Open Thread 28

Flat-fare Link at $3 is almost a done deal. ($)

Coincidentally, RMTransit has a new video on flat fares, zones, and distance-based fares.

An in-depth look at Bogotá’s TransMilenio BRT, which was a model for several other cities. This article outlines its history, how later politicians neglected it, and follows a woman on a five-bus commute. ($)

New York City’s congestion pricing is almost in place. $15 tolls are likely. ($)

High housing prices across the country. ($)

STB’s Martin Pagel has two articles in the World Transport Journal. Page 62 discusses gondolas that have been considered in Seattle. Page 13 has a primer on ropeways, the general term for gondolas and air trams.

King County is updating its comprehensive plan next year. Here’s the proposed draft. The EIS is taking comments through January 31. (This is separate from Seattle’s comprehensive plan update, which is also ongoing.)

A list of public gardens in Seattle and the northwest, suitable for forest bathing. ($) The Seattle Sensory Garden has things for all five senses. It’s next to the rose garden on the south end of the Woodland Park Zoo. The Highline SeaTac Botanical Garden also has a sensory garden and is worth visiting, although it’s a mile from a bus stop. (128 is closest, or A).

This is an open thread.

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Evolution of Urban Guideways

Sound Transit Link construction along I-5 (North Seattle by NE 145th St by author)

While traditional steel rail works well on the surface, Sound Transit and many other transit agencies favor elevated tracks in more semi-urban areas (tunnels in the urban core). To expedite construction of elevated guideways for the 1962 World’s Fair, Seattle turned to Germany for trains to run on a prefabricated monorail. Now another German manufacturer is testing a prefabricated dual guideway system with integrated maglev propulsion.

Continue reading “Evolution of Urban Guideways” | 124 comments