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- WMATA presents options for SmarTrip negative balances
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- Combine the Circulator and Metro maps for visitors
- For state legislature in Montgomery County
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Smart Growth
Add jobs, retail, and housing for all income levels in walkable places like
Wisconsin Avenue, Brookland, and Minnesota-
Transit
Provide more alternatives to driving by expanding Metro capacity, building streetcar lines, and speeding up buses. Grow ridership through better maps and schedules from signs to mobile devices. Read posts »
Public Space
Our roadways are our most valuable public places. Design them to accommodate safe walking and bicycling. Locate plazas and public parks to create numerous focal points for human activity. Read posts »
Traffic
Design neighborhoods around grids instead of cul-de-sacs. Avoid building new freeways or widening existing ones which only induces further sprawl. Read posts »
Parking
Drivers create substantial traffic by circling endlessly for scarce parking. Use pricing to manage curb space and dedicate the revenue to providing alternatives to driving. Read posts »
Architecture
Preserve our row house neighborhoods and beautiful architecture that engages pedestrians visually and functionally. Eschew bad modernism that turns its back on the street and the starchitects that peddle it to "make a statement." Read posts »
Education & Safety
Make our urban areas desirable places for people and families of all ages with the highest quality education and safe neighborhoods for all. Read posts »




by burgher on Nov 3, 2009 8:46 am
by Boots on Nov 3, 2009 9:12 am
http://theblogofthecourtier.blogspot.com/2009/11/sensible-solution.html
by Boots on Nov 3, 2009 9:14 am
by AJ on Nov 3, 2009 9:16 am
by Steve on Nov 3, 2009 10:01 am
by TM on Nov 3, 2009 10:07 am
by Sand Box John on Nov 3, 2009 10:39 am
There also is the issue of the support infrastructure, schools and water sewer capacity.
That has had some impact, that doesn't change when the control of the various legislative or executive branches may change.
Similarly, having strong "adequate public facilities" laws forces linkage between growth policies and infrastructure. DC doesn't have this. Some people raise this as an issue, i.e., the failure of water mains for fires, the elementary school capacity in Ward 3, to limit proposals for intensification.
But the basic point of the Smart Growth initiative other than reducing exurban sprawl, wasn't really directed towards the Eastern Shore. By definition it isn't in the catchment area for fixed rail transit.
As John Porcari said more than once, all of Maryland's projected population increases for the next few decades could be accommodated by increasing the intensification of land use in the catchment area of transit stations...
by Richard Layman on Nov 3, 2009 3:46 pm
There are pros and cons to the system and it depends how its implemented. If pedestrians ONLY get walk during the all-ways its a problem, because nobody likes waiting to cross when the cars have green and theres no obstacle to safe passage.
by J on Nov 3, 2009 4:28 pm
The Boston area also has something I don't think I've seen here too often, which is pedestrian crossings that are button activated only, where the lights are otherwise blinking green or blinking yellow. When a ped presses, it can stop the traffic, but otherwise traffic is free to proceed. Seems to minimize wait times all around.
by ah on Nov 3, 2009 4:32 pm
by trainsintokyo on Nov 3, 2009 8:02 pm
by Gavin Baker on Nov 3, 2009 9:37 pm
by ah on Nov 3, 2009 10:26 pm
The three smart growth projects that I am familiar with over here on the Eastern Shore never had a transit component in them. They were/are designed in a manner that would allegedly reduce the need to use an automobile, pedestrian friendly access to commercial, retail and other amenities.
by Sand Box John on Nov 3, 2009 11:32 pm
We had something like that in Chevy Chase DC, but somehow the many supposedly intelligent residents of the community found it too confusing, so DDOT changed it to a regular light.
by Andrew on Nov 4, 2009 6:28 am
by Kelly on Nov 4, 2009 5:46 pm
Barnes had an inventive mind and persuasive personality and is credited with a number of applied traffic engineering inventions, including actuated traffic signals, which are signals that change when the presence of an automobile is registered (usually by a crossing of a mechanical or electronic treadle) or when a pedestrian pushes a button.
The Barnes Dance is a pedestrian-oriented traffic signal cycling system that stops all traffic in an intersection at one point in the cycle. This allows pedestrians to get through the intersection at the same time by crossing the street in any direction, including diagonally. The best dances usually took place in the middle of the cycle where the diaagonals all crossed in the center of the intersection.
According to Baltimoreans, the first Barnes Dance intersection was installed in the early 1940s. Denver claims that it was the first city to adopt the Barnes Dance, but they didn't appear there until the late 1940s. Washington had a number of Barnes Dance intersections in around its F Street shopping district in the 1950s and 1960s.
Barnes is also credited with shooting down one of Robert Moses's grandiose plans, an elevated cross-town mid-Manhattan expressway, in 1962, when he was New York traffic commissioner.
by Richard Arkin on Nov 5, 2009 1:04 am