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Online Charette: New Streetcar Lines

Online Charette: New Streetcar Lines

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PostFeb 27, 2006#1

Obviously there?s some interest in starting new streetcar lines in St. Louis. This thread will be a place where we can discuss which new lines we want to see, with the eventual goal of producing a plan for one or more lines which we think will be the most valuable.



Some of the benefits of streetcars over buses that are touted by their supporters are: increased ridership, increased economic development along the line, making transit more pleasant for tourists and residents, and improving the ?atmosphere? in the urban environment around them. We should keep these factors, and the extent to which they will affect different routes, in mind when proposing new lines.



We can include areas surrounding the city in the discussion, although since the city is where the most density is I assume most of the discussion will center there; we can also look at the trolleybus option (electric buses that run on overhead wires) in some places. Finally, I think we should also discuss different ways of funding new lines, since cost vs. benefit seems to be a lively issue whenever streetcars are brought up.



A thread already exists discussing a Fantasy Grand trolley line, it might be worth reviewing, some other ideas were brought up there as well.



So which lines do you think would be most successful, or which do you just plain want to see?



I?ll go ahead and put my two cents in: I think Downtown and Grand Center need to be connected, Metrolink just doesn?t cut it. My preference would be for a line starting at the Landing and running down Washington to Grand.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#2

i'm all for any type of alternative fuel vehicle. it seems to be the best option with rising gas prices. much cheaper to instal then a trolly or light rail, but, to be a devil's advocate, wouldn't law makers say, "why do they need wires, just give them more busses." i think they need to mock these new MAX busses they have in KC. they have snesors in them that change the light as they approach the intersection. i agree, grand and downtown need to be connected.



btw, doest the delmar bus already do that? maybe all we need to do is do that witht he delmar line.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#3

The Max in KC utilizes an 'exclusive' lane for it's service during rush hour. Cars aren't supposed to park in in or even use it during rush hour, but cars still park there and the bus had to maneuver into the auto lanes to avoid them. In general I'm not a fan of taking away a parking lane for busses, especially if the road can handle large volumes. Signal Prioritization (as some busses in LA use) would require a massive upgrade of our vintage signals in St. Louis.



What I like when it comes to streetcars is the modern version. People prefer speed when it comes to mass transit and a vintage streetcar would flop IMO unless it served a small area(i.e Bottle District-Arch-Ballpark Village, Delmar Loop-Forest Park MetroLink). Some areas may not be conducive to running a streetcar down the middle of the street like Gravois or Kinghighway. Steve Patterson posted this picture on his website and it intrigues me. This is in Portland and as you can see the streetcar runs in the right hand traffic lane, IMO this would be much safer to embark/disembark especially on the high volume roadways.







I recommend going to this link and scrolling through the other Portland examples:



Image Source

508
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PostFeb 27, 2006#4

bikin'_man wrote: to be a devil's advocate, wouldn't law makers say, "why do they need wires, just give them more busses."


One reason I like the trollyebus or electric bus option is there is virtually no noise associated with the vehicles, which IMO vastly improves the experience of walking down the sidewalk; they also run on a fixed route, as streetcars do. A trolleybus would obviously require a fraction of the startup costs of a streetcar line. This type of approach might be best for Grand, as it would cause minimal disruption to be installed.



However, when considering installation of streetcar lines, it helps to keep this in mind:


Urban Review St. Louis wrote:Portland's line was built at a rate of 3 blocks in 3 weeks.

PostFeb 27, 2006#5

bikin'_man wrote:i agree, grand and downtown need to be connected.

btw, doest the delmar bus already do that? maybe all we need to do is do that witht he delmar line.


yeah, I thought about that too. I'm just thinking it would be a lot nicer for conventioneers, tourists, people spending the evening downtown, and residents if they could take a streetcar to the Grand Center theatre district instead of the bus. I have trouble picturing people getting dressed up for dinner and a show and then hopping on the delmar bus.



not saying it doesn't happen...

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PostFeb 27, 2006#6

A bus is a bus is a bus is a bus.

2,331
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2,331

PostFeb 27, 2006#7

I like the idea of a starter line from downtown to the Theatre District (ideally continuing to the CWE in the future). Using the Portland streetcar pictured. Combined with giving incentives for transit & pedestrian friendly development within a block of the street car line. Creating a spine from which we could expand and strengthen.



It would be extremely important to focus on the nearby development. We don't want a streetcar that goes through nowhere to get nowhere (Tampa). It would be a failure that would scuttle support of any further lines.



If that development is not likely, I would prefer the starter line go into a highly developed area with lots of residential and commercial. Perhaps the Near South Side.



PS: I have no interest in a BRT. Perhaps it could be used to serve suburbs where Metrolink or Streetcars are not practical. Certainly not for our core city and major transportation routes.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#8

i remember something DL Hugley said when his new show started, it was about the time Rosa Parks died, and he was saying how great a woman she was, and she was, but then he he has to poke humor in it. he said, man, she was so great, she refused to get up when a white man wanted her seat. thenhe procedes to say, it tells you how far this country has come, that you wouldn't beleive that at one time in history there was a time when a white man would ride a bus.



busses are a supplemt to light rail. i agree that the current busses that we have are inadequate, they need a face lift, made more efficent, and if that means a seperate lane, maybe fenced off so that cars cannot drive in them, then let's do it. many people here talk about wanting better public transit, but they don't want it to be at the expense of the car. like, let's not disrupt street parking, when one of the examples provided by of these said people does just that. that street car takes up on street parking lanes. i don't want to attack anyone, that's not the point here, but what i am trying to say is that for the people that live in the city itself, use this system that you want to make better. i live in the skinny-d during the summers, and i leave my car at my parent's house for thoes 3 months. i only drive it once or twice when i go west of skinker. but not even to clayton.



there is strength in numbers, and politicians will see that. the thing that they look for is a parade to march in front of, and if they see that this is something important to a large group, they will support it more. so anyway, my views are a bit out there. but i'll stop here for now.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#9

bikin man, you make good points and BRT could certainly be useful in some places. And who knows, maybe you are totally correct, though I don't like the BRT lines I have seen.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#10

I know I might sound like a broken record, but we really should try to get an advantage over other cities by getting private companies to build these lines. I want to see these lines within the next couple of years and thats will never happen with a publicly run company who does not have to worry about the bottom line. In a city with squabbling aldermen and constant MDOT "cost overruns" (called "bankruptcy" in the private sector), it is not a smart idea to let politicians run this thing because they want the photo op at the ribbon cutting.



Our initial trolley system was built by private companies and it was the largest in the world until the late thirties when it was over taken by Paris' system. Sounds like this plan worked out fairly well.



We need to research how the private companies got right of ways on the streets, raised funding, etc in the old days, and see if city hall will promote the fact that it is willing to sell these right of ways down Grand, Washington, etc, etc to private trolley companies. We should also privatize the bus system so that it actually has to compete and not just soak the taxpayers when it can't meet operating costs.



Joe Edwards has already raised a fair amount of private money for the trolley down Delmar, maybe if he and the donors became investors instead, they would have incentive to stretch the thing down to the CWE and make a pretty penny while they're at it (both on fares and the property value increases of their property).

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PostFeb 27, 2006#11

^Do you know of any private companies that are offering to build streetcars in St. Louis? If so, I want to hear their proposals.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#12

This privately funded transportation you keep bringing up happened because transportation functioned a lot differently when the original streetcar lines were built. They were built, for one, before the auto boom and were initially designed for wealthy people living further from the city who could afford this form of transportation. Only after the auto boom did the streetcars become cheaper and generally used by a different demographic. When public transportation was built by private companies it was just that - Private transportation. It was more expensive and was used by the wealthy. This is why the working class neighborhoods were in the inner ring of downtown nearest the factories, because the wealthy could afford to live further away and pay for transportation. I think its extremely silly to think that what worked in the late 19th century will necessarily work in the early 21st.



I'm not saying streetcars won't work at all, I'm just saying that they are not the type of investment that I think private companies are going to want to risk in the St. Louis of 2006 with all of its highways and automobiles. At this point I don't think a cohesive urban transportation plan is going to come through individual private investments that would, quite honestly, be very risky. The only way we are going to change St. Louis into an thriving, healthy, urban environment is through the committment of a caring community, through the aid of government and tax incentives and, yes, the partnership of the private sector. But we can't rely entirely on the private! There is a reason why there are no private proposals for public transportation in St. Louis.

508
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508

PostFeb 27, 2006#13

I suspect a private company would have to charge very high admission to justify the cost of installing a streetcar, and could thus be a disservice to some of it's core consumers. A case could be made for public funding, or possibly a public-private partnership, based on economic development, improving transit experience for tourists to areas the city wants to show off, and creating buzz around certain neighborhoods. All of these are hard to quantify, but a good argument can be made.



btw thanks for posting the pic b&m, it helps to have an idea of what we're talking about. we might be able to get a nice streetscape shot of South Grand or Grand Center and superimpose a streetcar on it to get people more excited about the idea.

PostFeb 27, 2006#14

Grand is the city's busiest bus line, and I believe the next is kingshighway. Does anyone know what the next couple in line are? Kingshighway may not be appropriate for the streetcar solution, but some other heavily traveled routes might give us an idea about what lines could receive high ridership.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#15

stlmike wrote:When public transportation was built by private companies it was just that - Private transportation.


Any transportation system whether publicly or privately built, unless there is a immense pool of funds or capital, must build profitable lines first until the infrastructure is dense enough that less profitable lines can affordably be built by taking advantage of existing infrastructure.



There was a day too when flight or train travel before it were too expensive for all but the most wealthy.



Either way the choice of the initial line has a lot to determine the overall sucess such projects.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#16

I think its extremely silly to think that what worked in the late 19th century will necessarily work in the early 21st.


Mike, even though I don't agree with all your points about pubic vs. private transport, I certainly agree with this one. If you look at this sentence again, it's actually an argument against streetcars.



I'd love to see a streetcar on Grand, not because I think it will be cost-effective or because it will do much for development, but just because it would be cool. Unfortunately, coolness like this comes with a hefty price tag. Still, maybe it would be worthwhile, in the interests of creating a more vibrant urban environment?



Today's urbanists often seem to overlook an important fact about the urban environments of the past: They were by-products of the huge industrial growth the U.S. experienced in the 19th and early 20th centuries. In most cases, they were a means to an end.



New Urbanism, in contrast, sees urbanism as an end in itself. This is a fundamental shift in thinking and most people are not yet comfortable with it; just look at the sprawl all around us that continues unchecked. Until we can convince more people that urban environments are the place to be, projects like streetcars (not to mention light rail) will face big funding hurdles.

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PostFeb 27, 2006#17

ah yes^ urbanity in the name of efficency is not efficent if it is mandated.

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PostFeb 28, 2006#18

I don't think I was making an argument against streetcars. I was merely saying that if streetcars are going to work in the 21st century, then that will be because they were approached differently than they were in the 19th century. There are many reasons why streetcars functioned successfully in St. Louis in the late 19th and early 20th century that are simply not the case today. I don't think ANYONE who is seriously considering the construction of a streetcar line would not consider these differences.

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PostFeb 28, 2006#19

stl555 wrote: My preference would be for a line starting at the Landing and running down Washington to Grand.


This would be a good pilot project. I think we need to start small and this route, I think, would be hugely successful.

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PostFeb 28, 2006#20

LouLou wrote:I'd love to see a streetcar on Grand, not because I think it will be cost-effective or because it will do much for development, but just because it would be cool. Unfortunately, coolness like this comes with a hefty price tag. Still, maybe it would be worthwhile, in the interests of creating a more vibrant urban environment?


I think you hit on the dilemma here. People keep trying to justify the costs by increased ridership and economic development along the line. These factors may exist, but let's just be honest and say that what we really like about streetcars is that they are more pleasant than a bus and add vibrancy to an urban street in a way that we can't really measure. This may be justification enough for us to consider them.

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PostFeb 28, 2006#21

Perhaps the real problem is that all the ideas revolve around taking what amount to already highly sucessful bus lines and making them streetcar lines, something that would clearly increase ridership, but might not offer the type of increases that justify the extra costs.



The next logical step might then be to consider lines with great, but under utilized potential. These could include a large loop system that ran both on Kingshighway and Grand, but looped on Natural Bridge and Chippewa? Or maybe a line that involved Chouteau and Manchester, or a line that concected Soulard, Lafeyett Sq and downtown. The idea would be creating lines with a maximum of potential developable land around some stations and provides service that might otherwise require transfers.

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PostFeb 28, 2006#22

The street car lines went belly up because the city taxed them to death and subsidized their competition (private companies didn't build the highways). If highways did not pass their costs onto the taxpayers (same with public busses as well) and actually had to compete, the streetcar business would likely still be in business (and much of the near Southside would still be connected).



This is more of an issue of getting the government out of the way of private enterprise. This city was founded on commerce and shoots itself in the foot everytime it suppresses it. If we want to be a world class city we need to scale back taxes and regulations. All of the emerging world class cities are tax havens. Do we want to be Hong Kong/Dubai or do we want to be Pyongyang?

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PostFeb 28, 2006#23

If a private company wants to build them, I'm all for it. But they don't. The only streetcar line that is actually being built seems to be treated more like a novelty than anything else. It goes from the loop to the History Museum. Has anyone here ever used a bus? I use them all the time and they are very practical. Many cities use them in addition to their rail service and they are widely used. Many bus routes in St. Louis are downright succesfull. Why replace them? I don't think its worth spending all this money and putting all of this effort into something that just seems cooler than something that is already fully functional to begin with. St. Louis ought to focus more on completing MetroLink. I admit, it'd be cool to have streetcars and it's great to fantasize but I think we all need to drink a cool glass of reality and realize that the days of extended and thriving streetcar networks probably aren't going to come back. At least not in the near future.



edit:

I just want to clarify, I'm not against streetcars. I just think don't think its the kind of thing we should be spending money on at this point.

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PostFeb 28, 2006#24

I use buses from time to time, and you're right, they can be practical way to get around. But I'm also considering how we can take a few of our better urban environments to the next level, increasing their popularity with both tourists and locals. I don't think anyone's arguing for an "extensive" network of streetcars (at least I'm not). I'd like to see perhaps 2 lines hitting a lot of areas that are not served by metrolink and may never be (S. Grand, Grand Center, some of the near southside neighborhoods). Streetcars are never going to replace buses as cheap, functional public transportation, but in a few areas I think they can be appropriate. I think St. Louis's size and variety of transportation needs can justify having metrolink, busses, and a streetcar or two to fill the spaces in between.



Maybe we should ask why other cities have opted for modern streetcars over a busline. Does anyone have more info on Portland's lines? why they went the streetcar route (so to speak)?

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PostFeb 28, 2006#25

Bastiat wrote:Do we want to be Hong Kong/Dubai or do we want to be Pyongyang?


None of those places appeal to me as a role model. I would rather be a Boston, London, or Barcelona. All three cities are prosperous, beautiful, and have good transit. Do they exist without taxes & regulations?



Do you really think St. Louis, Missouri is going to eliminate government? Must every thread on transit, education, and everything else be derailed so we can discuss the advantages and disadvantages of eliminating government or returning to the robber baron era? Please don't take that as an attack, you often make valid points and all ideas are welcome as far as I am concerned. But, if we want to discuss the possibility of starting a streetcar line and where it should go, the first step isn't going to be eliminating government. As a practical matter, that simply isn't going to happen.

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