Sure. But some of the questions and replies here have been kind of confusing, so let me just be really clear what I mean here by "getting rid of the Bowker Overpass."
In the simplest form, Storrow could still connect to Charlesgate East and West. There should still be ramps from the Fens, over the highway, and down to Commonwealth. The Bowker Overpass I want removed is the elevated road that starts above the Pike and runs directly to Storrow. For an example of what this could look like, the
research from Northeastern analyzed this proposal
View attachment 44165
The details on those slides are sparse and I'm looking for the real paper, but they say the surface streets alone can work to carry the traffic that currently goes over the Bowker Overpass. Doing that still allows cars to get through. They'll just have to go on surface streets. And that will open up, I don't know, 4-5 acres of park space.
So it is that elevated span from the Pike to Storrow that I think can and should be demolished. The couple of projects MassDOT is planning only really connect to the ends of that span. But I dislike their plans because they ensure that we'll keep that elevated part that ought to go.
So with all that in mind, here are some answers to your questions:
Ambulances can take the surface streets, Charlesgate East or West. Cars might block an ambulance there, but that's also true on the current Bowker. On the surface streets you could have a 12ft bike lane that emergency vehicles can also use. Bikers can and do get out of the way of ambulances.
Again, the surface streets can allegedly handle all the existing Bowker traffic, says the Northeastern researchers. So this wouldn't dump all the Bowker traffic onto other exits. The researchers might be wrong, I really don't know. But the surface streets would still carry some chunk of the traffic. And the question would still come back to whether the added benefit of the overpass is worth the cost.
Yeah, I have no idea how to rigorously quantify that. But assuming the researchers are wrong, for the sake of argument, really roughly that might mean that thousands of fewer cars can make it though Charlesgate per day. However, shifting that number of people to public transit would require the most
marginal of improvements at the MBTA. Every day ridership on the MBTA is over 700,00 across all modes. Pre-Covid, it was over 1.2 million. Just looking at the Green Line, since that passes under the Bowker, that used to carry many 10s of thousands more riders every day. If Longwood is an important destination for Bowker traffic, you can look at all those bus lines that
each used to carry 100s or 1000s more people every day. We know how to move more people on public transit. This year the T carried more people than last year. Next year is hopefully better. And as it improves, carrying around an extra several thousand people per day is really a drop in the bucket.
omg omg omg. I know, right? I mean, most likely people won't get hurt because people will see it's not safe. It will be obvious that it's a joke crosswalk, and it won't get used. Which is cruel in it's own way.