F-Line to Dudley
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My point was that Washington from Egleston south is still walking distance to the orange line. Nubian certainly got shafted, but Egleston is a 10min walk from Stony Brook.
Believe it or not, I always thought the old El ended at Nubian. Didn’t know it continued down through Egleston. So when people talk about Washington LRT, is the assumption that the LRT would go to Egleston?
1901-10 it terminated at Dudley. 1910 was the Forest Hills extension. The debate about El teardown and "equal or better" was all about Nubian-inbound.
See last post re: Egleston. It was not thought that Egleston transit would be more than moderately inconvenienced by the loss of the El so long as stop selection on the SW Corridor was mindful about picking the right street-grid pairings. Distance-wise, Egleston-NEC via Atherton St. was within rounding error's sameness of the difference between Thompson Sq. and Community College stations on the old vs. new Charlestown alignments, where the 1975 service relocation went off without a hitch and did not unduly punish the 92 which didn't make the trip down the street from Thompson. Egleston had more bus routes and thus somewhat higher stakes, but it was thought that with some already originating from Jackson Sq. that filet options could equitably cover the non-Jackson routes with quick shoot down the street.
SW Corridor planners didn't listen to the neighborhood on station siting. They went with the rote RR-era Stony Brook station site that served a completely alien audience (i.e. dense 1950's & prior Dedham/Needham 'circuit' service) than what the El used on grounds that moving it 2 blocks to center on street grid access would mess up stop spacing to Jackson. Debate cut off cold...no alternative sitings considered. Egleston was thus hard-cut off from the walkshed which now involves getting dragged minimum 2 blocks off-center from either the Square or SB station on one end, and is hard wayfinding because of the multiple turns required and multitude of different street choices for making the turns. SB ended up hosting zero buses...which cratered its ridership. And the adherence to traditional NEC RR station siting applied to an El replacement era ended up backfiring, as for all the overblown concerns about excessive closeness to Jackson Sq. it was Green St. that Stony Brook ended up partially cannibalizing...making the pair of them the lowest-utilized Orange Line stations by far.
Well-executed by listening to the damn neighborhood, Egleston transit didn't have to become a wipeout. But that's exactly what happened. Sure, it's more easily fixable than the breakage at Nubian which is why the "equal or better" debate today hasn't really expanded upon its base. But do you ever hear anything but crickets about improving Egleston transit? Or troubleshooting the ridership wipeout at Stony Brook by studying repositioning of the station closer to a known walkshed? No. Once fucked up thou shalt never be unfucked by the Planning Gods. So we get useless peans like "oh, suck it up it's close on a map" when map ≠ functional walkshed, and writ-large accessibility is a sliding scale vs. a healthy individual's walkshed. It could be different at modest cost, but there's no signs anyone on the outside cares enough to listen. And that in turn rolls up into the whole world-of-hurt suspicion that underlies "equal or better" politics.
Boston’s lack of cross-town transit and it’s lack of connectivity between downtown and the southern neighborhoods are two different problems, imo.
You'll get no argument from this thread on that point. So why, then, is there such persistent apparent animus that downtown pipe vs. the radial bucket list are at odds with each other? Was it not duly explained that if you study the neighborhood for what its priorities are, you can establish strength-of-signal for whether a downtown pipe is significant enough plurality demand to line up the megabucks resources for? And maybe it IS a consensus win-win??? Why, then, is so much shade getting cast at the neighborhood at the possibility that they wouldn't see as strong a majority/plurality demand as you might and thus it must be forced on them outside-in?
It belies a sense that a neighborhood expressing its own self-determination to name its priorities is only useful when those priorities just so happen to line up with outside Planning God's. Maybe Planning God is being utterly benevolent and attempted-helpful here, but when that same exact set of circumstances smote their transit with generations of ruination when it broke in a most very malevolent way is exactly why they have PTSD about trusting outside voices. If you'd rather not be bothered with saddling up and dialogue around those PTSD triggers, perhaps a change in approach to that dialogue is first order of business.
I just feel like running through Nubian shouldn't be leagues harder than running to and from Nubian. Why hasn't the city been able to do BRT successfully on Washington north of Nubian?
This was explained over and over in the history Cliffs Notes. The Silver Line is not BRT. Lack of any enforced protection for its so-called bus lanes makes it bullshit on its face as branded BRT. They knew it was an expensively restickered 49 bus all along and that the only goal was to get SL Phase III and the Seaport pipe funded through shotgun marriage. The earliest proposals for it had better traffic lane separation than what actually got built. Even straight-on benchmarked LRT vs. TT modes. Once the shotgun marriage for Seaport juvenation became the all-encompassing focus, they started kicking planks out from under Washington St.'s basic functioning. They knew years before it was ever formally announced as such that it would never be a run-thru transit line to South Station with the Orange & Red transfers because of the shit-sandwich ops....that Washington would be a forced-loop transfer in a cavern under Boylston with just a Green Line transfer, nothing else. Once that was settled there was no point to even trying to enforce the sanctity of bus lanes via parking reconfigs or pay more than lip service to transit signal priority. It was broken by design to shit all over what was left of the "equal or better" commitment because everybody was green with envy over the Seaport.
It doesn't need to be *the one* destination. If Nubian really is such a destination, then a connection to downtown should exist.
Which...would exactly be the case if they *honestly* built the Silver Line with real traffic separation instead of using it as a set-up to shovel money at the Seaport. But this was a wholly planned breakage of transit. And that's why the neighborhood is so suspicious of being told by outsiders what's good for them. They got shit on again and again and again to further someone else's pet projects.
This is why we keep imploring on this thread to read up on the history. Planning God isn't going to be listened to telling them from on-high what they should be doing. It's got to be embedded from a springboard within the neighborhood's priorities to get anywhere. Exactly how Take Two of the 28X hit paydirt with this new proposal slow-cooked through a decade of careful City-cum-neighborhood workshopping instead of 2009 where--as many posters have attested from personal memory--the state just showed up one day and started dictating at them how things would be (again!) without making any honest effort at dialogue.
I can say it till I'm blue in the face...you *might* find real juice for a stronger downtown pipe that's very much in agreement with what you propose. It hasn't been studied so we of course don't know. There are an awful lot of wavelengths to explore in their transit priority bucket list. But it has zero chance of gaining traction is it isn't going to be a full-on mind meld born within those neighborhood priorities and workshopped to the nines with the neighborhood. The second there's a glint of "I know what's better for you than you think you do" it's...fucking...over, because that's an immediate trigger for Roxbury's PTSD.
This inquiry ain't getting anywhere if first act is anything other than immersing with interest in the history to refine the approach. Asking again and again why things just can't be so doesn't advance it to a point of usefulness. The reply (not just from me...we've got a whole chorus now) is going to be "because the history...read up."