General Infrastructure

For that kind of money why not just make a stacked interchange with flyover ramps? You can widen the highway to 4 full travel lanes in each direction (with a full breakdown lane in each direction) for a 3 mile stretch - 1.5 before and 1.5 after?

Why are they even mentioning the toll plazas and connector ramps -- presumably there will not be any toll plaza as we now are familiar -- just open road tolling along a typical merge
 
You only need 2 flyovers to eliminate weaving, which seems to be one of the main goals here.
 
Just spent the weekend in dc...if Boston had their transit system you could almost live anywhere and get into town no problem. Makes me really frustrated with Boston's growing pains.
 
Just spent the weekend in dc...if Boston had their transit system you could almost live anywhere and get into town no problem. Makes me really frustrated with Boston's growing pains.

DC's Metro is largely a commuter rail type system to shuttle the masses in from the burbs. Metro is pretty ineffective at getting around downtown DC easily. Boston excels in this regard, our city's core is covered in transit (green line), but the system lacks solid development at the reaches.
 
Just spent the weekend in dc...if Boston had their transit system you could almost live anywhere and get into town no problem. Makes me really frustrated with Boston's growing pains.

DC's metro misses a large chunk of the city and suburbs. It's good for what it is but don't judge it based on one trip.
 
As noted above, DC's metro system is pretty much a commuter rail system with big gaps as mass transit: Georgetown's pretty much overlooked (Foggy Bottom isn't really Georgetown) and most of the up-and-coming neighborhoods in the NNE having scant access. Metro rail's footprint serves its purpose well as does Boston's for the most part. For me, Metro's saving grace is excellent bus-rail connection with set-your-watch-by-it bus dependability and civil--even pleasant--bus drivers (something Boston can't seem to manage).
 
Still think DC has a superior system, fast, reliable, efficient, clean. I was especially impressed by its fares. Charges a $1 for a smart trip card and then trips are priced by peak/non-peak as well as distance. The fare structure is something the T should absolutely model. Lastly, the trains themselves are bigger, so no ridiculous crowding, people had seats even during rush hour for the most part. It's not uncommon for The orange line to have 10 min headways during rush which leads to horrific crowding.
 
Lastly, the trains themselves are bigger, so no ridiculous crowding, people had seats even during rush hour for the most part. It's not uncommon for The orange line to have 10 min headways during rush which leads to horrific crowding.

Metro opened in 1976. The T's core dates to the early 1900s (and prior in the GL's case). Metro also fails just as spectacularly as the T on some days too. Every time I've gone to DC, I've experienced T-like delays.
 
I like the DC circulator buses too. Frequent and $1 fares. Hits up locations that aren't well served by WMATA. And they're not "circles", it's just the name.

There's good things about DC Metro but I'll list a few things that are going wrong, seemingly, all the time:
  • Constantly failing escalators to those deep, deep stations
  • Too frequent incidents with injuries or fatalities
  • Worsening service on the outer ends leading to 20 min+ wait times
  • Fare cost can become prohibitive if you aren't a high-income earner
  • Silver/Blue/Orange sharing a tunnel makes for a real puzzle of a capacity crunch
 
I thought DC's metro was nice...but for $237 for a monthly pass...I'll take the T any day.

http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/20...ajor-cities/PCHq7piOOnsvSvs9K22kBI/story.html

DC Metro is practically a Police State compared to the T -- cameras everywhere

But most obnoxiously No food or drink can be consumed on a platform or a vehicle on the Metro

An associate of mine who has a daily banana in the morning was nearly arrested. My colleague and I were standing on a platform waiting for a train when he opened his briefcase pulled out a banana and was promptly accosted by a Metro Cop
 
DC Metro is practically a Police State compared to the T -- cameras everywhere

But most obnoxiously No food or drink can be consumed on a platform or a vehicle on the Metro

An associate of mine who has a daily banana in the morning was nearly arrested. My colleague and I were standing on a platform waiting for a train when he opened his briefcase pulled out a banana and was promptly accosted by a Metro Cop

What?? People can't eat their lunch in peace on Metro?? Damn fascists...
 
Zone based fares make sense on the Metro because it's coverage area mimics commuter rail. I'm not sure how much sense they make on the T. I could see a discount incentive for people that don't go into the heaviest areas, (Commuting from say Alewife to Harvard) but I don't think we should start discounting a trip from Park to Copley or Charles MGH to South Station. That's going to put more people into the busiest part of the system.
 
Zone based fares make sense on the Metro because it's coverage area mimics commuter rail. I'm not sure how much sense they make on the T. I could see a discount incentive for people that don't go into the heaviest areas, (Commuting from say Alewife to Harvard) but I don't think we should start discounting a trip from Park to Copley or Charles MGH to South Station. That's going to put more people into the busiest part of the system.

What some cities do, e.g. Berlin, or Paris until its ongoing transition to single-zone fares regionwide*, is have the inner zone comprise only city center, but then only sell tickets for at least 2 zones. In Berlin, this is the simplest, with 3 zones: A is inner Berlin, B is outer Berlin, C is the suburbs served by the S-Bahn. The transport association sells AB and BC tickets, which cost about the same, and ABC tickets, which are more expensive. This doesn't cheapen the equivalent of Alewife-Harvard tickets, but does cheapen the equivalent of Norwood-Forest Hills, Wellesley-Allston, and Salem-Chelsea tickets.

The A/B zone boundary is set at the Ringbahn, so the Boston equivalent would be to set it at the Urban Ring. In Berlin the Ringbahn itself is in Zone A, but I'd recommend that Boston set the Urban Ring itself in Zone B, since the congestion in Boston is more localized to downtown and Back Bay. Berlin sets the B/C zone boundary at city limits, which are much looser than in Boston; for Boston, the rough equivalent is the outer limits of the cities served by the subway and frequent local buses.

Of course, since Boston commuter rail extends far out, there would have to be multiple concentric zones beyond Zone C, like Paris's zones 1-6, or Berlin's farther-out zones on the Regionalbahn, which aren't part of the A/B/C system. There would also be non-concentric zones for independent cities like Worcester and New Bedford, and of course a separate zonal system for Rhode Island. But within the zone system, fares would be mode-neutral, with unlimited free transfers: a Downtown Boston-Worcester ticket is automatically also a ticket on transit within Worcester and Boston.

*In Paris, most suburbs are much poorer than the city; one suburban department, Seine-St.-Denis, is the poorest department in France, while Paris itself is either the richest or one of the richest. The zoneless regional fares were passed by the Socialist-Green coalition as an equity plan. In Boston, I would recommend against it, since the poverty is concentrated in the city and in inner suburbs that would be part of the city zone.
 
Every time the light at Linden and Brighton Ave is out, traffic flows better. Same with a lot in North Brighton by me. However, I wonder if there is a difference between a flashing, disabled signal, and a stop sign in the way drivers to interact. A flashing signal seems to make everyone really cautious, while if there is a atop sign (especially a two way) no one can get through.

http://www.citylab.com/cityfixer/2015/04/4-reasons-to-remove-traffic-lights-in-the-era-of-peak-driving/390375/

Perhaps the city should reevaluate ditching a few.
 
Yeah, I've also observed Union Square (Allston) when the traffic lights go to blinkers, in the middle of rush hour, and it actually seemed to work out better. Queues cleared up, no crashes, not really any honking either.

Problem is that people walking mostly don't know how to deal with the situation. Some stand there and wait for the signal that's never going to come. Others look to try and cross, but don't really attempt to wave down the drivers or make any effort to show their intention. And of course, it's a mess for people with visual impairments.

The existing signal infrastructure is quite terrible for walking there, but without it the street would still need significant reconfiguration to put people on foot at highest priority.
 
True, I always forget that everyone doesn't just walk into the street and make eye contact when they should have the right of way.
 

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