They definitely won’t if we add more visual barriers like overpasses and noise pollution with high speed traffic. It’s within the walk shed of a transit station. The Station Landing TOD shows that density is viable here if separation is removed. There is an insane amount of space dedicated to retail parking diagonal from Station Landing, the only separation being the intersection.
Maybe a pedestrian overpass would work, but those tend to be incredibly unpleasant. I just don’t see why increased auto capacity should be the priority anywhere that close to a rapid transit station.
If this project can stitch the area northwest of the intersection to Wellington station, the state gets an actual ROI instead of just more expensive auto infrastructure to maintain.
Right you are, Badusername!
On balance pedestrian overpasses just don't work (with Charles MGH over Storrow Drive being the extremely costly singular exception). Pedestrian overpasses are usually a sad reminder of our failures to address humanity in our auto-centric craving for faster go-cart tracks... sorry... highways. If you start to really think about why things are built how they are, think of the childish zeal of the original 'parkway' creators and their world fulla new toys! Subsidized suburban houses! Wicked fast giant cars! Cheap drugs! It's almost like... I'm there...
"Nice highway Bill! Our mostly white suburban commuters will love it."
"Thanks, Dave."
"Oooh! That street is plenty wide for my brand new Plymouth Gargantuan SS. Betcha I could take that curve at 75! One thing though... how do you get to the other side of this street from here? Looks.... dangerous?"
"Oh! Crap!"
<< Bill sketches furiously >>
"How about this?"
"Wow, that's ugly as hell and nobody is going use it... but who cares, right? Let's knock off early after lunch... and have a couple of those martinis, as it is the fashion now for us as modern road engineers."
<<Exit, Both Laughing>>
I want us to stop pandering to our collective primitive brain and build better places. We need to undo the loathsome decisions of the past. That means Slowing. The Hell. Down. And being much more thoughtful in our choices. We need to end the 360 degree strip-mall direct access crap. Look at this intersection -- CVS has 2 parking lot entrances less than 200 feet from the corner. Kappy's has FIVE friggin' entrances(!) with 3 directly opening to traffic the Circle! Booze! Now!
Why is traffic slow? Oh, I dunno. Start asking those questions! Figure out how everything around WC got so royally jacked up. If it looks acceptable to you, please seek help. It's all hideous, collecting the worst crap we've collectively swallowed. Like Medford's tumor laden colon.
Bottom line, we have to stop wishing for overpasses, long sweeping corners and gimmicky light-timer-y crap in our cities and large towns. We need to scale back and rebuild dense areas for two legs at 5 mph, not 4 wheels at 65mph. The rotary idea I sketched was methadone for you overpass junkies. If it were up to me I'd give you two lanes in four directions and a single stop light, then I'd let you sort out the stack of bodies and metal, and let you figure out how to get through Medford without going 75 miles an hour.
Could be the martinis talkin'.