Charlie_mta
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- Jul 15, 2006
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Masshole drivers don't need no stinkin' acceleration lanes!This is a rare stretch of highway in Massachusetts where a proper acceleration lane is present.
Masshole drivers don't need no stinkin' acceleration lanes!This is a rare stretch of highway in Massachusetts where a proper acceleration lane is present.
Nice; discussion on aB had been started here previously (great to see this moving forward):
Memorial Drive Greenway Phase III
Attended the second public meeting for this project last night. The scope is fairly substantial - 2 miles of the Memorial Drive Greenway from the BU Boathouse to the Eliot Bridge. The project scope includes reworking the BU Bridge Rotary/Reid Overpass intersection (three very early alternatives...archboston.com
... this whole area is a bag of broken glass and nails with a mystery amount of cash at the bottom (A nickel? A million bucks? Who knows?)
It has fascinated me for years. Thank you, thank you all for not shrugging your shoulders! Stlin and C-Town, you rock!
The problem I see is the physical constraint of not having enough vertical clearance beneath I-93 to bridge over the Orange Line (which runs right under the I-93 viaduct). The OL could be lowered for a short distance in an underpass to enable a ped crossing. Wouldn't be cheap but not prohibitively expensive either.I also stand and look longingly across the railroad right of way and wonder if we'll ever be able to get some kind of pedestrian and bike connection from Hood Park to Inner Belt that would enable a safe and grade-separated Charlestown-Somerville connection, like the fancy pedestrian bridge to the south underneath the Zakim Bridge…?
Right you are. It’s do-able, but don’t forget about the commuter rail tracks and the possible freight track ownership quagmire between the aforementioned Boston Sand and Gravel’s lease/own/take abutter situation. It all affects how poorly that mile has been planned in the last half-century. This is why you can’t have nice things.The problem I see is the physical constraint of not having enough vertical clearance beneath I-93 to bridge over the Orange Line (which runs right under the I-93 viaduct). The OL could be lowered for a short distance in an underpass to enable a ped crossing. Wouldn't be cheap but not prohibitively expensive either.
Right you are. It’s do-able, but don’t forget about the commuter rail tracks and the possible freight track ownership quagmire between the aforementioned Boston Sand and Gravel’s lease/own/take abutter situation. It all affects how poorly that mile has been planned in the last half-century. This is why you can’t have nice things.
That's all great, but how about the final design and construction of the Red-Blue connector?Gov. Baker Urges Quick Adoption Of New $9.7B Transportation Bill
“The MBTA's efforts to replace its entire Green Line trolley fleet, a statewide move toward electric vehicle adoption, and projects to make Massachusetts infrastructure more resilient in the face of climate change impact would all get a major boost under a $9.7 billion bond bill Gov. Charlie Baker rolled out Thursday…”
https://www.nbcboston.com/news/loca...tion-of-new-9-7b-transportation-bill/2671891/
Isn't this bus lane being eliminated since GLX to Lechmere/Union is now open?I just want to make a comment about all the weird lanes they have painted over the past couple of years, turning car lanes into bus lanes, bike lanes, etc. The problem is that a lot of those lanes are now faded. If they do not commit to repainting those lines we basically have mayhem now. Nobody respects the "bus only" lanes anymore, such as the one by the science museum, because you can barely even read that it still says that! If they're going to go out of their way to turn the roads into nonsense, then they need to raise the budget for repainting that nonsense so it's clearly visible for all users of the road.
As an aside, the double light on the O'Brien Highway between Edwin Land Blvd and Museum Way is an absolute disaster because of the bus lane. Only 4-5 cars can fit between those roads at once, so you have constant backups into the intersection where they really needed to keep both lanes for cars for that short stretch. Does anybody know the timetable for returning that lane to all traffic? Even in off-peak hours that intersection has become an even bigger nightmare due to removing the 2nd lane's capacity at the double-stacked light. I could see making it buses only directly next to the museum, but that very short stretch between lights is a killer.
I assume it is, though there's no official confirmation.Isn't this bus lane being eliminated since GLX to Lechmere/Union is now open?
I assume it is, though there's no official confirmation.
Regardless, even before the GLX opening, some cars were already not respecting the bus lanes, partly due to how faded they are.
I haven’t seen the McGrath resurfacing project discussed renecelty, but it was linked in a BBJ article today about the 15 MacGrath/Sav-Mor lab project starting this summer.
Hopefully the lab building will jumpstart the highway project.