I couldn't find the thread on Franklyn Arterial, but there's an update:
Portland Council hears update on Franklin Street redesign
PPH Text:
The city plans to apply for federal funding and begin work later this decade on a project that was approved in 2015 in an effort to make the area safer for bicyclists and pedestrians while creating space to build housing.
The Portland City Council received a long-awaited update on a master plan to redesign Franklin Street Arterial – a major road that funnels traffic from Interstate 295 into downtown Portland.
The throughway was built in the 1960s as part of an urban renewal project that destroyed historic housing, displaced immigrant communities and separated the East Bayside neighborhood from Portland’s downtown.
On Monday night, Jeremiah Bartlett, the city’s transportation systems engineer, gave a presentation updating the council on the project, which was approved in 2015. Bartlett said that the city plans to apply for federal funding to aid in the cost of the redesign beginning in fall of 2024, and hopes to begin construction sometime between 2026 and 2030 contingent on funding.
Zarro described the redesign as a “once in a generation, transformational project.”
Councilor Mark Dion, however, expressed concern about the removal of the trees in the median and about the cost of the project.
Funding has been an obstacle since the redesign was approved in 2015, when the estimated cost was $22 million. Now, according to Nell Donaldson, director of special projects in the city, it’s difficult to estimate. For the next phase, which entails mapping out a detailed budget, applying for federal funding and nailing down the finer points of the project, Donaldson estimated the city will spend $250,000. This money would not come from the upcoming year’s budget, instead the city will tap accounts it has dedicated to infrastructure spending and – should the City Council approve it – a
Village Partnership Agreement Fund, a program offered by the Maine Department of Transportation.
As for procuring federal funding to complete the project by 2030, Bartlett was confident that through a combination of federal grants and earmarks the necessary funding will be secured. “We certainly have friends in high places in Washington at this point,” he said.
The Franklin Street redesign project was started in 2009 with a dedicated neighborhood group, and since its inception the scope and primary goals of the project have shifted. What was once aimed primarily at making a crucial part of the city more walkable has evolved into a large-scale project that not only prioritizes pedestrians and cyclists but also affordable housing development along Franklin. Mayor Kate Snyder called the project as it stands today “certainly one of the most ambitious projects we’ve worked on,” but ultimately expressed support for it, praising in particular the opportunity to build more affordable housing.
Although the City Council approved the project in 2015, it did not approve a budget, simply the idea to reconstruct the arterial. The council will make funding decisions as the project unfolds.
View attachment 42662