Dr. Rosen Rosen
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Almost no sign of the old Lechmere station, and now apparently there’s a big pile of dirt. Being fenced up.
...Winchester and Woburn are going to need a make a good land use plan to justify full rapid transit extension past West Medford, to what is currently a low-density suburb. Otherwise, all transit service past West Medford that could be justified is that hourly 134 bus, or the commuter rail. Car centric sprawl means running transit becomes a lot more expensive, with more areas to cover, when development is spread out in low density and automobile oriented suburbs..
Winchester (3,800 / sq mile) and Woburn (3200 / sq mile) are not "low-density suburbs." Let's not exaggerate. They are "medium-density suburbs" with higher population densities than:
The "low-density suburb" moniker should be reserved for places with with less than 1k per square mile, which is less than a third of their population densities, like Easton, Westford, or Wareham.
- Fall River
- Framingham
- Haverhill
Unlike low-density suburbs, Winchester and Woburn could absolutely justify and support a couple Green Line stops each. Heck, this board loves to talk about what a great idea extending Green (or sometimes even Orange) Line service to Needham (2500 / sq mile) would be, even though Needham is less dense than either Winchester or Woburn.
Now, whether or not extending the Green Line to Winchester/Woburn is the best solution is a different and interesting conversation, and is certainly debatable.
True, but the problem with the two communities is that while there is population, the land use pattern doesn't support it. Much of the area consists of large lot sizes, SFH zoning, and many parking lots and wide high speed arterials dominate commercial areas. As I said, the communities will need a land use plan to justify an extension. The existing population density, while it supports transit in theory, actual land use patterns and actually trying to access transit, not so much.
It's the same problem with London Ontario Canada trying to build an LRT streetcar line in the 21st century. Some make the excuse "we can't have a streetcar here, our population (density) is too low". Even though the population is much higher than 100 years ago and streetcars ran 100 years ago. The problem is the land use and urbanization pattern.
I like to refer to https://ghsl.jrc.ec.europa.eu/visualisation.php# for interactive maps of urbanization patterns for all cities across the world, including Boston. As seen below (I changed the color to blank from blue for clarity). It is more precise than census blocks or population density maps, but not precise enough to reflect a zoning map of lots/buildings.
View attachment 32516
It's a rough approximation. I generally associate areas as:
- Green/Yellow/Gray areas -> "rural". These areas typically don't support transit in the US/Canada.
- Pale Orange -> "low density suburb". These areas are often car dependent in the US/Canada, generally SFH/SFZ/R1 zoned areas. These areas in theory, would support transit, but the land use pattern doesn't support it. I'll admit, "low density" suburb might be a bit of a stretch, but anyhow, it's a land use/zoning problem. "Low" is relative to inner core Boston. Woburn, Needham, Reading, Melrose fall in this category. Note: If the map is panned over to Europe, pale orange colors are not seen regularly in Europe, deep orange and brown colors make up a much higher porportion of urbanization in Europe.
- Deep Orange -> "high density suburb". These are walkable suburbs in the US/Canada, generally areas where frequent rapid transit and frequent bus service works best. Frequencies of under 10 minutes, or even 5-6 minutes, can be achieved easily. Medford, Watertown, Roslindale fit in this category.
- Brown/Red -> "urban". The city itself. Central Sq. Cambridge, Union Sq. Somerville, and South End fit in this category. Rapid Transit could support 5 minute frequencies, if not 3.
- Pink/Purple -> Usually commercial/industrial areas in the US/Canada.
They didn’t even bother turning on the T sign at Washington for the East somerville station.The fancy sculptural lighting on the bridge at Magoun is only half working now. That is probably a land-speed record for the T to give up on installed lighting.
It sounds like what you’re advocating for is coupling improvements to transit to these types of communities with transit-oriented development and design around proposed stations. I agree with this approach whole-heartedly.
Our disagreement appears to lie solely with terminology. What you call “low-density suburb” (based on being auto-centric and lower density than what Europeans consider suburbs), I call “medium-density suburbs” (based on being typical of suburbs in this region, much denser than many and less dense than some, but with the shared recognition of their auto-centric orientation).
I did indeed encounter the apparent "Stop Request" policy on the Medford Branch, which was announced verbally over the PA going outbound but not inbound -- I'm guessing at operator's discretion. And sure enough, we did indeed come to a full halt at Magoun Sq going inbound, but, with no stop requested, did not open the doors before carrying on. I really dislike this policy. Any minor speed benefit is almost completely negated by the full halt, and at best it creates confusion and at worst it is an accessibility issue for Deaf & HoH riders. (There is no signage anywhere to explain this policy, and no indication inside the car [on Type 8s, at least] of how you actually put in your "stop request".)
I wonder whose water lines? Might be this big distribution line that crosses the tracks there at the station. It is big enough that you'd probably want to de-energize the OCS served from Ball Sq (roughly the stations they're closing)
View attachment 32393
Oh dang, I just remembered something. (I thought I took a picture of this, but I guess I didn't...) Story time!According to the T press release, it is because water lines serving the station need “additional insulation”. I wish they could tackle something seemingly small like that during the overnight windows, rather than a full day shutdown.
Yea. Took the train for the first time yesterday. The ride out of town was packed with winter classic fans. Great to see.I don't usually get off the Blue Line at Gov't Center during the morning commute, but I did today to run an errand before work. I was pretty impressed with the number of commuters I saw turn left up the stairs from the BL platform and head over to the Medford/Union platform. There was a much bigger morning queue than I've seen when the trains were terminating at Lechmere. I can't wait to see actual numbers for the various stops.
They have already started replacing the signs at other stations.Took it for the first time today. It was during peak rush hour and after a moderate and inexcusable OL delay, the Medford branch was also delayed and they had to empty out a train at N Station and everyone waited. At N Station, even more insane--just because this is so typical of the T--all the signs and maps were pre-extension. As in, the platforms servicing the northbound Somerville and Medford lines still said "Lechmere". Some people who excuse things away might find this a minor quibble. It's not. The T had *decades* to prepare for this, and moreover, the stations in Somerville obviously have the right signs and maps. It's not like this took everyone by surprise. What in the everloving fuck is wrong with people making decisions at the MBTA that whoever signed off on new maps and signs didn't think to just, I don't know, you know, make enough new signs that the stations actually have accurate maps? It's just abysmal that this is still the usual for the T. From childhood, the T has always exemplified the absolute worst of ineffectual and thoughtless bureaucracy. This goes beyond Baker, and even goes beyond the state legislature that's sat on its hands allowed the T to deteriorate for 50 years. I don't know what the solution to this deeper disease is, but boy does it seem unlikely the T will ever actually appear to be in capable hands in my lifetime.
As for the line itself, once the train actually came, it was smooth and fast. People I know who live in Somerville are also liking it, though they note frequent service disruptions (as is normal with the T, alas). We have good bones for this system, it's just so frustrating that it seems like a problem nobody wants to actually solve once and for all. Funding is obviously a huge part of the issue, but funding doesn't explain why someone literally didnt bother replacing the signs at North Station.
I think the question is why they waited until both GLX branches are already in service just to start replacing them, especially at the most important stations such as Green Line stations downtown.They have already started replacing the signs at other stations.
I think the question is why they waited until both GLX branches are already in service just to start replacing them, especially at the most important stations such as Green Line stations downtown.
Many Chinese cities, with one or more new subway lines or extensions opening every year, are able to have maps at every single station on the entire system up-to-date on opening day of the new lines.