DanielPWM19
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- Aug 21, 2020
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I wholeheartedly agree.A bit in the Phoenix about city staff recommending that city council once again take up this redesign as a transportation priority:
We're probably still a long way from any changes to Franklin, but I think it's an area where the right changes could drastically improve the city. Worth noting that even since the July 2015 report the east side of Franklin between Congress and Middle has basically been built out with 3 housing developments.
Glancing over the 2015 report reminds me of how great it would be to return Lincoln Park to its original footprint, but what kind of engineering would that require as the park edge now slopes off very quickly down to the street?
By the way I noticed another large section of fencing has been removed from the Congress Street side of the park for restoration, but at the rate they're going it's gonna take at least another ten years to restore the whole perimeter.
Redesigning Franklin into an Urban boulevard will reconnect the East End to the rest of downtown, remove the ugly scar left from misguided urban renewal, and free up land both sides for meaningful development. It doesn't have to be a tunnel of high-rises, but mixed developments. It would change the city drastically for the better. Restoring the park to its original footprint would also be amazing.
I'd love to see the Forest Avenue corridor reimagined as a well-designed boulevard too. It basically already is, but there's room for some developments without ruining the character.
The biggest hurdle is selling the redesign to the people. As quoted:
"Embedded in his [Markos Miller, who co-chaired the Public Advisory Committee dedicated to studying and redesigning Franklin Street from 2008 to 2015] concern is a long-held feeling that the Franklin Street redesign effort is a housing and economic development plan disguised as a transportation plan.” - This and the fact that the neighboring areas are mostly poor, it could be seen as a scourge.