Nineteen year ago I started this blog as a distraction from my father’s heart attack and slow recovery. It was late 2004 and social media & video streaming apps didn’t exist yet — or at least not widely available to the general public. Blogs were the newest means of …
The new NGA West campus , Jefferson & Cass, has been under construction for a few years now. Next NGA West is a large-scale construction project that will build a new facility for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency in St. Louis, Missouri.This $1.7B project is managed by the U.S. Army …
Book publisher Island Press always impresses me with thoughtful new books written by people working to solve current problems — the subjects are important ones for urbanists and policy makers to be familiar and actively discussing. These four books are presented in the order I received them. ‘Justice and …
This post is about two indirectly related topics: the new Siteman Cancer Center building under construction on the Washington University School of Medicine/BJC campus and an update on my stage 4 kidney cancer. Let’s deal with the latter first. You may have noticed I’ve not posted in three months, …
August 20, 2017Featured, Sunday PollComments Off on Sunday Poll: Will You Be In The Path of Totality Tomorrow?
Tomorrow is the big day, the total solar eclipse.
For months, state highway officials from 14 states have been meeting regularly via conference call to plan for – or more importantly try to head off– what could be the largest traffic jam in U.S. history Monday, when an estimated 200 million people will be within a day’s drive of the path of the first total solar eclipse in 99 years.
The roughly 70-mile-wide path of totality – where the moon will block 100 percent of the sun – stretches from Oregon to South Carolina.
In Oregon, where the totality begins at 10:16 a.m. at Depoe Bay, officials have ordered extra-wide-load trucks off the highways through Tuesday to ease congestion, and in Madras, which has been identified by many experts as one of prime viewing locations, the National Guard is being called in to help control traffic. (Post-Dispatch)
It has been impossible to escape talk of tomorrow’s eclipse. Today’s poll seeks to see how interested readers are in the eclipse.
This poll will close at 8pm tonight. Results tomorrow with another post on the eclipse.
August 18, 2017Featured, Planning & Design, TransportationComments Off on St. Louis Does the Opposite of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)
NACTO’s mission is to build cities as places for people, with safe, sustainable, accessible and equitable transportation choices that support a strong economy and vibrant quality of life.
We do this by:
Communicating a bold vision for 21st century urban mobility and building strong leadership capacity among city transportation officials.
Empowering a coalition of cities to lead the way on transportation policy at the local, state, and national levels.
Raising the state of the practice for street design that prioritizes people walking, biking, and taking transit.
Here’s their intro video:
Since St. Louis, and the region by extension, does the opposite of what NACTO recommends, we could benefit greatly if the city joined — and followed their lead. But I doubt the traffic engineers in the Streets Dept and the like-minded engineers at the Board of Public Service are willing to change the way things have always been done.
Again, see various departments fighting NACTO’s recommendations. In the coming months I plan posts showing the NACTO way vs the St. Louis way.
August 16, 2017FeaturedComments Off on Readers Are Mostly Comfortable With Small Arch Tram Capsules
Tram rides to the top of the Gateway Arch began just over fifty years ago, on July 24, 1967. A few weeks later, 50 years ago. yesterday, a najor malfunction occurred:
An eight-car tram is in the north leg of the Gateway Arch descended about forty feet from the observation gallery and stopped, trapping thirty-six passengers in semi-darkness. From 6:40 to 8:15P.M. the passengers waited calmly to be freed. Arch personnel moved the train back up to the observation deck with a winch. and passengers climbed out, descending the fifty-foot spiral staircase to the elevator halfway down the arch. The train ran no more that evening, and others waiting for a ride were given refunds.
An even more harrowing entrapment occurred a few years later when a party of four was left in a capsule after the last tram was thought to have been vacated. The door of their capsule did not open and the trash was “parked” for the night. Lights in the Arch were extinguished and the air vents were shut off. Their screams went unheard, so one of the passengers, using a knife to pry open the catch, succeeded in getting the doors open. He climbed out on a foot-wide beam and helped the others across to the stairs and safety.
I’ve been up in the Arch twice in my 27+ years in St. Louis — once pre-stroke and once post-stroke. Getting into and out of the capsule was a challenge post-stroke, but I can’t imagine having to walk down a spiral stair. Though I’ve done so on the Texas Eagle train.
Thankfully, as part of all the work being done at the Arch the Trams were given a major update, this should ensure years of reliable service.
The results from the recent non-scientific Sunday Poll:
Q: Agree or disagree: I’m uncomfortable while riding the Arch tram due to the small capsules.
Strongly agree 5 [17.24%]
Agree 1 [3.45%]
Somewhat agree 5 [17.24%]
Neither agree or disagree 3 [10.34%]
Somewhat disagree 2 [6.9%]
Disagree 8 [27.59%]
Strongly disagree 4 [13.79%]
Not Applicable/Unsure/No Answer 1 [3.45%]
More who voted are comfortable. I’ll go up a 3rd time once all the work, museum, etc are finished.
A look back at the original Civic Center MetroBus Center. The block North of Spruce had many trees.
The new design is substantially different, it has 3 times as many bus bays. First we have to get to it. For both the ribbon cutting (8/10) and open house (8/11) I arrived from the North on the West side of 14th Street (next to Peabody Opera/Scottrade Center). Both times I had to take a detour, hopefully this morning this is open.
At the ribbon cutting on Thursday Metro Transit Exec Dir Ray Friem was adamant Civic Center would open allowing smoking, like their other bus centers. I argued this was the perfect time to make Civic Center smoke-free. Metro staff told me their inconsistent policy of no-smoking on train platforms but smoking at bus shelters on their private property had been the subject of many internal debates over the years. Friem said Metro would go smoke0-free, he just didn’t know how or when. I rallied others to talk to Friem. It worked.
Metro has announced Civic Center is opening smoke-free, other bus transit centers will go smoke0-free next month. Finally I can change buses at a transit center without having my eyes water or throat close because of smokers around me.
Four bus routes are being split up:
The #30 is being split into the #19 St. Louis Ave and #30 Arsenal
The #32 M.L. King-Chouteau is being split into the #31 Chouteau and #32 M.L. King.
The #40 Broadway route becomes the #20 S. Broadway and #40 N. Broadway — yes, both are being routes through Civic Center.
The #99 Downtown Trolley is having a West portion split off into the #96 Market Street Shuttle.
August 13, 2017Featured, Sunday PollComments Off on Sunday Poll: Are You Uncomfortable In The Arch Tram?
I’d guess that most of you reading this post have been up in the Gateway Arch at least once. Today’s poll question is curious if you get uncomfortable doing so.
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