Downtown Dallas Needs Zipcars and Bioswales. Or Lots of Pretty Flower Pots.

As we predicted, the word "balance" was frequently used to describe what a "great street" could and should be during Tuesday's presentation to the city council's Transportation and Environment Committees. The council was left with plenty to ponder as RTKL's Eric Dohrer more or less told the council that it...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

As we predicted,

the word

“balance”

was

frequently

used

to describe what a

“great street” could and should be during Tuesday’s presentation to the city council’s Transportation and Environment Committees. The council was left with plenty to ponder as RTKL’s Eric Dohrer more or less told the council that it needs to rip up (metaphorically, at least) downtown’s pavement, get the cars off the pavement and create separate,

Related

well-defined

sections

for sidewalks, bicycle lanes and

narrow driving lanes.

Related

Starting from scratch isn’t always necessary, he told them.

Medians

can be

expanded and replaced with greenery instead of concrete.

Related

Planters

with

flowers

and trees add

Related

natural

beauty and

serve

as barriers

Related

between foot traffic and cars.

Still.

“Our city has not moved forward thinking about these little, small details,” said Carolyn Davis, who likes

the idea

Related

of

integrating

flower pots, plants and trees

onto

Related

Malcolm X

and Cedar Crest Boulevards. “People say it’s a bad area, but if you start putting these types of things in this area, it’ll change the mindset.”

The council,

cautious about overreaching, expressed

Related

interest in initially pursuing small projects

— if, they said, they were interested in adopting the project at all.

Dohrer

was hesitant to provide specific costs, but

Related

recommended

prioritizing

projects

that would be easy to implement. Davis mentioned

Related

possibly including

a provision for

street

improvements

Related

in the 2010 bond package, while Angela Hunt

singled out

Ross Avenue

and suggested creating

Related

more

links

to Dallas Area Rapid Transit light rail.

This is

Related

about “changing our mindset from, ‘How do we move cars as fast as possible?’ to ‘How do we move people?,'”
Hunt said.

One thing that discourages pedestrian traffic
downtown is
there aren’t enough
clearly marked intersections and crosswalks. Installing so-called “curb neckdowns” — or extensions —
is one way of reducing the crossing
distance between intersections; they’d also force drivers to slow down. Some
of RTKL’s other suggestions sounded like
a rundown of
an urban planner’s wish list: bioswales
that catch and filter rainwater; solar-powered bus stops; citywide bike
rentals; tiny zipcars to supplement mass transit. Or, as
RTKL’s
Tom Brink
said, half-seriously,
“We were thinking maybe in Dallas it would be a zip truck.”

The briefing was
ostensibly
about improving streets, but the underlying message was shifting Dallas
away from city-grid-dominated by cars and trucks. “We’re kind of
trending away from the automobile ever so slightly,” said Dohrer. “I
think we’ll see $4 gas again before we see $1.50 gas.”

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the This Week’s Top Stories newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...