Southron, on Mar 26 2009, 10:04 PM, said:
An engineering study of lowering the interstate was presented to ONB, with a projected cost of up to $700 million and nearly 20 acres reclaimed for development. According to ONB the existing interstate is within seven years or so of its life cycle and could cost $125 million to repair or replace.
Proposal presented to Birmingham leaders calling for lowering I-20/59 downtown

Proposal presented to Birmingham leaders calling for lowering I-20/59 downtown

Atlanta's Downtown Connector is a perfect example as it is entrenched or partially so throughout Midtown and for many years served as a substantial barrier to community and economic development westward from Midtown due to the basic automotive-oriented utilitarian designs of the street overpasses. That has been changing substantially with reconstruction of some of them with a eye towards improving the pedestrian and cycling experience/environment.
Compare the pedestrian experience of the North Avenue overpass (via Google Streetview) of 10' wide sidewalks sandwiched between chain link fencing and five lanes of traffic with the recently rebuilt Fifth St. overpass (image below) that serves to connect Georgia Tech's campus expansion on the east side of the Connector to the main land-locked campus on the west side.

The bridge is a full acre, most of which is a small park with barrier plantings that muffle traffic noise and visually hide the interstate below; you can cross it with practically no awareness that there are 16 lanes of traffic underneath you. Currently, the 14th St. bridge is being rebuilt with pedestrian- and bike-friendly features, though not nearly as elaborate as 5th St.













