otis-t, on Dec 28 2006, 12:27 PM, said:
I hadn't heard about the new train station -- what's the timeline for that project?
This train station could be built any time; the property is already acquired jointly by NCDOT and the city of Asheville. I'm not sure of the timeline - it's been "two years from now" for the past ten years. The train station has wiggled itself into NCDOT's latest TIP (P-3804) though the project is unfunded.
It's quite likely that the station will be built well before trains can actually stop there. Norfolk Southern, who owns the rail lines between Salisbury and Asheville, have a list of improvements almost $140 million long that they're demanding before they'll allow four passenger trains per day to traverse their tracks.
Quote
Speaking of pedestrian bridges, what could be done to improve pedestrian access across McDowell @ the Biltmore Estate entrance? It is extremely unpleasant to walk there, and with a new hotel coming in on the west side, there will be a greater need for pedestrian comfort/safety.
You're absolutely right about pedestrian improvements, though I think a pedestrian bridge is far from necessary. It would be an eyesore, and people would sooner jaywalk against a red light than climb stairs to go over that street. Here are my suggested improvements:
1. Sidewalks were there are none, and wider sidewalks where they exist but are inadequate. Street trees, planters, and benches would also be nice, though not necessary.
2. Better crosswalks, all corners of each intersection.
Zebra stripes, or better yet, pavers of some sort. Or for something different, that funky hexagonal pattern at Haywood & Battery Park downtown.
3. Better signals with better timing.
New, bright LED stoplights for cars; LED signals with countdowns for pedestrians, timed such that they do not require a pushbutton to activate, and will allow pedestrians to cross during every cycle. (even in the middle of the night - just like downtown).
If McDowell were a city street, all three items above should be no problem. But since McDowell is an NCDOT highway - a signed, major US route at that - getting the signals timed in any way that diminishes vehicular capacity would require an act of Congress (or the MPO, at least.)
But all of this is less is still less than the red tape of building a pedestrian bridge, and will result in a far more attractive streetscape. Short of a freeway or an expressway, I've never seen a 5-lane road that really needs a bridge to make pedestrians feel safe.
While we're at it I'd also like to see the intersection at Biltmore & Brook improved as above, as well as the 5-way intersection at Vanderbilt, McDowell, Biltmore, All Souls, and Hendersonville.
It would be really great if there could be a new signalized intersection installed at Angle Street on both Biltmore and McDowell. Unfortunately, NCDOT's "1000 foot" rule would prevent this. The 1000 foot rule states that no two traffic signals shall be closer than 1000 feet. As I eluded before, The DOT's inflexibility is notorious - this "1000 foot rule" applies in downtown Raleigh just the same as it applies in the middle of rural Yancey county. The only exceptions to this rule that I've seen are places where signals are grandfathered in, and there are plenty of examples where 'grandfathered' signals have been ripped out at a later date.