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  1. #1

    Default What is with the East/West streets in midtown??

    one of my biggest problems with midtown is the east/west streets going through it.

    currently there are 2 [[read: TWO) streets that you can drive on without turning that will connect you from West of the Lodge to East of I-75 [[Warren and Mack/MLK). Who the hell thought this would be a good idea?

    on top of that MANY of the east/west streets within midtown constantly are shifting north and south, and there is no flow from block to block

    here are just a few examples of Canfield and Selden streets

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    A big problem is the DMC campus. They don't allow a single street to cut through it and it made basically a giant mega-block on the east side of midtown

    Another problem on the east side of midtown seems to be those giant suburb-esque developments near brush park and the DMC

    If midtown wants to be fully walkable it would be nice to get some four-way intersections and not all these awkward 3 way ones where you're shifting north and south just to go east or west.

    rant over.

  2. #2

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    Cass was the dividing line between landowners about a billion years ago. Okay maybe about 200 years ago. To the West was Lewis Cass' ribbon farm to the E were the homesteads of the Gentry. What you are seeing is the result of historic land divisions from long ago. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cass_Fa...rty_Submission

    It is nothing worth ranting over.

  3. #3

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    Sort of a by-product of planning streets and developing along the edges of the old ribbon farms and partly because most people were traveling north-south anyway. There's wasn't really enough traffic traveling east-west to bother aligning the streets.

    This is what the area looked like in 1876.

    http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/micounty...image&size=400

  4. #4

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    Yeah I agree, there are so many little spots like that. I feel like if the city government was stronger they would be able to deal with these situations. The roads, not only in midtown and downtown, but throughout the city, make no sense. There are also a bunch of peculiar spots where you could tell some planner in the 50s half implemented a half baked idea.

    Especially with so much empty space it would be possible to fix many of them and make everything much more coherent and effective.

  5. #5

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    The effect is amplified when you want to reach the Lodge freeway if you're in Midtown

    God forbid you are anywhere on woodward north of Mack because since Forest is a one way leading AWAY from the freeway [[WHICH NEEDS TO CHANGE [please make it a two-way!!!), you have to loop all the way down to mack just to reach the damn service drive of the lodge to enter at forest!

    If forest was a two-way leading to the lodge i honestly wouldn't have noticed this problem midtown has. But if i ever want to take the lodge I end up having to either go through a god damn maze of left turn/right turn/ north/ south/ to reach the lodge service drive

    or now-a-days i just go south to mack and take a right, and go back north on the lodge service drive to get to the frickin freeway.

  6. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by SpartanDawg View Post
    The effect is amplified when you want to reach the Lodge freeway if you're in Midtown

    God forbid you are anywhere on woodward north of Mack because since Forest is a one way leading AWAY from the freeway [[WHICH NEEDS TO CHANGE [please make it a two-way!!!), you have to loop all the way down to mack just to reach the damn service drive of the lodge to enter at forest!
    Why would you go all the down to Mack? You can just go up to Warren and make a left at the Lodge and loop around the service drive. All left-turns.

  7. #7

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    Maybe they can add another freeway to get to the freeway.

  8. #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jason View Post
    Yeah I agree, there are so many little spots like that. I feel like if the city government was stronger they would be able to deal with these situations. The roads, not only in midtown and downtown, but throughout the city, make no sense. There are also a bunch of peculiar spots where you could tell some planner in the 50s half implemented a half baked idea.

    Especially with so much empty space it would be possible to fix many of them and make everything much more coherent and effective.
    I would be surprised that when platted there was even a City out that far.

  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitPlanner View Post
    Cass was the dividing line between landowners about a billion years ago. Okay maybe about 200 years ago. To the West was Lewis Cass' ribbon farm to the E were the homesteads of the Gentry. What you are seeing is the result of historic land divisions from long ago. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cass_Fa...rty_Submission

    It is nothing worth ranting over.
    Agreed.

    On a list of things in Detroit to whine about, this has to be like 158,097 on the list...

  10. #10

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    Like DetroitPlanner said, the unevenness of streets running across Woodward, Cass, etc. is an artifact of our local history. As you may know, Detroit was originally laid out in a series of long narrow "ribbon" farms that ran northward from the river. And the echo of that pattern can still be seen today in the southern portion of the city.

    Outside of the center of downtown [[the Woodward Plan), the main "spoke" arterials, and boundary streets like Grand Blvd and Outer Dr., the street pattern in most of the rest of the city is not the result of planning, but is a relic of hundreds of subdivisions cut out of farmland and laid out by real estate speculators as the city's population grew. This is why the street layout can seem to "make no sense" in spots [[as Jason says above), streets often don't quite meet or "jog" at intersections, and sometimes you'll run into a neighborhood with streets on a different orientation from adjacent neighborhoods. So, the answer to SpartanDawg's question in the original post is that the street layout was no one's "idea."

    The streets that now do run straight across Woodward north of downtown are mostly the result of 20th century planning attempts to ease automobile travel across the city. The model for this was Vernor Highway, which was cobbled together as a crosstown auto route out of several different streets in the 1920s [[the downtown portion is now under I-75). Warren and Forest were turned into one-way crosstown through streets [[Warren westbound, and Forest eastbound) for auto traffic in the 1930s. Warren was later widened into a boulevard through that area in the 1970s, leaving Forest alone as one way. The Mack - MLK [[formerly Myrtle) crosstown boulevard was linked together out of several streets through the '60s and '70s.

    The superblocks of the Med Center, Lafayette Park, Wayne State, and several other such areas, are of course the result of 1950s, 60s, and 70s planning ideas about the undesirability of urbanism, congestion, and density that left similar dead areas in cities throughout the country.
    Last edited by EastsideAl; October-21-14 at 08:41 PM.

  11. #11

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    Quote Originally Posted by animatedmartian View Post
    Why would you go all the down to Mack? You can just go up to Warren and make a left at the Lodge and loop around the service drive. All left-turns.

    well to be honest, i'm dumb and never thought of that...

    but still it is a bit unnecessary, i'm sure they could workout the logistics and just make forest a two way street starting at the service drive to make it easier on people..

    really appreciate the feedback too i actually didn't realize why they were like this, i figured it was some artifact of old urban planning..

    the super blocks thing though.. man i reaaallllyyy wish they would cut down on those. the one that irks me the most in midtown [[as i have said before) is the John R, Alexandrine, Mack, and Woodward bounded one... there is no point to it and it can be VERY easily broken up by having selden continue through from woodward to John R. they just have to go through a giant parking lot ...

    really wish some higher-ups would consider it, although i'm sure the situation is muddied by people owning that land, etc.

    but it would make that area so much more desirable for development, rather than just massive parking behind some stand-alone towers..

    one can only dream.

  12. #12

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    really if there is ANY time to continue selden through it would be now.. while the construction of the new wayne state physician group building is going up... i'm praying it's in their plans to have a street cut through that block

  13. #13

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    Quote Originally Posted by 313WX View Post
    Agreed.

    On a list of things in Detroit to whine about, this has to be like 158,097 on the list...
    Other than the fact stupid DMC won't allow a road through its lobby.

  14. #14

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    Quote Originally Posted by SpartanDawg View Post
    really if there is ANY time to continue selden through it would be now.. while the construction of the new wayne state physician group building is going up... i'm praying it's in their plans to have a street cut through that block
    I don't think there's a need for Selden to go through. Maybe have a pedestrian pathway, but I'm sure most people don't have any trouble reaching DMC from other routes by car.

    I would be in favor of breaking up all the superblocks with garden apartments, however. Like having Canfield and Prentis reconnected to the Lodge and realigning those apartments to the street.

  15. #15

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    Check out one of the pre 1956 DTE aerials of the Mt Elliott/Harper intersection. The jog in Mt Elliot was taken out when the Edsel Ford was cut through.

    Streets are the same way between Canton and Plymouth. Sheldon, Lilly and Morton Taylor all have an aligner in them at the border. Lilly and Morton Taylor also change names in Plymouth.

    The jog at Michigan Ave between Belleville Rd and Canton Center was taken out when an aligner was put in around a dozen years ago.

    You can start on Parkview Ave on the west side of Kalamazoo, hit an aligner, and you are on White's Rd. Another aligner and you are on Cork St.

    As others have suggested, it's a lack of planning between local authorities that leads to this mess. The worst I have seen is on the west side of Columbus, Ohio. Streets go all over the place, start and stop, and take off at odd angles, as the city has overrun a number of small villages and townships over the years.

  16. #16

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    1. Look at a detailed street map of the city. Detroit has four different street grids:

    a. The Woodward Plan in downtown.

    b. The streets oriented on the ribbon farms along the Detroit River.

    c. The streets oriented on the ribbon farms along Lake St Clair.

    d. The streets oriented on the township and section lines of the Northwest Survey.

    2. Even in the east-west/north-south roads of the NW Survey, you will have "jogs" at intersections which are "grid corrections" from a combination of chain and compass surveying inaccuracies and the fact that townships/sections are trying to impose a flat system on a spherical earth.

    3. Through East-west corridors [[and streetcar and bus routes) have always been suboptimal in Detroit. This was one of the "drivers" of the Davison Xpwy and the Edsel Ford Xpwy.

  17. #17

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    Quote Originally Posted by Steve203 View Post
    As others have suggested, it's a lack of planning between local authorities that leads to this mess. The worst I have seen is on the west side of Columbus, Ohio. Streets go all over the place, start and stop, and take off at odd angles, as the city has overrun a number of small villages and townships over the years.
    This subdivision of land predates City planning by probably a century. Might as well complain about the areas where the Woodward Plan stops then the grid begins, or when the old French ribbon farm system meets the rigorous Jefferson Survey system.

  18. #18

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    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitPlanner View Post
    "rigorous" Jefferson Survey system.
    Rigorous in concept, but executed with quite a bit less precision. Survey was by chain and compass through often impassible woods and swamps. A "chain" was the 66 foot long "Gunters Chain" of 100 "links". Eight chains per furlong, Eighty chains per mile. You were lucky to get one or two degree accuracy in azimuth with the old surveyors compass.
    Last edited by Hermod; October-22-14 at 07:33 AM.

  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by EastsideAl View Post
    Like DetroitPlanner said, the unevenness of streets running across Woodward, Cass, etc. is an artifact of our local history. As you may know, Detroit was originally laid out in a series of long narrow "ribbon" farms that ran northward from the river. And the echo of that pattern can still be seen today in the southern portion of the city.

    Outside of the center of downtown [[the Woodward Plan), the main "spoke" arterials, and boundary streets like Grand Blvd and Outer Dr., the street pattern in most of the rest of the city is not the result of planning, but is a relic of hundreds of subdivisions cut out of farmland and laid out by real estate speculators as the city's population grew. This is why the street layout can seem to "make no sense" in spots [[as Jason says above), streets often don't quite meet or "jog" at intersections, and sometimes you'll run into a neighborhood with streets on a different orientation from adjacent neighborhoods. So, the answer to SpartanDawg's question in the original post is that the street layout was no one's "idea."

    The streets that now do run straight across Woodward north of downtown are mostly the result of 20th century planning attempts to ease automobile travel across the city. The model for this was Vernor Highway, which was cobbled together as a crosstown auto route out of several different streets in the 1920s [[the downtown portion is now under I-75). Warren and Forest were turned into one-way crosstown through streets [[Warren westbound, and Forest eastbound) for auto traffic in the 1930s. Warren was later widened into a boulevard through that area in the 1970s, leaving Forest alone as one way. The Mack - MLK [[formerly Myrtle) crosstown boulevard was linked together out of several streets through the '60s and '70s.

    The superblocks of the Med Center, Lafayette Park, Wayne State, and several other such areas, are of course the result of 1950s, 60s, and 70s planning ideas about the undesirability of urbanism, congestion, and density that left similar dead areas in cities throughout the country.
    I always thought that "the Woodward plan" was the reason for the spoke pattern in downtown until I read this recently:
    The spoke-wheel layout of Detroit's streets is often attributed to Judge Augustus Woodward. But according to Joel Stone, senior curator at the Detroit Historical Society, that's a common misconception."The spoke-wheel plan we can attribute to the Native Americans," Stone explained. "They were here long before anyone else, and they had established trails."
    These trails would take them down to Toledo, up to Port Huron, off to Grand Rapids, or up towards Pontiac. They were used for trade and travel and still stand today, just with different names than they once had: Jefferson, Gratiot, Woodward, Grand River, Michigan Avenue, and Fort Street.
    The streets are the major spokes of Detroit's wheel system and their hub is Campus Martius Park.
    http://michiganradio.org/post/8-mile...ht-miles-where

  20. #20

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    Quote Originally Posted by jcole View Post
    I always thought that "the Woodward plan" was the reason for the spoke pattern in downtown until I read this recently:

    http://michiganradio.org/post/8-mile...ht-miles-where
    Thanks for this link. I never knew about this center post before. Too busy being a new mom at the time I guess.

  21. #21

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    Quote Originally Posted by jcole View Post
    I always thought that "the Woodward plan" was the reason for the spoke pattern in downtown until I read this recently:

    "The spoke-wheel layout of Detroit's streets is often attributed to Judge Augustus Woodward. But according to Joel Stone, senior curator at the Detroit Historical Society, that's a common misconception."The spoke-wheel plan we can attribute to the Native Americans," Stone explained. "They were here long before anyone else, and they had established trails."
    These trails would take them down to Toledo, up to Port Huron, off to Grand Rapids, or up towards Pontiac. They were used for trade and travel and still stand today, just with different names than they once had: Jefferson, Gratiot, Woodward, Grand River, Michigan Avenue, and Fort Street.
    The streets are the major spokes of Detroit's wheel system and their hub is Campus Martius Park. "

    http://michiganradio.org/post/8-mile...ht-miles-where
    Although they started as Indian Trails, they were included as widened "spoke" roads in the Woodward Plan. The inter-city roads connected to these spokes were laid out along the old trails, and straightened, widened, graded, etc. by the military through the first half of the 1800s. This military road system was pushed by Lewis Cass, and approved by Congress, in reaction to the difficulties of defending and supplying Detroit during the War of 1812.

  22. #22

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    Quote Originally Posted by jcole View Post
    I always thought that "the Woodward plan" was the reason for the spoke pattern in downtown until I read this recently:

    http://michiganradio.org/post/8-mile...ht-miles-where
    The Woodward Plan incorporated the already existing pathways. It was an ambitious plan and reminds me a lot of Christaller's later work in proving Central Place theory and market hierarchies.
    http://www.geocurrents.info/geograph...-and-elsewhere
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/37603091@N02/3560718957/

  23. #23

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    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitPlanner View Post
    The Woodward Plan incorporated the already existing pathways. It was an ambitious plan and reminds me a lot of Christaller's later work in proving Central Place theory and market hierarchies.
    http://www.geocurrents.info/geograph...-and-elsewhere
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/37603091@N02/3560718957/
    The annotated version of the 2nd link shows how much of the Plan was actually implemented.

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/37603091@N02/3590065349/

    End result: https://www.flickr.com/photos/376030...57618862355998

    It's interesting to note that Grand River and Fort Street wouldn't have existed within the Woodward Plan. Also Gratiot would instead be Monroe Street and follow the same route only a few feet over to the east.
    Last edited by animatedmartian; October-22-14 at 11:18 PM.

  24. #24

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    Quote Originally Posted by animatedmartian View Post
    The annotated version of the 2nd link shows how much of the Plan was actually implemented.

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/37603091@N02/3590065349/

    End result: https://www.flickr.com/photos/376030...57618862355998

    It's interesting to note that Grand River and Fort Street wouldn't have existed within the Woodward Plan. Also Gratiot would instead be Monroe Street and follow the same route only a few feet over to the east.
    Gratiot was the "military road" connecting Detroit to Fort Gratiot [[Port Huron).

  25. #25

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    We can still blame Woodward for Grand Circus Park. When they couldn't buy the land to make a full circle, the plan should've been scrapped. That's not to say Grand Circus Park isn't attractive. It is. But it didn't do wonders for the downtown street grid.

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