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  1. #1

    Default Is an underground subway more appropriate for Woodward than an aboveground rail.

    I think that the light rail proposal is great for Detroit. However, it would have been better if we had an underground Subway as opposed to a light rail running up and down Woodward. Obviouslly it would be much more expensive, but I would be curious if there was a cost analysis as to the difference in cost. Anyone know?? It would be great to have an underground subway especially in the Winter..People can wait for trains or make connections if future lines are put in while being warmed. Also, trains would not be mingling with traffic and crossing intersections. Lastly, I heard that there are underground tunnels beneath Detroit and Midtown. Maybe these could be converted to underground rail. I know..I know....my proposals sound so crazy to people......

  2. #2

    Default

    I think a 120 ft wide, nine lane right of way can easily handle the streetcars, especially with the level of traffic seen on Woodward. A subway would be redundant. The only stretch where I think a subway would be even remotely viable is along Vernor Hwy in Southwest Detroit.

  3. #3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Meddle View Post
    Good grief, not you again.
    LOL!



    I thought a subway, was by definition underground. hmmm...
    The only thing a subway in Detroit is going to do is attract the "homeless" to the warmth in the winter, as well as a casual place for most people to pee. There just isn't enough people. Start with LRV. If for some reason the population explodes and the LRV's are a menace to traffic, THEN you sink the line in the ground.
    I think streetcars, LRV, whatever you want to call'em, would ultimatly be better for Downtown anyways. In a subway you're going to miss all the shops along the way. Having a buisness on a streetcar route means 1000's of eyeballs are rolling past your storefront everyday. Plus a stretcar can make more stops. A subway will be clear out of downtown in 3 or 4 stops.

  4. #4

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Magnatomicflux View Post
    LOL!
    I thought a subway, was by definition underground. hmmm...
    Actually many of the Subways I frequent ARE above ground and serve a great sandwich I wish you all would quit picking on NewDetroit and his/her incredible ideas, 17 now I believe? I for one would never want an aboveground subway as then you'd have to build an aboveground tunnel to cover it. HOWEVER, besides a place for the homeless, a subway would make a great movie set for all those scary movies and cops n robbers.

    Now it's time for milk and cookies and a nap so NewDetroit can focus on other incredible thoughts to save the city

  5. #5

    Default

    Yes, it is.

  6. #6

    Default

    If I remember correctly, there were at least two plans to build a subway under Woodward. The 1919 plan could have succeeded, but the city used its bonding authority to buy the Detroit portion of the Detroit United Railway in the early 1920s, incorporating it as the Department of Street Railways we know now as DDOT. I believe at that point they couldn't issue enough bonds to build the subway, so it died. Do recall seeing some midcentury plans for a subway station under Campus Martius.

    At some point, light rail could attract enough dense development to where a subway would make sense. Which, in turn, would attract even denser development.

    I call BS on this fear of trains mingling with traffic. Not only should light rail have right-of-way it can rely on, one of the reasons Detroit is so f*cked right now is because everybody is terrified of impeding vehicular traffic. Remember, EVERYBODY is traffic, not just motorists.

  7. #7

    Default

    From what I understand, putting a local commuter train system is always much more expensive. As to the concern that the homeless will use it for warmth, this is always a concern, but that has not been a problem in the DC system. The appropriate procedures need to be implemented to verify that no one remains in the system after it closes [[if it closes). As for the people urinating, that's disgusting and needs to be dealt with in the design to ensure that the possibility for this does not exist.

    The advantages of the above ground system are that people get the chance to see businesses and attractions that they travel past and may decide to visit later. It also helps to connect the commuters to the community.

  8. #8
    Bearinabox Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Magnatomicflux View Post
    I thought a subway, was by definition underground. hmmm...
    Vienna has a subway line that's elevated for most of its length. I'm not sure what makes it a subway except that they call it one, but there it is.

  9. #9

    Default

    Several subway lines in New York are underground in the densely developed areas and run on elevated track through others. Very expensive to put the whole thing underground. Boston, Philly and Chicago also have systems that are surface or elevated and go underground as they enter the center city.

  10. #10

    Default

    Just for "grins" from Answers.com

    What is a subway?

    In: Inventions, Trains [Edit categories]

    An underground series of tunnels with trains running through them. They are used as a form of mass transit allowing pedestrians to get across big cities generally quicker than by car.

  11. #11

    Default

    With respect to comingling above ground rail transportation with cars, trucks, etc. Zurich has a rail trolley system that runs down the center of streets just like the old pictures of Woodward show from the early 1900's. also, while not widespread, how about the San Fransisco Cablecar system? Seems to work well with little/no problem.

  12. #12

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Trumpeteer View Post
    Just for "grins" from Answers.com

    What is a subway?

    In: Inventions, Trains [Edit categories]

    An underground series of tunnels with trains running through them. They are used as a form of mass transit allowing pedestrians to get across big cities generally quicker than by car.
    In London "subway" refers to underground walkways.

  13. #13

    Default

    When I lived in the NYC borough of Queens, the nearest 'subway' line to my apartment actually ran above the street for pretty much its entire length outside of Manhattan. This is actually quite common in the so-called outer boroughs of NYC.

    No, Chicagoans and former Chicagoans, no one in NYC calls these lines "the el" like they do in Chicago. They are always called "the subway" there, since they're part of the subway system. Real old-time NYers will recall for you that NYC did once have a separate system of 'els', a system that was older than the subways [[built in the late 1800s) with trains running above-ground over several Manhattan avenues and out into the boroughs. But the last of these was torn down in the 1950s.

  14. #14

    Default

    The transportation professionals usually use the terms light rail and heavy rail. A subway is a type of heavy rail system that runs underground. Heavy rail systems have their own right of way. Light rail systems can have their own right of way or share a surface road right of way.

    The only type of heavy rail system that Detroit will possibly ever see is a commuter train. That is, a rail line with very few stops that supports commuters travelling relatively long distances.

    Any discussion of the potential for a local subway line for the Woodward Avenue corridor should probably recognize that there is a good chance that there will never be another underground heavy rail system built from scratch anywhere in the entire country. [[Los Angeles and New York are doing some expansion on underground lines but that's it.) The infrastructure costs are simply too high. Detroit will see flying cars before it gets a subway. Flying cars will be fun.

  15. #15

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    If I remember correctly, there were at least two plans to build a subway under Woodward. The 1919 plan could have succeeded, but the city used its bonding authority to buy the Detroit portion of the Detroit United Railway in the early 1920s, incorporating it as the Department of Street Railways we know now as DDOT. I believe at that point they couldn't issue enough bonds to build the subway, so it died. Do recall seeing some midcentury plans for a subway station under Campus Martius.

    Detroit voters also approved the building of a subway in a 1933 referendum, but the state refused to fund it or to submit it to the feds to be funded.

    There was a lot of talk, and a bond issue for a study and public hearings, in the '60s and early '70s about a subway on Woodward that might have used the Grand Trunk rail alignment north of the city through Oakland County. The federal and state funding may have been there then to do it, but there was little local will and a lot of the all-too-familiar fears and animosities.

    Subways are great, but incredibly expensive to build and maintain. In addition to commitment from higher levels of government to provide the necessary building and operating subsidies, they really require a significant population density to be useful and effective. We don't have that here, and won't for the foreseeable future. I think an expandable light rail system is really the way to go in Detroit.

    The worries about traffic are really a red herring, since streetcars once operated on the streets here, and continue to operate elsewhere, in reasonable safety surrounded by much higher volumes of traffic than we currently see on Detroit streets.

  16. #16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    In London "subway" refers to underground walkways.
    They're called "Pedways" here though. The Brits have it wrong again.

  17. #17

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by EastsideAl View Post
    Real old-time NYers will recall for you that NYC did once have a separate system of 'els', a system that was older than the subways [[built in the late 1800s) with trains running above-ground over several Manhattan avenues and out into the boroughs. But the last of these was torn down in the 1950s.
    The subway was built to replace the els.

  18. #18

    Default

    Yes, subways would be prefereable, but everybody's broke. Impeding traffic is not a problem, you just give the trolley/bus/tram/light rail priority, which is not some pie-in-the-sky theoretical concept, but a tested system. Other cities have systems that automatically manipulate the stop lights appropriately for emergency services, for example. You just use transponders, basically like those you have at a parking garage, or maybe a device attached to the lights that identifies the flashing lights that accompany sirens, or possibly something different, there may be other solutions out there. Anyways, that issue is pretty old hat, aside from a breakdown of civility that may have people double-parking.

    Newdetroit, your suggestions are too "macro," IMO. They require billion dollar bond issues, massive federal funds, or some other bonanza. So they're basically academic, IMO. Wouldn't it be great if man could fly?

    IMO, try "Should there be a blog that covers musical acts in SE Mich to foster regional integration and promote local music scene as brand Detroit?" so you or somebody else can start that blog.

  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by tetsua View Post
    They're called "Pedways" here though. The Brits have it wrong again.
    Actually, according to some old heads on this board, that was once what subways were in Detroit too.

  20. #20

    Default

    I remember hearing somewhere that there would be a terrific infrastructure problem with a subway under Woodward. Right?

  21. #21

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by douglasm View Post
    I remember hearing somewhere that there would be a terrific infrastructure problem with a subway under Woodward. Right?
    Totally. Much better that we just lay concrete over it perfectly and it never crumbles.

  22. #22

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    The subway was built to replace the els.
    Well, sort of. The last of the 3 subway systems built in NYC, the 'Independent' [[i.e. publicly owned and operated) 6th and 8th Ave. lines, was built to replace the els. There was also supposed to be a 2nd Ave. line, but that is only just now being partially built.

    But the other subway systems in the city, the privately-built IRT and the BMT [[formerly BRT), were built to compliment the el system, and did so for decades.

  23. #23

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    Actually, according to some old heads on this board, that was once what subways were in Detroit too.
    Thats what they still call them in New Center.

  24. #24

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Newdetroit View Post
    I think that the light rail proposal is great for Detroit. However, it would have been better if we had an underground Subway as opposed to a light rail running up and down Woodward. Obviouslly it would be much more expensive, but I would be curious if there was a cost analysis as to the difference in cost. Anyone know?? It would be great to have an underground subway especially in the Winter..People can wait for trains or make connections if future lines are put in while being warmed. Also, trains would not be mingling with traffic and crossing intersections. Lastly, I heard that there are underground tunnels beneath Detroit and Midtown. Maybe these could be converted to underground rail. I know..I know....my proposals sound so crazy to people......
    9 miles of subway? No. A half mile tunnel for light rail to service downtown? Yes.

  25. #25

    Default

    I'd support selective subway development.. too bad that John Hertel killed all that talk in his pitch meetings..

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