CSO Projects
Since the CSO is major ongoing project, I figured it deserves it's own forum.
Current CSO Newsletter
In the newsletter available now they show some renderings of a streetscaped Grand Ave, which really looks nice.
Current CSO Newsletter
In the newsletter available now they show some renderings of a streetscaped Grand Ave, which really looks nice.
Comments
I've seen old photographs of Oakland before the additional lanes and before it curved off to connect back to Saginaw near Big Tony's Pizza. The homes looked really nice, with sizable front yards...Now who wants to live in a house right on a four-lane one-way street (with no parking)? Last weekend I walked down Saginaw to Sawyer's Pancake house -- what a frightening experience! I've heard people talk about the crime in the area near Pine/Saginaw, but I was definitely more afraid of getting hit with a speeding car (35 must be the minimum speed limit) or road debris flying up and hitting me.
I know Portland's had great success with road diets. What do people think - will Lansing take the chance when the CSO project comes to those streets and reduce the lanes?
Perhaps now that there aren't three GM factories down the street that people have to rush to and from to punch a clock at shift changes, MDOT will consider it.
I recognize that Saginaw/Oakland is a state trunkline and gets its fair share of traffic, but it's got at least double the lane counts of I-496, which I'm sure gets more traffic.
That said, the plan I do remember seeing in the City Pulse some years back did have the street remaining the same size but simply converting it two two ways using the further left and right lanes for one-street parking to slow down traffic even further. This also totally took out most of Oakland through much of the westside turning it into a linear green-space. That sounded a bit extreme, but there are so many possibilities, ANY of which would be better than what we have, now. Growing up in the very area where all four of these one-way streets met, I can tell you it's absolutely terrible what it does to the neighborhood.