Lansing to EL light rail - is it viable?
The more I think about it the more excited I get about having a light rail or streetcar system connecting downtown Lansing with downtown East Lansing. These two cities really compliment eachother so well and if they could be more integrated the results would be incredible. Lansing has the advantage with adults and young professionals and East Lansing has the advantage when it comes to young adults, higher education and disposable income.
In my mind the track could be reduced to 4.0 miles if you had one end at the proposed East Village site (Bogue and Grand River) in East Lansing and the other end located at the Convention Center in downtown Lansing with 7 stops in total (Convention Center, Sparrow Hospital, Eastside Lansing near The Green Door, Frandor, Brody Complex at Harrison Road, downtown EL near MAC/Abbot, and East Village).
Do you think it'd be successful as far as ridership levels? What about from a return on investment perspective?
In my mind the track could be reduced to 4.0 miles if you had one end at the proposed East Village site (Bogue and Grand River) in East Lansing and the other end located at the Convention Center in downtown Lansing with 7 stops in total (Convention Center, Sparrow Hospital, Eastside Lansing near The Green Door, Frandor, Brody Complex at Harrison Road, downtown EL near MAC/Abbot, and East Village).
Do you think it'd be successful as far as ridership levels? What about from a return on investment perspective?
Comments
(Even an express bus during rush hours that made fewer stops between Meridian Mall and the Capitol would be a nice improvement over the short-term.)
This topic has been coming up more and more in local circles. Any service improvements, however, will hit the back burner for who-knows-how-long if the CATA millage fails. Get out on November 4th and vote "yes".
Once the millage is secured it is my understanding that CATA needs one of those infamous "earmarks" to pull together the planning funding to do a bona-fide feasibility study of the corridor.
It's true that we are on the smaller end as far as population goes (2007 MSA estimate at 456,000 - Lansing city at 120,000/EL city at 50,000/MSU students at 45,000). I know it's not a perfect comparison, but if Boise Idaho with an MSA estimate of 550,000 and a city population of 200,000 can implement a modern streetcar system I think we could as well. FYI, their proposed system is about 3 miles and is expected to cost about $55 million.
Does anyone know in general how feasibility studies are conducted? Is there a magic number that needs to be hit for vehicle traffic count or bus ridership numbers?
http://capitalgainsmedia.com/inthenews/rail0310.aspx
http://www.wilx.com/news/headlines/41327852.html
BTW, to link the articles, use the button/option second from the right.