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  #1  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2009, 5:32 PM
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Old Posted Nov 19, 2009, 5:43 PM
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^ Oh, sorry. I didn't bother to read the article. But it's still nice to dream. I do it all the time in the case of LA's rail system.
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Old Posted Dec 8, 2009, 4:00 PM
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Completed streetcar tracks on Benning Road, photos from DDOT's facebook page.











There are still no wires, as you can see. The city is working on legislation that will make them legal.
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Old Posted Dec 22, 2009, 6:50 PM
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Self-tax allowed for N.Va. businesses to fund Metro stations

Self-tax allowed for N.Va. businesses to fund Metro stations

Kravitz, Derek
Washington Post
Tuesday, December 22, 2009; B03


Asking business owners to tax themselves is never an easy sell. Asking about three dozen Northern Virginia landowners to tax themselves $330 million could be seen as an unlikely, if not impossible, task.

But with cash-strapped Fairfax County looking to help pay its $850 million share of the second portion of the 23-mile Metrorail extension to Dulles International Airport, the landowners had a choice: Tax yourselves, or risk losing potentially profitable Metrorail stops in Fairfax and Loudoun counties.

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved the creation of a tax district in a special meeting Monday afternoon, after officials and business leaders worked for 5 1/2 years to rally support for the unusual self-taxing plan. The district will impose rates starting at 5 cents per $100 of assessed value next year and increase to 20 cents in 2013. The public funding provided by the landowners, who own about $8 billion worth of property on the western side of Dulles, will provide about $330 million for the project, which will extend from Wiehle Avenue in Reston and Tysons Corner to the airport and Route 772 in Loudoun County.

Fairfax County is to contribute $90 million for the rail stops, but officials are still debating how to pay for an additional $120 million needed for the three stations at Reston Parkway, Herndon and Route 28. Officials are looking at pulling money from a commercial and industrial tax already on the books in Fairfax or asking for more federal funds.

Despite the lingering financing questions, Fairfax Board of Supervisors Chairman Sharon S. Bulova (D) said the tax district's creation is a boon for transit-oriented development in the region.

"This has not been an easy road, but landowners knew if the tax district wasn't established, we could very well have an express lane to Tysons Corner," she said.

The plan crafted by the Western Alliance for Rail to Dulles, a nonprofit agency made up of the landowners, has been in the works since the group was created in June 2004. It includes several money-back safeguards for the property owners in the event the second phase of the project falls apart or is not funded by the federal government. Commercial property owners in the Tysons Corner area have agreed to a tax to pay for the project's first phase, from West Falls Church to Tysons Corner. Property owners in Reston and Herndon did not want to be included in the Tysons tax district and formed their own group.

Since October, an undisclosed number of additional landowners have signed onto the tax plan, bringing the percentage of landowners approving the tax to nearly 61 percent, said C. Lee Fifer, legal counsel to the Western Alliance for Rail to Dulles. With its creation Monday, the tax will be in place by the start of the next fiscal year July 1, allowing the county to build cash reserves that can be used to pay down bonds once they are issued.

Many of the landowners, Fifer said, are hopeful that the rail stops will bring with them opportunities for increased density and development. "To not have rail would hurt us in the long run," he said.

U.S. Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.), a former chairman of the Fairfax board who pushed for the project for nearly four years before being elected to Congress in 2008, said the funding plan, simply put, "is critical for bringing in rail, and all of the development and jobs it brings with it."

"There were a lot of pockmarks along the way but this was really the only way to do it," Connolly said.

The idea to create a special real estate tax first started with the Route 28 tax district to widen the highway. Property owners along the route, frustrated by the state's inability to fund the project, created a special tax district to help pay for the road improvements.

But in Reston and Herndon, Fifer's group struggled initially to get people to sign onto the tax plan. About 31 percent of the area's landowners agreed in principle to the tax district before the Washington Metropolitan Airports Authority took control of the Metrorail project in 2006. At that point, the group essentially had to start collecting signatures from scratch.

"It was rigorous, to start when the economy is struggling as it has and to ask people to tax themselves when they're not sure of their positions or their company's position," Fifer said.

Critics of the tax district say it is yet another unneeded expense placed on area businesses. Christopher W. Walker, a venture capitalist who owns land in the affected area and serves as president of the Dulles Corridor Users Group, has campaigned against the tax district, saying the Metro extension is not cost-effective and would do little to ease gridlock.

"It would be much easier, and much cheaper, to have bus service, but the politicians just wanted to spend the big money on rail," said Walker, who is considering filing a lawsuit to block the tax district from collecting funds. "We're basically taxing people in the future without giving them a chance to weigh in on it."

An advisory board for the tax district will be created by Jan. 12.
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Old Posted Dec 22, 2009, 6:51 PM
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Shuttles for Tysons Metro stations in Virginia need grants (Washington Post)

Shuttles for Tysons Metro stations in Virginia need grants

Hosh, Kafia
Washington Post
Tuesday, December 22, 2009; B03


When four new Metro stations open in Tysons Corner in 2013, Fairfax County plans to have a shuttle bus service ready to ferry riders among the Silver Line stations, office complexes and shopping malls.

But cash-strapped Fairfax has no money now to fund the proposed service. The county's silver lining could come in the form of $280 million in new federal grants dedicated to urban circulators such as streetcars and buses -- if Fairfax can compete successfully for the money.

The grants give priority to transit projects that support the redevelopment of communities into mixed-use, high-density areas. Those guidelines seem to be in line with Fairfax's draft blueprint for redeveloping Tysons into an urban epicenter with pedestrian-friendly streets surrounded by high-rise office and residential buildings.

"It looks like someone wrote [the guidelines] with Tysons in mind," said Clark Tyler, chairman of the county-appointed Tysons Land Use Task Force, a 37-member panel that helped draft the blueprint.

The grant program, which was announced this month, is open to state and local governments. Federal officials said they don't know how competitive the process will be until all applications are submitted by the Feb. 8 deadline.

Fairfax County officials, transit experts and developers agree that a shuttle service with frequent stops would encourage motorists in Tysons to ditch their cars for the rails, relieving congestion in the traffic-choked job center.

The proposed "Tysons Link" would consist of five routes, with each one connecting office complexes and residential areas to two Silver Line stations and retail and restaurant outlets. All of the routes would serve the Tysons Central 123 station. Four would also serve Tysons West, and one would also serve Tysons East.

Preliminary estimates from transit officials indicate that Fairfax needs $9 million to buy the new buses and $5.8 million annually to operate the service.

The county can vie for up to $25 million from a $130 million federal grant designated for urban circulator systems. It also can compete for a chunk of another $150 million allocated for the purchase, replacement or rehabilitation of buses and related equipment.

Kathy Ichter, Fairfax's transportation director, said the county considers all potential funding for its transit projects. But she said Fairfax is still studying the grant requirements to gauge whether the proposed shuttle bus service is eligible for federal money.

"If there is a match here for Tysons, we will be making a grant application," she said. "Tysons is one of our number one priorities."

Ichter cautioned that a federally funded shuttle service could become a cost burden for Fairfax. The county would be required to spend additional money to comply with federal regulations.

"If we take one federal dollar, that means the entire system is federalized and we'd have to go by all their rules," she said. "This is a huge cost implication."

Ichter said one option to bypass that cost burden would be to have the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority run the shuttle service on behalf of Fairfax. WMATA is partly funded and regulated by the federal government.

Ichter said the county has not finalized its cost estimates, but that it intends to have the bus service in place when the stations open in Tysons.

"People want to know exactly what we're running at the end of 2013," she said. "We're four years out. We are entering the phase where we need to be making the decisions about ordering the buses, exactly where the routes are, getting the finances in place, with the idea that when 2013 gets here we'll be ready to deliver."

Stewart Schwartz, executive director of the Coalition for Smarter Growth, said a reliable shuttle service would give commuters an incentive to use transit instead of driving into Tysons.

"If an employee knows there will readily be a circulator available as they get off the Metrorail, and that the transfer is easy and quick to the circulator, they will be more likely to use it," he said.

The Tysons task force has proposed the idea of having landowners served by the bus routes fund the operation of the shuttle-bus service; in exchange, the county would increase density guidelines for the landowners' redevelopment projects. Task force members say the federal grant could help pay for the purchase of new buses, the first step in ensuring that the service is in place when the new Metro stations open.

"The worst thing that could happen is the first train come up and [disgorges] 300 people who stare into a parking lot," Tyler said.
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  #6  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2010, 10:42 PM
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Always good to hear about TODs!
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  #7  
Old Posted Jan 14, 2010, 3:41 AM
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kiss and ride lane... lol, love that term.
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  #8  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2010, 2:08 PM
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Well, didn't see this coming.

John Catoe has resigned, effective in April.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...av=hcmoduletmv

Just prior to announcing his decision, he held a rather innovative blogger roundtable with DC bloggers (and bloggers only) with no subject off limits, and everything on the record.

Some recaps:

http://www.welovedc.com/2010/01/14/t...th-john-catoe/

http://www.movingmomentarily.com/201...toe-human.html

http://greatergreaterwashington.org/post.cgi?id=4613

http://www.wtfmetro.com/2010/01/q-with-john-catoe.html

http://unsuckdcmetro.blogspot.com/20...und-table.html

It's a bold move when the Metro GM invites the author of a blog called "Unsuck DC Metro" to talk, face to face.

With that in mind, despite his resignation it's a unique way to really reach out to the kinds of people that can both be your harshest critics but also your most passionate advocates.

Anyway, all of us in DC are still processing what all this means. Metro faces the largest crisis in its history, with both long and short term budget issues, safety concerns, serious capital improvement needs, and a system that is already straining against the theoretical capacity of the current infrastructure.
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  #9  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2010, 3:33 PM
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Push on for Wisconsin Ave. streetcars (Washington Examiner)

The Washington Examiner published an article today about the campaign of the Wisconsin Avenue Streetcar Coalition to build support for a streetcar route from the Friendship Heights and Tenley metro stations along Wisconsin Avenue to the the terminus of the Georgetown - Benning Road streetcar line. Here is the link for the Coalition's Facebook group: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gi...2402429&ref=ts


Push on for Wisconsin Ave. streetcars

By: Kaitlin Schluter
Special to The Examiner
March 21, 2010

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/lo...-88598262.html


A group of D.C. residents along the Wisconsin Avenue corridor are clamoring to bring streetcars to their neighborhoods.

Project maps currently show a plan to build 37 miles of streetcar track in the D.C. area -- a hefty undertaking that began construction in Anacostia last year. On area maps, that proposed route is marked by dotted lines.

"We want more than a dotted arrow, we want some track on the ground," said Ben Thielen, head of the Wisconsin Avenue Streetcar Coalition and a Glover Park resident.

Thielen's group has asked the District Department of Transportation to study the feasibility of a route alignment along Wisconsin Avenue to provide places like Tenleytown more access. Thielen prefers an alignment where two lanes of streetcars would replace curbside parking. He says the change will relieve congestion in Georgetown as people will be more apt to ditch the car keys if another transit option is available.

According to DDOT spokesman John Lisle, the uncertain future of the line may be determined by community support.

"The dotted line represents the possibility of putting a line there if that's something the city and residents and businesses in Georgetown all agree is a good idea," Lisle said.

According to the DDOT's report in October 2005, the Friendship Heights to Georgetown corridor had received high ratings in terms of potential streetcar ridership, accessibility and minimal environment impact. However, the report states the area is "already highly developed and does not include any city economic development initiatives."

But support appears to be growing. The Coalition's Facebook page is up to 146 members, the D.C. chapter of the Sierra Club is endorsing streetcars along Wisconsin Avenue, and the organization is trying to line up backing from more commissioners with advisory neighborhood committees.

"If you look at the density and need for mass transit and connection [between neighborhoods] -- it's a no-brainer," said Brian Cohen, ANC commissioner for Glover Park and Cathedral Heights.

Not everyone wants streetcars in the neighborhoods. Glover Park resident Alan Carpien said they would add to congestion to the area, noting the streetcars were originally taken out of the area and should be kept that way.

"I can't think of anything that would ruin the neighborhood more than a streetcar line and, frankly, this is a bad idea," Carpien said.
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Old Posted Mar 29, 2010, 4:39 PM
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High-rises planned near Alexandria's Eisenhower Metro station (Washington Examiner)

High-rises planned near Alexandria's Eisenhower Metro station

By: Bill Myers
Examiner Staff Writer
March 28, 2010

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/lo...-89295887.html


A private development company is set to announce a plan for a set of high-rise buildings that would transform Alexandria's skyline.

The Hoffman Co. is seeking approval to build three towers next to the Eisenhower Avenue Metro station. It would add more than 1.3 million square feet of residential space to the city, one of the region's tallest buildings and another 70,000 in retail, including a large Harris Teeter store, Alexandria development chief Gwen Wright said.

[IMG]http://media.washingtonexaminer.com/images/250*140/eisenhowertoned2.jpg[/IMG]
A rendering shows the view of the towers from the Beltway. (Courtesy Alexandria Department of Planning and Zoning)

The proposal calls for 140,000 square feet more than called for in the city's original master plan, but Hoffman officials have promised to add 55 affordable condominiums or apartments into the mix — the largest affordable housing contribution by a developer in Alexandria, Wright said.

It's part of an ambitious and widespread effort to move the suburbs up in the air. Planning chiefs believe that the future of city planning lies in densely packed, mixed-use high-rises, close to mass transit, where residents can walk to work, shop and play.

One of the planned towers would reach 370 feet, making it one of the tallest in the Washington area, Wright said.

If approved by the city council, the plan would require Alexandria and Metro officials to rework the nearby station, with a new bus loop and kiss n' ride. The statue of Dwight Eisenhower also would be moved from Holland Lane to the center of the three towers. The area will be called "Eisenhower Station Square," Wright said.

The work would cost taxpayers about $3 million, Wright said.

The plan is already getting a thumbs up from local development officials.

"It's something that's going to be a great statement for Alexandria's development," said Val Hawkins of the Alexandria Economic Development Partnership. "If you're coming along the Woodrow Wilson Bridge or coming up [Interstate] 495, it's going to be a really impressive skyline."

Wright stressed that, though the new tower would be among the tallest, it would be built in a valley, which means it would appear to be shorter than, say, the George Washington Masonic Memorial.

Hoffman officials didn't respond to requests for comment.

The plans are scheduled to be reviewed by the Alexandria planning committee on April 6 and the full city council on April 17.
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Old Posted Apr 27, 2010, 2:34 PM
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Southwest neighborhood in D.C. takes a turn for the better (Washington Post)

Southwest neighborhood in D.C. takes a turn for the better

By Lisa Rein
Washington Post
Tuesday, April 27, 2010; B01

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...?hpid=newswell

For 50 years, Southwest Washington was divided in half by a mall and an office complex that withered with age. Like the freeway that isolates the neighborhood from downtown, Waterside Mall left its community without a center.

Today, the mall is gone, two gleaming glass office towers with a splashy ground-floor Safeway supermarket have risen in its place and the road that was mothballed to build it is back, with wide sidewalks for pedestrians. Fourth Street might be a stretch of asphalt over two city blocks, but its reappearance in a neighborhood plagued by a generation of poor urban design is an important milestone in its revival.


Maya Tate, 9, waits for her grandfather to bring out her birthday cake from the Safeway supermarket that rose in place of the Waterside Mall in Southwest Washington. (Melina Mara - The Washington Post)

The new pedestrian-friendly, mixed-use project at the Metro's door, Waterfront Station, is the first of three legs of an $800 million redevelopment of 1.2 million square feet for offices, the same amount of residential space and at least 110,000 square feet devoted to shops and restaurants. A CVS and a Bank of America are moving back soon from temporary quarters. A Subway and another restaurant -- one with tablecloths run by the owners of Tunnicliff's Tavern on Capitol Hill -- have signed leases. Three District government agencies moved into the office space this month.




At Sixth Street and Maine Avenue two blocks away, Arena Stage will reopen this fall after a $125 million makeover, expanding its footprint with a new playhouse and rehearsal, office and public space.

"The bottom line is that Southwest is back," said Andrew Litsky, chairman of the Advisory Neighborhood Commission for the area and a resident since 1977. "For everyone who was complaining there was a paucity of everything, they're wrong."

Southwest, in the shadow of the U.S. Capitol, is a mix of federal workers, the elderly, professionals and public housing. It was targeted by the federal government for wholesale urban renewal in the 1950s, with blocks of brick rowhouses almost entirely torn down. Thousands of residents were displaced.

New modernist architecture replaced the old, with vast stretches of concrete, high-rises and minimal stores. It was the opposite of the style favored by today's city planners, who believe that Washington should be remade into walkable neighborhoods with dense development around Metro stations and first-floor retail.

Council member Tommy Wells (D-Ward 6), who represents Southwest, calls the Metro and the waterfront "built-in amenities" that will give urgency to redevelopment as soon as financing begins flowing. A water taxi is scheduled to launch this summer, serving the waterfront in Southwest and the Nationals' ballpark in Southeast, he said.

Wells is pushing for a narrow road along the waterfront for pedestrians and bicyclists.

"We essentially have a six-lane highway that goes through the neighborhood," he said. "How do we make it more animated, safer, more livable and walkable to de-emphasize the car?"

The revival was a long time coming.

Fannie Mae, the mortgage giant, walked out of a deal to be the anchor tenant in 2005, dashing hopes that the aging mall, empty since the Environmental Protection Agency moved out in the early 2000s, would be razed. But Forest City Enterprises found construction financing two years ago, just as credit markets were freezing.

On Third Street, the Bernstein Cos. have completed renovation of a 126-apartment building and gutted another the same size, creating condominiums instead.

Tight credit markets have put a bigger renaissance on hold. Forest City, which is developing Waterfront with Vornado/Charles E. Smith, is still trying to line up financing for the second phase. And a plan to transform 47 acres along the Washington Channel into an inviting stretch of housing, restaurants, shops and cultural attractions has not been started, for the same reason.

For now, the community's most notable new feature is the Safeway, a 54,100-square-foot store with underground parking that opened last week. The supermarket it replaced, also a Safeway, boarded up on a neighboring lot, was a poorly stocked eyesore that languished for years, angering residents.

The new one features a food court, deli, cheese bar, bakery, sit-down sushi bar and full-service deli, along with a Starbucks. The store has hired 40 local residents. On opening day, April 16, workers in chef's hats handed out sourdough bread slices with a balsamic-vinegar spread and other samples as shoppers scoured the eye-catching aisles.
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Old Posted May 5, 2010, 6:24 PM
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I attended the Streetcar Open House and Mayor Fenty's press conference. It was a great event and Councilmembers Graham and Evans, as well as Rep. Blumenauer (D-OR) attended and also spoke. The streetcars are beautiful vehicles and will be a significant improvement over the WMATA and Circulator buses.

Someone from DDOT mentioned the new DC Transit Future System Plan, which was just published on their website. The 2005 Transit Alternatives Analysis has been very helpful in making the case for a Wisconsin Avenue streetcar. I will review this report and summarize my comments this week. Here is the link: http://ddot.dc.gov/DC/DDOT/About+DDO...Transit+Future.

I also spoke briefly with Gabe Klein, Director of DDOT, and told him this is a great 37-mile system but it would be an even better 42-mile network with connections to Tenley and Friendship Heights.

I will post photos from today's event on the Wisconsin Avenue Streetcar Coalition's Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gi...2402429&ref=ts ) and this forum later this evening.
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Old Posted May 6, 2010, 11:20 AM
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Mayor Adrian Fenty describing the passenger benefits of DC's planned 37-mile streetcar network.




Who wouldn't want to be behind the controls of this Czech beauty?



Wide doors to allow easy entry/exit of passengers, further saving travel time for passengers.



Everybody panic! There might be an overhead wire behind Councilmember Jack Evans somewhere.



In addition to the low floor, making boarding and exit easier for passengers, there is plenty of room inside the Skoda streetcars to ensure that passengers have a comfortable ride.
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  #14  
Old Posted Mar 29, 2010, 6:25 PM
llamaorama llamaorama is online now
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Quote:
The work would cost taxpayers about $3 million, Wright said.
So uh, the developer whose project is mandating these renovations is going to pay for this, right?

I'm all for stuff like this because it means integrating large buildings with the transportation system but you'd think they'd be the ones doing the modifications to the existing infrastructure.
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Old Posted Mar 30, 2010, 2:02 AM
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^Agreed. No idea why the city would pay for the expenses a developer is incurring, especially when that developer is already breaking other rules and wanting a pass.
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Old Posted Apr 1, 2010, 4:49 AM
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Yeah. Still a cool project and I hope it happens.

I mean, look at this, in combination with neighboring projects I can't believe how mahoosive the Eisenhower Av District. of Alexandria is getting.

http://hoffmantowncenter.com/community_siteplans.html

Basically all of the blue shaded buildings are done or under construction, and half the orange shaded ones are done or a done deal, so it looks like it really will fill out like on the map.

Last edited by llamaorama; Apr 1, 2010 at 5:16 AM.
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Old Posted Apr 1, 2010, 11:06 AM
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^ Local governments in the DC region have done a decent job encouraging growth near metro stations but it is striking how much room there still is for growth around the stations. This development around the Eisenhower Ave. station is just one example. 2,200 homes were planned to be built around the Vienna station by Pulte, tremendous growth is already occurring and more is planned by the future Silver Line stations along the Dulles corridor. Montgomery Co. approved a great land-use plan for dense, walkable development around the White Flint station. The Rhode Island Ave station is going to be redeveloped.

There was a discussion the other day about the land-use surrounding Capitol South on the Orange/Blue line. The huge Congressional parking lot is there-- it holds much potential for development (though this is unlikely to occur any time soon). There is plenty of land around the Tenley station that can be developed. Similarly, there is 3-4 acres of empty space above L'Enfant Plaza, next to the CSX tracks that could be built into another block of office space.

We have this multi-billion dollar investment in metro. We should encourage as much development as possible around the stations, decreasing sprawl and helping to build ridership.
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Old Posted Apr 2, 2010, 1:08 PM
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Metro woes may put federal funding for transit projects at risk

Quote:
The deterioration of Washington's Metro system could jeopardize federal funding for new transit projects in the area, including a Purple Line light-rail system in Maryland and streetcar networks in Arlington County and the District.

In awarding highly competitive funding for new projects, the Federal Transit Administration considers applicants' ability to maintain their current transit systems. Because governments in Maryland, the District and Northern Virginia are partially responsible for funding Metro, the FTA will weigh the safety and reliability of the Metro system before granting money for new transit lines, transportation planners said.

"The bottom line is, we'll have to solve the Metro problem in order to do new things," said Ronald F. Kirby, transportation planning director for the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.
Does anyone know whether Fenty's budget that was released yesterday included funding for Metro? Apparently Virginia is ready to provide local funding, but it will be contingent on DC and MD also providing local funding.
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Old Posted Apr 2, 2010, 1:47 PM
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There's still a good amount of area around Hoffman/Eisenhower area to develop. It will look pretty interesting when complete, dramatically different from now, which is dramatically different from 15 yrs ago.

I'm not sure what Fenty has appropriated to metro but I wouldn't get hopes up in this environment. It's going to be really tough squeezing anything else out of the budget and right now. There's a FairShare movement going on so people ask their representatives to get money to Metro.
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Old Posted Apr 27, 2010, 4:27 PM
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Does anyone remember an article from about a year ago about the "plight" of some suckers who bought a spendy condo near Nationals Park who complained the area was a desert, and they had to order groceries online? Lol stupid people, that Safeway is like less than a mile away.

Anyways I wonder if any of the old 1960's stuff down there is worth saving?

I know its mostly horrible projects, but weren't there a few market-rate buildings which have aged better? I remember reading somewhere online a person's account of the area and looked at some photos. They had wandered into a private courtyard with lots of trees, and the buildings themselves were very fascinating examples of the architecture of the time.
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