Residents get say on bridge over I-5
Pedestrian span - Sam Adams wants neighbors to slice the $11 million pie
Friday, March 09, 2007
FRED LEESON
The Oregonian
City Commissioner Sam Adams is trying a new strategy for building a South Portland pedestrian bridge over Interstate 5 that might cut costs and allow money for other neighborhood transportation planning.
Adams also vowed late Wednesday to let South Portland Neighborhood Association members have the strongest voice in weighing costs against aesthetics in the bridge design.
"You guys will decide how pretty it should be and how much to pay," Adams said at a neighborhood meeting. "You deserve to be in the driver's seat. I'm making a pledge that I will take your decision and run with it."
Adams' decision may mean the end of a modern design that won public favor in earlier meetings but would eat up all or more of an $11 million budget. The 700-foot pedestrian/bicycle bridge would run below the aerial tram and connect the South Portland neighborhood to the burgeoning South Waterfront District and the Willamette River.
Instead of proceeding with the conceptual design offered last fall, the Portland Office of Transportation will ask design-build teams to submit proposed designs with specified construction costs. A committee heavily weighted with neighborhood residents will then pick which design and price tag it prefers.
Final approval lies with the Portland City Council, but the council probably will accept the recommendation from Adams, who is in charge of city transportation matters.
South Portland residents want any money left over in the $11 million federal allocation to be used for preliminary engineering for the South Portland Circulation Study. Key elements of the study include relocating ramps at the west end of the Ross Island Bridge and narrowing Southwest Naito Parkway.
Reducing obstructions from busy arterials that bisect the neighborhood -- known earlier as Corbett-Terwilliger/Lair Hill -- has been a neighborhood priority since the late 1970s. But the city never has found money to carry out the plan, which Adams said could cost at least $30 million.
Jim Gardner, a South Portland board member, recited a history of four City Council votes supporting the circulation plan. The last came when the council approved the pedestrian bridge as a concession to neighborhood opposition to the tram. Gardner said the $11 million was to include the bridge and preliminary engineering on the other projects.
"To us, that almost seemed like a doublecross" if the bridge uses all $11 million, he said. "How can we find a way to get started on a project that has been a vision of this neighborhood since the late 1970s?"
Adams said road money comes from state gasoline taxes, which have fallen far short of city needs. He said the city has 510 miles of major streets needing maintenance at a cost of $375 million. "We've been in a transportation crisis in this city for the past 10 or 15 years," he said.
"You have a right to be frustrated," Adams told the South Portland group. "The only thing worse would be for me to make promises I can't keep."
Other transportation projects -- such as the tram, light rail and the Portland Streetcar -- used other money sources, he said, and were not built at the expense of roads. He said he is asking the Legislature to increase the state gas tax.
Fred Leeson: 503-294-5946;
fredleeson@news.oregonian.com
http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/o...670.xml&coll=7