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More Cities Are Banishing Highways Underground — And Building Parks on Top
The Pew Charitable Trusts ^ | April 2, 2018 | Martha T. Moore

Posted on 04/28/2018 1:04:22 AM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

The most popular place to put a city park is, increasingly, on a highway.

Cities looking to boost their downtowns, or to improve downtrodden neighborhoods, are creating “highway cap parks” on decks constructed over freeways that cut through the urban center. Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Denver and Dallas have deck parks underway. Atlanta, Houston, Minneapolis and Santa Monica, California, are among the cities considering similar projects.

In crowded cities, highway deck parks are a way to create new acreage and provide green space that can spur downtown development. Capping a highway to create a park also can reconnect urban neighborhoods sliced apart by the expressway building boom of the 1960s and ’70s.

“There’s been a sort of a sea change in the way people think about roads and real estate in general,” said Ed McMahon, a senior fellow at the Urban Land Institute, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit that focuses on land use. “If you design a city around cars, you’re going to get more cars. If you design a city around people, you’re going to get more people and places and better real estate value.”

Dallas broke ground in February on the highway project that will undergird its second deck park, to be built over Interstate 35 in the Oak Cliff neighborhood. In 2012, the city opened the 5-acre, $110 million Klyde Warren Park above a freeway that separates the downtown Dallas Arts District from the Uptown residential and retail neighborhood.

“Everyone knows the future of cities is a good quality of life and attracting folks and telling them you don’t have to live in a concrete jungle,” said Bobby Abtahi, president of the Dallas Park and Recreation Board.

Dallas began building deck parks when local officials realized that its paucity of green space was hurting the city’s competitiveness with businesses, Abtahi said. Klyde Warren Park, now run by a foundation, includes a performance space, a children’s park, a restaurant and a dog run.

Property values around the park have shot up, bringing higher property tax revenue for the city. Office rents in nearby towers have risen by a third since the park opened. New development brought 7,000 more workers to downtown and 1,500 new apartments.

Klyde Warren Park, which draws a million visitors a year, “has kind of turned into our public square,” Abtahi said. “It’s really turned into a place where you see anyone and everyone.”

But skeptics argue that highways topped by parks are still highways, and that cities would be better off investing in mass transit.

Angie Schmitt, editor of Streetsblog USA, a news site that promotes alternatives to car transportation, said deck parks are too often used to “greenwash” highway expansion projects.

“The problem with having a park over a highway is that highways aren’t a very nice place to be,” Schmitt said. “There’s a lot of pollution and a lot of noise. Capping a highway is a very expensive way to create land. You could end up with a very expensive park that’s not a great park.”

Attractive Urban Cores

Some deck parks have been around for decades: Seattle opened Freeway Park over I-5 in 1976 and Phoenix has had a park over I-10 since 1990. The current surge is being spurred by strong demand for development in the urban core, where there’s not much space for new parks.

“If you had plenty of other well-located urban land, you don’t need to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to make this location better,” said Jennifer Ball, vice president for planning and economic development of Central Atlanta Progress, a business coalition. “This urban land is at a premium now.”

To respond to the demand, Central Atlanta Progress has designed and is studying the feasibility of the Stitch, a $300 million proposed project to cover portions of the I-75/I-85 “connector” that creates a 14-lane gash through Atlanta’s downtown. The Stitch would include parks, a rebuilt transit station, and land for new development.

“It really is an economic development strategy,” Ball said. “It has a park, but if you dig closely into all the pretty renderings, we also see it as real estate development projects and the development of air rights. You’re creating land.”

Deck parks are expensive: Chicago’s Millennium Park, built over railroad tracks, cost $490 million and opened in 2004, four years after the millennium it was intended to celebrate. The Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, created during Boston’s “Big Dig” to bury its Central Artery, cost $40 million, a fraction of the entire project’s $15 billion price tag but still a sizeable investment. Almost half of the $110 million cost of building Klyde Warren Park came from corporate and private donors.

Aging Expressways

The urgent need to repair or upgrade many half-century-old urban expressways also is fueling the construction of so-called cap parks. Highway reconstruction projects offer an opportunity — and possibly funding — for freeway caps.

In Denver, a $1.3 billion highway project will tear down an elevated portion of I-70 that runs through a low-income neighborhood, sink the rebuilt roadway and build a 5-acre deck park on top. (The project is being challenged in court on environmental grounds.) In Dallas, the Oak Cliff park deck will be built as part of a $666 million highway reconstruction project that will widen I-35 from eight lanes to 10.

The Oak Cliff park will reconnect a residential neighborhood divided by the highway’s construction in the ’50s. Oak Cliff residents objected to the current planned highway widening and proposed a cap park to offset the impact.

“The sentiment was, ‘Why should North Dallas and Klyde Warren get all the nice things?”’ Abtahi said. “That was never a discussion that was had before this highway was built.”

Highways built during the interstate highway boom are nearing the end of their useful life, so some kind of reconstruction is inevitable, said Michael Morris, director of transportation for the North Central Texas Council of Governments. The council is funding the bulk of the nearly $40 million cost for the Oak Cliff park.

“If you’re going to do it, you might as well have adult conversations with the people along the corridor about what’s in the best interests of their communities,” he said. For one thing, unhappy residents can drastically slow down the approval process for a highway project. “If you want to be in the freeway business in urban regions, you’ve got to be in the context-sensitive design business or you’re going to be there for a long time.”

Similarly, in Pittsburgh, a $26 million cap park over I-579 will rejoin the Hill District, a primarily African-American part of the city that was cut off by the highway construction, to downtown.

And in Minnesota, the state transportation department is considering three expressway lids as part of a two-year planning project for overhauling I-94, one of the city’s main arteries. One of the decks would reconnect Rondo, an African-American neighborhood in St. Paul split in two by the highway. The destruction of that neighborhood was so great — 900 homes and businesses were demolished — that in 2015 the state transportation commissioner Charles Zelle and Mayor Chris Coleman formally apologized to residents.

The Obama administration also gave deck parks a push, offering a $19 million grant for the Pittsburgh park. Then-Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx in 2016 said that urban highways had exacerbated economic inequality by devastating African-American neighborhoods for the benefit of suburban drivers.

“We have entire areas in this country where the infrastructure that is supposed to connect people is constraining them,” Foxx said in a speech at the Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank. “Achieving a middle-class life is made harder because of past transportation decisions.” He urged transportation planners to work on “connecting people to opportunity.”

Morris, the Texas transportation engineer, said Foxx “correctly reminded people … you have a responsibility to be sensitive to these issues.” The Oak Cliff park “speaks very directly to this particular policy.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; US: Colorado; US: Georgia; US: Illinois; US: Massachusetts; US: Minnesota; US: Pennsylvania; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: atlanta; boston; chicago; cities; colorado; dallas; deckparks; denver; freeways; georgia; illinois; klydewarrenpark; massachusetts; minnesota; openspace; pennsylvania; pittsburgh; stpaul; texas; thestitch
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
New York City actually did an interesting thing with one of their overpasses (I think it was an elevated railroad). Rather than tear it down, they made it into a park, making it possible to walk about 20 city blocks in midtown on the West Side surrounded by greenery and not having to cross any surface streets.

I've walked it several times and I think it's a great idea. Now many Freepers have this bias against any public money being spent on things that benefit pedestrians but I think it's money well spent. I think motor vehicles are great too but sometimes it's good to just get out in the fresh air and walk around the city without having to constantly make sure you don't get run over by cars.


21 posted on 04/28/2018 5:40:32 AM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: BenLurkin
Must increase the cost of the projects, surely.

Immensely.

If you aren't familiar with the huge cost and the mega cost over-runs on the Boston underground highway called the BIG-DIG just do a search.

These kinds of projects are like a perpetual motion machine fueled by taxpayer dollars.

Labor Unions and contractors make financial contributions to politicians.

Politicians reward them with projects like this.

How often do we see crews making roadways wider to add more lanes on ground level highways?

What happens when these underground highways need to be widened?


22 posted on 04/28/2018 5:56:39 AM PDT by Iron Munro (The art of government is to take money from one to give to another - Voltaire)
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To: Iron Munro
What happens when these underground highways need to be widened?

In the minds of government officials, there is no problem that the taxpayers' money won't fix.

23 posted on 04/28/2018 6:40:47 AM PDT by CommerceComet (Hillary: A unique blend of arrogance, incompetence, and corruption.)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
that separates the downtown Dallas Arts District from the Uptown residential and retail neighborhood.

The "Uptown" area used to be a Black neighborhood. Ethnic cleaning raised the property values and did away with the need for an expressway divider between the bulk of the area and downtown.

There are two remnants of the old neighborhood. First, a Black United Methodist Church about 7 blocks from a white United Methodist Church (and on the same side of expressway as the Arts District, so it missed being subject to urban renewal) and the portions of the old 'colored' cemetary that haven't been paved over with expressways and streets. (Freedmen's Cemetery, adjacent to the intact Jewish burial grounds).

As for the old 'colored' Booker T. Washington High School - it's now a magnet school to try to keep some whites in the DISD.

24 posted on 04/28/2018 6:41:22 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: Iron Munro
What happens when these underground highways need to be widened?To expand Woodall Rogers, one would need to extend it under the frontage roads and then cantilever the frontage roads over the new construction. Re-doing the deck park probably wouldn't add 1% to the cost of a project like that.

But that wouldn't do much for congestion, as the expressways at either end of Woodall Rogers are already well above capacity at rush hour. Adding lanes isn't going to increase throughput.

25 posted on 04/28/2018 6:48:26 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: zeestephen

I would be concerned too, that the homeless and youth gangs and undesirables will take over these spaces.

There are plenty of examples of public parks in places such as Chicago, where decent people don’t go to the parks and green spaces, because the gangs are there. Drug dealing and God knows what else forces out decent people.

The same concept has happened with many shopping malls around the country. A bad element starts showing up, decent people/paying customers of the malls are afraid to go there, business declines, stores pull out of the mall — it’s a downward spiral.


26 posted on 04/28/2018 7:53:16 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Just use the right epoxy.

Love,
the Big Dig


27 posted on 04/28/2018 12:26:49 PM PDT by NonValueAdded (#DeplorableMe #BitterClinger #HillNO! #cishet #MyPresident #MAGA #Winning #covfefe)
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To: SamAdams76

What fresh air?
You build a park over a freeway or main arterial road where do you think the vehicle exhaust goes?
Vehicle exhaust is hot gas, hot gas is lighter than ambient air temps, it goes up.
Have a nice day while you suck on an exhaust pipe.


28 posted on 04/28/2018 12:41:48 PM PDT by 5th MEB (Progressives in the open; --- FIRE FOR EFFECT!!)
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To: 5th MEB

You sound like you would be fun at parties!


29 posted on 04/28/2018 1:00:07 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

So deck parks are expensive at 400 million. But obama routiny gave away hundreds of billions of dollars. Why the amou t of money he gave SOUTH AFRICA alone cod build five hundred deck parks.

Just keeping it real.


30 posted on 04/28/2018 5:46:56 PM PDT by vannrox (The Preamble to the Bill of Rights - without it, our Bill of Rights is meaningless!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Sounds like a great place for homosexual truck drivers to exchange loads.


31 posted on 04/28/2018 8:17:04 PM PDT by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
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To: Some Fat Guy in L.A.
LOL!
32 posted on 04/28/2018 8:24:15 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (The US Constitution ....... Invented by geniuses and God .... Administered by morons ......)
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To: zeestephen
Just visited Millenium Park in Chicago. It is a fantastic asset in the middle of downtown, between Michigan Avenue and Lake Shore Drive, next to Lincoln Park. Whatever it cost and whatever it replaced, it was worth it.
33 posted on 04/29/2018 10:10:42 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: hinckley buzzard

Far short of an adequate incentive to get me to visit Chicago.


34 posted on 04/29/2018 10:30:07 PM PDT by steve86 (Prophecies of Maelmhaedhoc O'Morgair (Latin form: Malachy))
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To: Moonman62
Look at the park in Dallas on Google. It’s nice and it closes at night.Eh. The park in Dallas is not very park-y. There's very little free parking nearby if you jut want to visit, and the 'park' itself is mostly astro-turf-like spaces and sand sidewalks. There is no creek, not much in the way of big trees, and absolutely zero tall grass or actual park area.
35 posted on 05/02/2018 4:50:40 PM PDT by Svartalfiar
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