Posted on 07/25/2014 10:28:15 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
A $137 million three-mile train is coming to a nearly deserted avenue in a bankrupt city.
Growing up in the 1940s, Robert Fogelson remembers banging on the typewriter and peering out the window at his fathers office in a Manhattan skyscraper. Then "[my dad] would take us for lunch to a nearby Schrafts, a chain of restaurants that was popular with housewives like my mother, who regularly went downtown to shop to socialize ...or to meet my father for a play or a movie." Fogelson hadnt decided yet what he would do with his life, "[b]ut I took it for granted," he writes, whatever I did, I would do downtown."
As much a concept as a physical location, "downtown" was "the most powerful and widely recognized symbol of the American industrial metropolis," wrote historian Sam Bass Warner Jr., and it evokes sentimentality even in those of us who grew up long after flagship stores and corporate headquarters had relocated to the outskirts, leaving urban commercial districts empty and decrepit. Tourists still pack Times Square in New York City, where they can revel in a Disneyland-like recreation of downtowns bright lights and crowded sidewalks. Fogelson never became a denizen of a towering skyscraper; hes an urban historian at MIT and the author of Downtown: Its Rise and Fall, 1880-1950, an examination of how center cities have shaped pubic policy.
Fogelsons story ends in the middle of the last century, but downtowns allure is an ongoing distraction from whats actually important for the health of cities. It explains in part the twisted logic behind one of the most confounding urban development projects of our time, a $137 million 3.3-mile light rail line that breaks ground in Detroit next week. How else could sane people think a bankrupt city should build a wildly expensive rail line on a partially deserted avenue in a neighborhood awash in cheap parking?
Let's consider what the new light rail line will mean for the people who live and work in the Motor City. Today, the suburbanites who commute to downtown Detroit might be frustrated by their limited lunch optionsvacant storefronts dont facilitate much culinary varietybut at least they get to enjoy a congestion-free drive to the office. Under-utilized lots and garages occupy almost 40 percent of the land in downtown Detroit, so the walk from the car to the cube takes just a few minutes.
What if Dan Gilbert, the billionaire co-founder of Quicken Loans and the puppet master behind so many recent efforts to revitalize downtown Detroit, were to mandate that his employees utilize the new light rail line in their daily commutes after it opens in 2016? (Gilbert relocated Quicken's headquarters to downtown Detroit four years ago to inject life into the neighborhood.) That would mean rather than drive straight to the office theyd have to drive within three miles of the office, park their cars in a lot somewhere along Woodward Avenue, wait 7-10 minutes for a train to come, and hand over $1.50 for the inconvenience.
How will the light rail line serve the 26 percent of Detroit households that dont own cars and depend on the citys dreadful bus service? Detroit has a 139-square mile footprint, but the light rail line will serve only those travelers who happen to be going from one spot to another along one three-mile stretch on Woodward. Buses, on the other hand, have the capacity to weave through neighborhoods, giving commuters what they most desire, which is to move as quickly as possible from one location to another with the least amount of hassle. Buses are also orders of magnitude cheaper to operate and maintain, which is why Detroit shut down its last street rail line in 1956, when the citys population was almost three times its current size.
In a 2010 interview with Reason TV, Detroit journalist Charlie LeDuff compared the light rail line to building swimming pools in a city that has so many broken ambulances that calling 911 is like scheduling an appointment with a cable repairman. If every train car were to end up packed with riders, the light rail lines proposed $1.50 fare still wouldnt come close to paying the system's operating expenses, so its destined to become yet another drain on taxpayersjust like downtown Detroits existing rail line, the "People Mover, a.k.a. the horizontal elevator to nowhere, which has been burning city cash running empty rail cars in a three-mile loop since it opened in 1987.
Still, the federal government saw fit to hand over $41 million in subsidies to build more light rail in Detroit (thats $25 million in cash and $16 million through a tax gimmick). The Detroit News editorial page recently applauded the project, calling the federal commitment pocket change compared to what the government spends overall on infrastructure. Tell that to the public sector retirees facing a haircut on their pension benefits; in a city embroiled in chapter 9 bankruptcy, every dollar counts. Detroit is so cash strapped it's now cutting off water service to scofflaw elderly residents. (Light rails backers recently begged the feds for an additional $12 million in funding; the money hasnt materialized yet, but theyre pushing ahead with the project anyway.)
Detroits light rail line could be written off as a typical government pork fest, if only a large share of the construction funds werent coming from private sources. The biggest contributor besides the federal government is the nonprofit Kresge Foundation, which has pledged about $35 million. A key figure behind the project is Gilbert, a downtown nostalgic extraordinaire. Hanging in his offices, there's a 1917 photo depicting downtown Detroit as a dreamy wonderland, with pristine streets, Model Ts, ladies promenading in fine dresses, businessmen in top hats, and, of course, shinny rail cars running down Woodward. In 1917, Detroit was a magnet for the nations brightest mindsthe Silicon Valley of its dayand Gilbert wants to turn back time. Hes buying up empty office buildings on a bet that downtown can become a linchpin for the citys revival.
"'People my age, we would hear from our parents and grandparents who were raised in Detroit about how great this city was, from 1900 to the 60s,' Gilbert told The New York Times last year. "'As I started visiting [other] great American cities, it hit meman, how did we blow this so badly?'"
Gilbert's downtown investments are harmless as long as hes spending his own money, but the light rail line is mostly a play to leverage the public dollars required to fund its operations over the long term. Gilbert and Rip Rapson, the president and CEO of Kresge, would do a lot more good using the same money to replace Detroits aging bus fleet, which is an everyday drag on the quality of life in Detroit. (Lifting the citys ban on private jitneys would be even more fruitful.)
But bus philanthropy wouldn't yield any downtown monuments or splashy groundbreaking ceremonies, like the one I expect well be subjected to next week, including all the tiresome bromides about the citys comeback. Detroits best hope lies with concerned citizens and entrepreneurs making less heralded investments in the city's residential neighborhoods, like those featured in "Anarchy in Detroit," Zach Weissmuellers recent Reason TV series. Public dollars should focus exclusively on improving core services, such as helping the Detroit police build on its recent success in crime reduction.
Light rail is destined to become another monument in Detroits graveyard of failed renewal projects. It's time to cede our downtown nostalgia to the theme park operators.
Which ones have less graffiti?
Honestly, in that city it probably does not matter at this point. Never mind trying to drive through that hell on earth.
I see the Detroit Tigers just renewed their lease with Lakeland FLA. for the next several decades.
"End of the line on the Green Shoots Express! Thank you for choosing Blight Rail, please be prepared to be robbed as you leave the train for everyones convenience!"
I want to live within eyesight of that. Cool building.
"No way es sa, I ain't getting off in Detroit, you loco in da head gringo!"
The Detroit Bus company hires graffiti artists to paint many of their buses and they’ve only existed for 4 or 5 years. Call me crazy but I actually cheer for entrepreneurs.
buy and move it brick by brick somewhere else
Looks like Houston.
The Democrat mayor in Boise wants light rail in the downtown area.
Downtown Boise is all of 1.5 miles long.
http://www.mapquest.com/us/id/boise
Do you realize that that building is owned by one of America’s wealthiest men?
Maybe you should address your comment to Matty Maroun.
probably not far from Houston... just a bit south
he needs to replace some windows, although I don’t buy the “broken window theory” of economics
Corpus Christi? What a hole.
Mayor of Detroit to commission on light rail “For God’s sake, whatever you do, do NOT call it a bullet train!”
I don’t know, Tucson’s (which starts service today) is like 4 1/2 miles, 200 million bucks, and will screw up one of our big money draws. We might have Detroit beat.
rofl
That is apparently the Mexican train “The Beast” carrying illegal aliens to America
Well, we could lengthen it if only they would incorporate the rail into the Rainbow Bridge they wanted over Interstate 10 from downtown. Hey! Maybe I’ll mention it and they can revive the project!
Nah. For a moment there I lost contact with my political beliefs. Probably as a result of living in close proximity to mindless idiots. My Bad.
First off, I oppose the taxpayer-funded HSR scheme in California and I supported the privately funded French consortium that proposed building a sensible HSR along a far more direct route.
That said, the 'rail to nowhere' meme really needs to stop being repeated because it is a non-argument.
The Federal government mirrored the Interstate Highway Act when they came up with the funding plans for HSR and they required the rural portions of the routes to be built first and then the urban portions would be built.
This is because the failed US route system that was supposed to feature four-lane highways was typified by urban parkways being built that led to two-lane oil-and-gravel roads in the rural areas. The urban politicians saw no point in funding highways in rural areas so those highways were never built.
The first Interstate was #70 and it's first stretches were built in rural Kansas, Missouri, and Colorado. This ended up connecting Denver and St. Louis. when the US Route system had failed to provide a decent road between these major cities.
And in California the local politicias are wanting to make local HSR systems with a 'promise' that maybe someday they'll connect to something. Which is a lie and the Fed will never fund these local HSR systems because they really don't go anywhere at all.
I oppose taxpayer funded HSR, but if they're going to do it then the rural sections have to be built first otherwise the urban sections wil never conect to anything at all.
Thanks for reading.
Yeah, me too.
He'll ride forever 'neith the streets of Boston.
He's a man who'll never return......
Chump change compared to Boston’s “Big Dig”.
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