occidentalcapital
Senior Member
I'm glad this wasn't built. It doesn't make sense to have a major passenger train station right next to the legislature. We need to maintain some distance around the legislature for ceremonial effect.
|
|
|
I'm glad this wasn't built. It doesn't make sense to have a major passenger train station right next to the legislature. We need to maintain some distance around the legislature for ceremonial effect.
We need a couple of bridges in the area. The high level bridge is in pretty rough shape and honestly we should be planning for its replacement pretty soon.For reasons discussed on this forum (age, historical resource and viability for HSR), any HSR to downtown might need another river crossing.
That stretch along 109st would be ideal.I'm glad this wasn't built. It doesn't make sense to have a major passenger train station right next to the legislature. We need to maintain some distance around the legislature for ceremonial effect.
- because it was neglected for decades and to give it the new life you suggest would essentially require tearing it down and rebuilding it anyways. So you should just build a new bridge that better serves as an arterial inlet/outlet for the core as well as pedestrians and future HSR.FFS why are you guys so gung-ho about demolishing the historic and iconic High Level Bridge?
Why not just retain this bridge for bikes, pedestrians, transit and the streetcar and build a new bridge for vehicles, commercial traffic and HSR? Or is that notion somehow beyond your imagination?
Source for it being neglected for decades?- because it was neglected for decades and to give it the new life you suggest would essentially require tearing it down and rebuilding it anyways. So you should just build a new bridge that better serves as an arterial inlet/outlet for the core as well as pedestrians and future HSR.
As someone who spent years doing structural and civil inspections I am at a loss as to how people cannot accept that these assets have do have a life expectancy and that peoples first reaction is historical preservation over health and safety alongside a growing city’s needs.
I am aware that I'm nowhere near as qualified as you, but I would still like to push back on this. It is true that the bridge beams have lost, on average, 50% of their density. However, it was built to accomodate heavy freight and passenger trains.- because it was neglected for decades and to give it the new life you suggest would essentially require tearing it down and rebuilding it anyways. So you should just build a new bridge that better serves as an arterial inlet/outlet for the core as well as pedestrians and future HSR.
As someone who spent years doing structural and civil inspections I am at a loss as to how people cannot accept that these assets have do have a life expectancy and that peoples first reaction is historical preservation over health and safety alongside a growing city’s needs.
There still are several parking lots along 109 St, just north of the Leg that would probably actually make a good location for something like this.I'm glad this wasn't built. It doesn't make sense to have a major passenger train station right next to the legislature. We need to maintain some distance around the legislature for ceremonial effect.
Source being the engineering and feasibility studies done in the late 2010s assessing the condition of the bridge and its potential as a top level LRT crossing.Source for it being neglected for decades?
The loads aren’t my concern, it’s the conservative estimates that corrosion can be kept to 5% per decade simply by painting when we live in a winter climate with salts, sand, and a cheap municipal government. Not to mention EAs aren’t infallible nor are inspections. This is why bridge collapses come as such a surprise when they happen.I am aware that I'm nowhere near as qualified as you, but I would still like to push back on this. It is true that the bridge beams have lost, on average, 50% of their density. However, it was built to accomodate heavy freight and passenger trains.
The current load is a lot easier on it (no heavy rail and far less frequent streetcar usage). The city inspects it regularly, and it has said the bridge can continue to be used as-is if it is renewed every 25 years. I think that if vehicles and heavy rail were diverted to a new bridge, the remaining transit, pedestrians, and seasonal streetcar service would be that much easier on it. When combined with regular maintenance and 25-year renewals, I don't see why we'd need to lose one of our most defining historic landmarks.