Thursday, February 15, 2018

LA River -- the Theme Park

An LA River parcel with the greatest potential to be developed as a park illustrating its native and ecological value is called G2.  It is currently under study on how to accomplish this.

G2 is a 42 acre river front parcel on a part of the LA River that has a natural river bottom.  




The City of Los Angeles is seeking public input on how 
to develop it;  interim and long term.

But the G2 parcel is part of a bigger network of river parks 
in the area.  The Rio de Los Angeles State Park has been open for several years.  The California State Parks Bowtie Parcel in the foreground is underdeveloped as well as the Taylor Yard G2 parcel.  



About two miles away is another large State Park, Los Angeles State Historic Park which is in the process of getting connected to the River through a water wheel.






The proposal in this blog post is to tie the four parks in an LA River Theme Park "brand" that illustrates different ways to use the River.  One park is for active recreation, another for historical and cultural reference, the other two are undeveloped and open to discussion.  This proposal is to look at them all in concert.  The LA River Center and Gardens can be used as a jumping off point to highlight the parks and to provide a shuttle connecting them.








Sunday, February 5, 2017

A Confusing Proposal for LAX -- Part 2 of 2 Posts

The LAX proposal depends heavily on reducing traffic in the central terminal area by bringing people there on a people mover:  park or drop someone off at a nearby intermodal transfer facility and take the people mover in.  This assumption of traffic reduction is questionable, as are the benefits of the people mover with its connection to the Metro Rail Crenshaw Line.  

Furthermore, as proposed, the people mover design adds to the confusion.  Take a look:   

people mover = yellow line
dark orange = people mover stations
light orange = pedestrian walkways to the terminals 




I propose a design for the Central Terminal Area with the following benefits and attributes:

--a single-track people mover that acts as an internal circulator      and connector to the remote transfer facilities
--the Theme Building framed and highlighted by the people mover
--a large green space of iconic setting and design
--the "circular" people mover provides a clear sense of place and comfort in a complex airport








DIRECT TRAIN SERVICE  --  THE BLACK LINE
I don't believe the people mover and transfer facilities are going to reduce traffic because the terminal area is too accommodating to cars and there is no good alternative to driving.  The best way to reduce traffic is to connect the terminal area with a train that serves the region. One proposal, illustrated below, uses existing corridors to create a single direct train, the Black Line below, that provides a one-seat ride to Union Station.  I suggest special trains on this line with baggage check-in at Union Station.  
That would get cars off the road!




I have other ideas on LAX:

Self-driving cars in the terminal area
 http://accesslax.blogspot.com

Way-Finding at its Grandest (and a centralized train)



Wednesday, December 14, 2016

A Confusing Proposal for LAX - Part 1 of 2 Posts

LAX is wrapping up a multi-billion approval to “improve access to and egress from the airport.”  Will they spend billions and get the same results as the billions spent on the 405 widening, which is no improvement?


If someone wanted to design the least imaginative, most confusing, and dubiously effective access program, the proposed concept would be it:



The proposal creates two Intermodal Transportation Facilities (ITF) which will have
--parking
--baggage check-in
--meet and greet areas
The ITF to the right contains car rental facilities and a metro train station which does not provide direct service to LAX

The ITFs will be connected to the Central Terminal Area by a people mover.  If someone parks in the ITF and takes the people mover this will make for two long walks before reaching security.

50% of people who fly from LAX arrive by car.  Which facility will they use, ITF or Central Terminal Area?

The ITF and people mover provide alternative access but will people use it instead of just driving to the Central Terminal Area?

Will the ITF really reduce traffic?
Will the train connection provide a decent alternative to driving?   




Rental car drivers will use the ITF and most buses and shuttles in the Central Terminal Area are likely to be forced to use it but I doubt all will be eliminated;  buses for plane crews? Flyaway? Tour groups?  Shared-ride vans?  How much will traffic really be reduced?

And was the traffic concept of induced demand--where increasing capacity induces more traffic--considered?  Look no further than the 405 widening to see this idea at work.

The world's seventh busiest airport deserves better thinking. 

I am also disturbed by the proposal because it provides no role for LAX's long-standing symbol, the iconic Theme Building.  Instead the people mover ignores its relevance, skirts around it, provides no access, and pushes it aside.





There is lots of room for improvement in the proposal:  clear design, reroute the people mover, open space, and direct train service.  Detailed in Part 2.







Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Gold to Red


 Proposed Dash / Bus Line Connecting 
Gold Line  to  Red Line  

Highland Park, Mt Washington, Glassell Park, Cypress Park, Atwater, Silver Lake, Hollywood




Returns Service to Ave 50 and Division Streets (former line 176)
Adds Service on Rowena where none exists
Bus Line can be extension of line 175 or 176
No Comparable East-West bus service

Connecting the following Activity Centers (east to west)

—Highland Park Gold Line Station
—Highland Park - Figueroa com’l center
—Old LA Farmers Market
—Monte Vista Street Elementary School
—Academia Avance Charter School
—Food 4 Less (Figueroa)
—Highland Nursing & Wellness Center
—Aldama Elementary School
—Holy Virgin Mary Coptic Church
—Glassell Park Elementary School
—Sotomayor Learning Academies
—Renaissance Arts Charter School
—Los Feliz Charter School for Arts
—LA Media Center
—Super King Market
—Ribet Academy
—Env’t Science & Tech High School
—Goodwill Retail & Outlet Center
—LA Comm College Fletcher Sq
—LA River Greenway Trail
—Ivanhoe Elementary School
—Skyline Health Care & Wellness Center
—Trader Joe’s / Gelsons (Hyperion)
—Marshall High School
—Thomas King Middle School
—Vons Market
—Goodwill Los Angeles
—Childrens Hospital
—Kaiser Medical Center
—Hollywood Presbyterian
—Barnsdall Shopping Center
—Barnsdall Park
—Scientology Center
—Vermont Hollywood Retail District

—Vermont Sunset Red Line Station



Sunday, May 1, 2016

LAX Billion Dollar People Mover Addition Adds to the Mess


In the drawing it looks beautiful and simple--the proposed People Mover running through the middle of the Central Terminal Area (CTA) at LAX.  It jogs around the Theme Building and has three stations where passengers take moving walkways to the existing terminals.  

The People Mover trains are designed to carry people between the Central Terminal Area and three Intermodal Transfer Facilities (ITF).  The concept is that access to LAX will become easier because, and this is where I get confused, because, why?

Before I discuss this take a look at some of the other pretty pictures:






But here's the rub:  

The People Mover connects many buildings along its 2 1/4 mile route that have pick-up and drop-off locations.  This is in addition to the locations in the newly renovated Central Terminal Area.  And of course they all have parking garages.  So where to go to meet someone or drop them off?  

Everyone is going to head to the Central Terminal Area, especially if you have luggage.  There's lots of parking and new curb facilities.  But if someone did want to drive and use the Intermodal Transfer Facilities, good-luck finding them, none are on major streets.  

What can be said about this design is that it will eliminate rental car shuttle busses and make it easier to arrive by train.  It might eliminate other shuttle buses, if they are forced to, freeing up Central Terminal Area traffic.  

The problem with the train, however, is the majority of riders will need to change trains before they get to the People Mover because it does not travel a centralized or high-density route.

Oh, and roads will be improved too.  But if the roads are improved and busses eliminated from the CTA, more people will drive (Induced Demand).




Besides the wayward train, here are the new ways to access LAX:



THERE ARE BETTER WAYS

I have long been fascinated by the opportunities to improve the LAX experience and improve access.  These latest proposals come close to a design I proposed years ago, here's the link:  http://laxflightways.blogspot.com

Another idea is to eliminate parking in the Central Terminal Area and turn it into gardens.  This would not only encourage the use of  ITF parking but create an incredibly calming and beautiful space amid the chaos of LAX.  

And how about experimenting with self-driving vehicles that leave from the ITF where a person steps from a private vehicle right into a google car that takes them to the terminal?  

The best opportunity at LAX revolves around the simplicity of it's design, a "U" shaped plan with the Theme Building in the middle.  If designed properly this simple urban form can provide a sense of place and direction that makes it easy for the user to digest and manage.    


In these designs the moving sidewalks are draped with arcs that mimic the arcs of the Theme Building.  Otherwise the sidewalks are similar to the proposal at the top of this page.  













Saturday, April 30, 2016

Hollywood Boulevard and the Walk of Fame -- We Can Do Better

Los Angeles' iconic street may be home to the world's most glamorous event but it can use a make-over.


The day before the Oscar ceremony I took some friends from out of town to Miceli's restaurant and afterward had a walk around the site and the Boulevard.  I was struck by how much in dis-repair the Walk of Fame was and how, despite 20 years of revitalization efforts, it still feels and looks grubby.

And I know grubby.  I lived in Hollywood in the 70's and 80's and worked on revitalization efforts for the City.  Back then the opening of a storage facility was celebrated because it was the only private investment being made in Hollywood.


A few weeks later I found myself at the other end of Hollywood Boulevard and decided to look around and see how this end of the Walk of Fame and the Boulevard compared.

Take a look:









All of the Walk of Fame did not look this bad, but it was easy to find sections like this.  

Hollywood Boulevard and the Walk of Fame is a major economic generator for the region and State and it should not look like this.  This is especially ironic because there are many efforts to evolve LA's streets into more than just traffic corridors.



We can do better with LA's most iconic street.





Friday, February 12, 2016

A Hole in the Ground Speaks Volumes or Why Can't Proposed Proposed Projects in LA Be On the Internet?


Recently some buildings were torn down in our neighborhood, land graded, and a fence put up. It took about a day.  That was plenty of time to light up the neighborhood's internet sites with people asking "what's going on?"





This should be no surprise with today's instant communications, even if questions are limited to a small part of a small community.  

But what was really surprising was that I was able to find the answer within an hour of being asked.  


This is surprising because the City of Los Angeles does not post on the internet information on proposed projects.  It mails applicant provided paper files to neighborhood councils and sends an electronic table that contains all recent city applications filed.  That table contains a 2 or 3 line narrative description of the project.

I was able to find this project because the applicant had posted drawings and plans on their own web page. 



The City relies on paper to distribute this information to communities.  It mails a copy of a projects documents to neighborhood councils and uses a private company, BTC, to mail public hearing notices.  Some neighborhood councils post projects on their own web page.  

About a dozen years ago the Planning Department's computer systems administrator and I both agreed it was inevitable that proposed projects would be on the web:  the increase in accessibility and savings in staff resources make the idea a no-brainer.  The easiest way to implement would be is for BTC  to contract a web designer to post projects when they are filed.  An applicant has to visit BTC just before they file a case so it's a perfect opportunity.  And there would be no cost to the City, BTC can add the cost to their mailing fee.


I've updated the idea to include a DISCUSSION BOARD with a project's posting.  It's another way to democratize the process.  It's time the City got on-board.