Archive for August, 2006

The view from Winter Street

Thursday, August 24th, 2006

You’re on Winter Street, in the old First Ward, and a 1.5 mile long conundrum is rolling by.

This is the most efficient form of land transport we have. It’s a train, 150 cars each filled with 120 tons of Wyoming coal, pulled by five 4,400 computer-controlled locomotives with a crew of 2. It carries as […]

Decision time on the North Line

Thursday, August 24th, 2006

UH Downtown is the end of the line — for now. By 2010 the trains should be continuing on another stop to the Northern Intermodal Center, where light rail will meet the BRT line to Northline Mall.

Yesterday the METRO chose an alignment for this line that will follow North Main, jog east on Boundary, then […]

Westpark: how would it work?

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006

I posted yesterday about the politics of rail on Westpark. But what about the technical aspects? I’m going to confine this discussion to west of Shepherd. Of course, Westpark ends at Kirby, but METRO owns intact right-of-way as far as Shepherd. Past there, the old railroad right-of-way gets narrower and closer to the freeway […]

Do we want to be like Dallas?

Monday, August 21st, 2006

The design top speed of Houston’s light rail cars is 66 mph. Why? Because the top speed of Dallas’ is 65 mph.

Houston is seemingly doomed to endless comparison with Dallas. So once Dallas started construction of a light rail system in 1990, it became inevitable that our rail transit efforts would be compared to theirs.

Sometimes […]

Westpark: is it where the politics are?

Monday, August 21st, 2006

The discussion about the western end of METRO’s Universities Line has always been about Richmond: it is technically feasible? is it politically feasible? There’s an implied assumption that Westpark, while it may have lower ridership, will be easier to fit into the city and less contraversial. I don’t buy either of those assumptions. I’ll explain […]

Live!

Friday, August 4th, 2006

The public realm: slices of life A Series of Civic Forums Sponsored by the Rice Design Alliance Part 02: The Built Environment

Wednesday, August 9, 7 PM

Martin Melosi, Panelist Christof Spieler, Panelist John S. Jacob Ph.D., Moderator

Admission is free and open to the public Brown Auditorium, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston 1001 Bissonnet (Enter via the Main Street Door)