Thursday, October 30, 2014

PCID Congestion vs TADs


Perimeter-area governments meet on development by Mark Woolsey Posted: 10:53 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2014

A Monday meeting of representatives of the cities of Dunwoody and Sandy Springs, the Perimeter Community Improvement Districts and the Council for Quality Growth produced agreement that a coordinated approach is needed to encourage transit-oriented development in the Central Perimeter.

The participants agreed to explore such possibilities as alternative forms of transportation, the possibility of more and denser housing development close to transit stations and stops, and better-designed zoning in the area which is plays host to 123,0000 workers in a 4-square-mile area on weekdays.

Sandy Springs spokeswoman Sharon Kraun says staffers representing the four agencies who met Monday will work together on formulating proposals during the next 30 to 45 days, and will fold MARTA and the Georgia Department of Transportation into the discussions.


Comments

PCID has benefitted from its location.  It sits in the center of North Metro, on top of I-285, with highway access to East and West Atlanta Metro locations.  I moved to Dunwoody in 1983 and worked in Norcross electronics manufacturing companies for 10 years.  In 1993 I opened a private consulting practice and have had easy access to 45 clients’ facilities.

PCID struggles with the traffic created by having 125,000 jobs. I think it will take some expansion of the top of I-285 to reduce the gridlock and give Dunwoody commuter traffic a way to enter and exit PCID faster.  It will also take some expansion of the main roads.  Finally, it will take completing a bypass for I-75 and I-85 traffic to allow interstate traffic to go around Atlanta Metro.

PCID’s eyes have always been bigger than its stomach.  It is committed to growth as long as long as the City of Dunwoody is willing to grant 15 year, $83 million in tax holidays to office complex property companies to subsidize the job creators in these office buildings.  Dunwoody homeowners are conflicted about their subsidizing their own congestion. Feelings are mixed. Dunwoody does receive over half of its revenue from PCID, but road maintenance and city codes are abysmal.

PCID continues to be stymied by the congestion that plagues all high-density development.  The solution to pollution is dilution. If you have congestion, stop building and move it out of the congested area and congestion will lessen.  High density developments seem destined to fail.

Urban “sprawl” has allowed population growth to the suburbs and exurbs of Atlanta Metro and will continue to attract home building and office and industrial park development in these outer suburbs and exurbs. 

Metro Atlanta Highways & Roads

I watched the Atlanta Metro population grow from 3 million to 5 million.  I was puzzled by the lack of progress in growing the highway system East to West to deal with this population growth. I also wondered why I-75 and I-85 were jammed together in the middle of downtown Atlanta. I was puzzled at our resistance to add needed lanes. We did build GA-400 to address the North Metro housing growth, but we are scrambling to fix the I-285 exit ramp to GA-400.

All other large cities had created highway grids. Atlanta had I-20 connecting East and West, but North Metro had nothing but the top of I-285.  The outer-belt to encourage interstate traffic to bypass Atlanta traffic was discussed, but not built.

Atlanta Metro has lost several hundred thousand high tech jobs and our population has settled back to around 4 million, but the highway system we need in Atlanta Metro remains unfinished.

Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

 

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