I grew up in St. Louis
and loved it. I moved to Salina Kansas in 1975 and loved it too. I moved to Atlanta in 1983, when the
population was 3 million and it was good. Since 1983, the population of Atlanta
doubled and the highway and road systems didn’t keep up. Atlanta Metro needs to
shrink in population and double its highway and road infrastructure. The City
of Atlanta needs to concentrate on becoming a decent suburb.
We travel to St. Louis
to visit relatives and I naturally compare my experiences driving around St.
Louis Metro as opposed to driving around Atlanta Metro.
The population of St.
Louis Metro is 2.8 million in a land area 8,261 square miles. St. Louis has a
grid of 7 highways connecting all of St Louis County with access to St Charles
County. Travel time across the metro is 30 minutes tops.
St Louis is extremely
well designed with the City of St. Louis host to Busch Stadium, Mississippi
River front Gateway Arch, office buildings, civic buildings and St. Louis
Symphony Hall downtown.
At Mid-Town, St. Louis
hosts Forest Park, a 1,293 acre park that houses the St. Louis Zoo, Municipal
Opera, Steinberg Ice Skating rink, St. Louis Art Museum and a lake with boats
and a restaurant. The park is bordered by Grand Avenue, Lindell Blvd, Clayton Road
and Washington University.
The suburbs are host
to multiple cities, shopping centers, sports centers, churches, schools and
hospitals.
The city of St. Louis contains
five interstate highways that connect to a larger
regional highway system. Interstate 70, an east-west highway, runs roughly
from the northwest corner of the city to downtown
St. Louis. The
north-south Interstate 55 enters the city at the south near
the Carondelet neighborhood and runs toward the
center of the city, and both Interstate 64 and Interstate 44 enter the city on the west,
running parallel to the east.
Additionally, Interstate 170 crosses the
central portion of St. Louis connecting South St Louis with North St. Louis. Interstate
270 crosses the extreme northern portion of the city before crossing the
Mississippi River on the Chain of Rocks Bridge. Two of the five interstates
(Interstates 55 and 64) merge south of the Gateway
Arch National Park and
leave the city on the Poplar
Street Bridge into
Illinois, while Interstate 70 crosses into Illinois via the newly built Stan
Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge north
of downtown. Interstate 44 terminates at Interstate 70 on the western end of
the Stan Musial Bridge.
The city of St. Louis also has several
major roadways, including the north-south Memorial
Drive, located on the
western edge of the Gateway Arch National Park and parallel to Interstate 44,
the north-south streets of Grand
Boulevard and Jefferson
Avenue, both of which
run the length of the city, and Gravois Road, which runs from the southeastern
portion of the city to downtown and used to be signed as U.S. Route 66. An east-west roadway that connects the
city with surrounding communities is Martin
Luther King, Jr. Drive,
which carries traffic from the western edge of the city to downtown.
St. Louis Metro grew out from the
Mississippi river front, filled out in St. Louis County and spilled over into
St. Charles County across the Missouri river.
The population of Atlanta Metro is 5.8 million
in a land area of 8,376 square miles. Atlanta Metro completely gridlocked and
is tightly surrounded by the circular I-285 highway and has no grid highway in
the middle of the circle.
Atlanta is poorly designed with Brave’s Stadium
in Cobb County and other venues scattered all over town. Atlanta has suffered
from HOV and Toll lanes for decades. Travel time across Atlanta Metro is an
hour if you’re lucky.
Three major interstate highways converge in Atlanta; I-20 runs east to west
across town, I-75 runs from northwest to southeast, and I-85 runs from
northeast to southwest. I-75 and I-85 combine to form the Downtown Connector through the middle of the city, carrying more than
340,000 vehicles per day, making it one of the ten most congested segments of
interstate highway in the United States. The intersection of I-85 and
I-285 in Doraville is
nicknamed Spaghetti Junction. Metro Atlanta is also approached by Interstates 575, 675, and 985; Georgia 400, 141, and 316; and US 78; all terminate near the
Perimeter.
Atlanta grew in all directions and changing
jobs often requires moving to another suburb.
The suburbs are self-sufficient and residents can function adequately,
but travel across the metro and into the City of Atlanta is avoided because of
poorly laid out streets, not enough highway lanes, problems parking and venues
that are not worth going to.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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