Historically Eastern Avenue held the title of East Baltimore's Main
Street. Given that North Avenue was the northern border for much of the
City's history that wasn't as large of a stretch as it is today. The
way I think of Eastern Avenue is as a diverse high density Main Street
that acts as the northern border to gentrified Neighborhoods like Inner
Harbor East, Fells Point, and Canton. In addition, it acts as a southern
border to more traditional East Baltimore like Upper Fells Point,
Little Italy, Patterson Park, and Highlandtown. Given that Eastern
Avenue plays host to Retail, Residential, and Community Uses it seems
natural that the eastern end of the Red Line be located on Eastern
Avenue but guess what? It isn't.
Although I have spent a considerable amount of time bad mouthing
the Red Line being at surface level along Edmondson Avenue and that the
stops Downtown are lack luster at best, I haven't dedicated much time to
the Red Line in East Baltimore. Option 4C, which is the preferred
option for the City although I hear of more people who hate it rather
than like it.
Option 4C calls for the Red Line to go down President St. for a few
blocks to Fleet St. where the proposed Harbor East stop is to be
located. It will then travel down Fleet St. until it meets Boston St.
where it will travel at surface level until roughly the location of the
new Canton Crossing development. There they go again with surface level,
people think that because it's the cheapest alternative that it's also
the most effective. Sometimes you may have to spend more money in order
to make more money. When something makes more money yet had cost more to
pland and build wouldn't IT be more cost effective than something that
was cheap but has low ridership due to its poor location?
Although Boston St. is very wide considering its location just east
of Downtown, it isn't dense by any stretch of the imagination. Its
housing stock is new and mirrors that of its suburbs. There is also a
suburban style shopping center with a Safeway. The only dense area will
be Canton Crossing although funding woes haven't yielded many finished
products except for the 1st Mariner Tower. Also keep in mind that Boston
St. now has more residences as its waterfront once hosted industrial
uses that have been redeveloped. Also keep in mind that to the south of
Boston St. it's water and nobody but the fishes lives there and fish
don't ride mass transit.
Eastern Avenue on the other hand is much more Retail and Community
oriented with much more of an urban feel. The road itself is much
narrower with parallel parking. There are older "cookie cutter" row
homes with ground floor Retail as well as taller row homes that have
since been converted into Apartments. In short, when traveling on
Eastern Avenue you will know that you're in the City. There are also
plenty of City Bus Stops where Residents who don't have regular access
to a car take advantage of. On Boston St. the amount of Bus Stops
and Riders at said stops is much smaller than what is found on Eastern
Avenue. In short, Eastern Avenue is very dense and Boston St. is very
sparse.
I'm sure now you can see that Eastern Avenue being the preferred
location for the Red Line east of Downtown so why isn't it? It's very
true that tunneled Light Rail under a narrow street is more expensive
and disruptive than surface level Light Rail on a wide street that
comparatively doesn't get much traffic. Could this entire issue be
boiled down to the MTA being cheap? I think so, Although the Red Line
will cost more than other rail lines in DC simply because the other
lines are older and the cost of the Red Line is adjusted to inflation.
Given that the Red Line cost is adjusted to inflation, the MTA still
doesn't want to spend more money to make the Red Line comparable to its
DC brethren.
So it's all about money? That's what has been keeping the Red Line
from being all it can be? Yes that seems to be the problem. At the same
time, the Mayor, the Governor, and the MTA are hell bent on building
just to say that they have. Unfortunately end result of just "building
something" will not improve the area in fact it will detrimental
because the money spent would then be wated due to low ridership. Why
will ridership be low? Given that Boston St. is a lower density higher
income area than Eastern Avenue there are simply more options for them.
Residents there have more access to personal vehicles. Along Eastern
Avenue, Residents are less likely to own a car, not only that there are
simply many more of them both north and south of the road itself. This
all adds up to higher ridership.
The reasons above make Eastern Avenue a better choice but consider
this one; Eastern Avenue is narrow so it can't support surface level
transit therefore it would have to be underground. Underground or
tunneled transit is uninterrupted by vehicular traffic which makes
for shorter trip times. A big reason riders would choose Rail Transit
over their cars would be that it takes less time to get to their
destination. A surface level Rail Car is a big obstruction to traffic and
it has to compete with any and all other traffic. How often have trip
times been delayed on Howard St. due to the Rail Cars competing in rush
hour traffic? It will be just the same on Boston St. Boston St. may be
wide now but it isn't wide enough to accommodate two tracks of Light Rail
in addition to two way traffic and dedicated turn lanes.
Speaking of dedicated turn lanes, with the Rail Cars at surface
level on Boston St. there's a good chance that a lot of side streets
would be forbidden to make left turns onto and off of Boston St. This is
proposed to happen on Edmondson Avenue where the Rail Cars are slated
to be surface level. Like Boston St. this needs to be tunneled as well.
Given that Edmondson Avenue is not as well to do as Boston St., there
has been significantly less coverage by the News Media on it. If
tunneled under Eastern Avenue, these problems will of course be null and
void.
It's very clear that for the Red Line in southeast Baltimore,
Eastern Avenue is all around the better option. Although there is
currently a Community Compact on the record for Option 4C, there has been
some wiggle room in the form of Cooks Lane double tracking. Hopefully
if the pressure is put on the MTA they will change their mind and pony
up the funds to make the Red Line under Eastern Avenue a reality as well
as Edmondson Avenue.
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