Transit and Ride Hailing Working Together
All the city news you can use.
Every day at The Overhead Wire we sort through over 1,500 news items about cities and share the best ones with our email list. At the end of the week, we take some of the most popular stories and share them with Urban Milwaukee readers. They are national (or international) links, sometimes entertaining and sometimes absurd, but hopefully useful.
San Francisco’s Transbay Terminal opens soon: On August 12th buses will finally take and deliver passengers to the new $4.2 billion Transbay Terminal in San Francisco. The terminal includes a basement where high speed and regional trains will come in 2029 at the earliest and a rooftop park. The project took 8 years to complete but looks to be a welcome addition to the city. (John King | San Francisco Chronicle)
Transit and ride hailing hand in hand: According to a new report 27 transit agencies have joined forces with ride hailing companies since 2016 to provide service in areas that are relatively bare. These partnerships come in all shapes and sizes including subsidized rides and substituting for paratransit services. But questions about whether they are helping or hurting transit ridership continue to be asked. (Laura Bliss | CityLab)
The Roman that shaped our cities: Unfortunately an estimated 95% of manuscripts and books from Greek and Roman times were destroyed by war and fire. Fortunately this didn’t include the work of Vitruvius whose work helped shaped the way modern cities are designed. Determining a site for a new town, building types for civic events, and organization of trade were all revealed in his work De architectura. (Theo Mackey Pollack | The American Conservative)
Old roads to economic prosperity: Roadways built by the Romans 2,000 years ago are a good predictor of whether a place will be economically prosperous in current times. Danish economists who did the research say this is proof that infrastructure has always been a driver of economic development. (Christopher Ingram | Washington Post)
Changing the fire code: Baltimore City Council voted to repeal the part of the international fire code locally that restricts the widths of new streets. The Baltimore Fire Department had been using the rules to block bike lanes and development. The city will now look to use NACTO standards. (Luke Broadwater | Baltimore Sun)
Quote of the Week
I was talking last week with a zoning and planning lobbyist in Charlotte – a guy whose planning background doesn′t stop him from generally hewing to a basic free-market approach. He said he′s starting to believe cities should consider housing affordability as part of the basic package of infrastructure the local government provides.
–Mary Newsom discussing changing thoughts about providing affordable housing around the country. (Naked City)
On this week’s podcast, Susan Henderson talks to us about connecting form based codes and transportation.
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Transportation
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Streetcar Begins Daily Service To The Couture, BRT Will Soon Follow
Apr 11th, 2024 by Jeramey Jannene -
Paper Table Has Plan to Address Double-Parking
Apr 9th, 2024 by Sophie Bolich -
Just How Bad Are Milwaukee’s Roads?
Apr 7th, 2024 by Graham Kilmer
Urban Reads
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Why Has Condo Construction Collapsed in the US?
Apr 13th, 2024 by Jeff Wood -
What Happened to Compact Cars?
Apr 6th, 2024 by Jeff Wood -
Will Climate Change Push People to Northern Cities?
Mar 31st, 2024 by Jeff Wood