Just extending the 395 express lanes costs at least $500 million to build. If you spent that on bus service, what would you get? |
Could you be so kind as to say, in general terms, where you live? The OP was (apparently) talking about the City of Alexandria, and I don't think there is any large part of the City where a reasonable increase in bus service would not result in a meaningful increase in ridership. I do not wish to debate conditions in say, Chantilly, which I do not know at all well. Bus service is not something that can really be debated in the abstract - its impacted not only by income and family size, but by population density. proximity of destinations, and a range of other very local factors. |
We shall see what there is will for https://www.alexandriava.gov/tes/default.aspx?id=104193 |
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Note well - some living in the part of Taylor Run near Janneys Lane would take the AT2 bus to get to metro. That runs every 20 mins inbound, morning rush hour.
If they live near King Street, they have access to the AT2, AT5 AND AT6 so much higher frequency. If they live closer to Duke Street, it would be the AT8. Which currently runs every 10 minutes inbound at morning rush hour. |
Ivy City is a completely different neighborhood than Capitol Hill. |
Sure. I mentioned it early, but with quotes getting cut off it got lost. I am in Bethesda, a couple of miles from downtown and a couple of miles from the dc border. |
Bus service from Bethesda to the Bethesda Metro could be better and should be better. Downtown Bethesda has way too much cheap parking, which induces people to drive, which makes it much more difficult, unpleasant, and unsafe to walk around downtown Bethesda than it ought to be. |
Based in what metric have you decided that parking is too cheap? How much should it cost in your estimation? I also don't understand why you say it is difficult to walk in downtown Bethesda. There are sidewalks and frequent lights and crosswalks. They even changed some of the light patterns a couple of months ago to make it even better for pedestrians. |
Because there are narrow sidewalks and lots of big roads where people drive too fast. "Even better for pedestrians" is not something I'd say about downtown Bethesda, unless I were comparing it to, I don't know, Orlando. "Less bad for pedestrians than many other parts of the county," sure. Parking should cost enough that people who live nearby and/or who can take transit to their jobs in downtown Bethesda decide not to drive by themselves and park because parking costs too much. |
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^^^for numbers - there are currently about 23,000 parking spaces in downtown Bethesda, including spaces on the street, county garages, and private garages and surface lots.
That's a whole lot of parking for a whole lot of cars, in an area on top of a Metro station. |
NE Capitol Hill b/t Lincoln Park and H St. I am exactly 1 mile from Eastern Market metro and just over a mile from Union Station and Potomac Avenue metros. |
I assume they just meant up towards that area but within the Hill. But I am to PP who posted re: CH and this response wasn’t me. I am, as I noted elsewhere, basically halfway between Lincoln Park and H St and more or less 1 mile from 3 different metro stops. |
You are being ridiculous. The sidewalks aren't narrow. The roads aren't big. There really is no reason walking in downtown Bethesda is difficult. I do it all the time with my young kids without issue. |
Without many of these spots people would drive all the way to work in DC. Because there is parking available in Bethesda, many people use metro for the vast majority of their commute, which is ultimately what you want. |
No, it's not ultimately what I want, and it's not ultimately what the county government wants either. It's wasteful and dumb for downtown Bethesda to be a park-and-ride for people's Metro trips to DC. |