Anonymous wrote:Where would you even put a metro station to serve Taylor Run. Look at a map. West of King Street, the metro runs along a rail line south of Duke Street. If you can't walk to King Street Station, you aren't likely to walk across Duke.
Are you suggesting a brand new metro line to serve your little neighborhood of Single family houses?
Time to invoke Poe's Law. I know some annoying people in Taylor Run, but none so crazy as to suggest this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They really need to put one in. Thoughts?
My thought is they needed to put a very large parking garage at the King St metro.
If there were parking, people who live there would drive and park at the metro station and take metro.
I hate, hate, hate the magical thinking of "people will use public transportation to get to public transportation despite that adding anywhere from a half hour to an hour to their commute!"
There is no evidence that people in this area are going to abandon their cars even to go 1 mile.
No. The King/Callahan/Russell intersection is bad enough as is. There is nothing difficult about the 15-20 minute walk or 5 minute bus ride from Taylor Run. Talk about privileged.
How often do the buses come? I had this discussion with someone about Bethesda. I live more like 2-2.5 miles from the metro and drive in. It is too far to walk daily and the bus comes every half hour even in rush and would transform an 8-10 minute ride into 20+. Unless the buses came very frequently, which isn't realistic, there is just no way I am going to take the bus despite the cost of parking. This is particularly true since I have to get kids and get them to activities and the chance of bus routes lining up is very low.
It's simply a fantasy that some have that people will turn to public transportation to get to metro and restricting parking, as some advocate, is fool hardy.
If you live 2-2.5 miles from the metro, you are in Seminary Hill, not Taylor Run. I am in College Park, which is west of Taylor Run, and the walk to the metro is 1.3 miles.
PP lives in Bethesda
But it doesn't matter because 1 mile is too far for people to walk to take the Metro or a bus everyday if they have the option of driving. You can say it's not and argue over and over but the reality is born out every single day. So if planners just actually took into account reality, and planned and implemented that way, then things would improve.
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of this neighborhood but according to Google maps the eastern edge of the neighborhood hits the intersection where the King Street Metro is.
And the furthest point in the neighborhood is maybe 1.5 miles from the station but much of the neighborhood is much closer than that which is to say very walkable.
It also appears to be a very low density neighborhood - this isn't Del Ray with all its row houses and homes on small lots.
I suppose you could argue for a stop halfway between King Street and Eisenhower Avenue that would be near the east edge of this neighborhood but no way is the density there to justify spending $300 million on such a station.
Anonymous wrote:
But it doesn't matter because 1 mile is too far for people to walk to take the Metro or a bus everyday if they have the option of driving. You can say it's not and argue over and over but the reality is born out every single day. So if planners just actually took into account reality, and planned and implemented that way, then things would improve.
Anonymous wrote:
It's simply a fantasy that some have that people will turn to public transportation to get to metro and restricting parking, as some advocate, is fool hardy.
Anonymous wrote:
PP lives in Bethesda
But it doesn't matter because 1 mile is too far for people to walk to take the Metro or a bus everyday if they have the option of driving. You can say it's not and argue over and over but the reality is born out every single day. So if planners just actually took into account reality, and planned and implemented that way, then things would improve.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is so weird. “Why doesn’t my random small neighborhood of single family homes 1 mile from a Metro Station have its own Metro station?”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They really need to put one in. Thoughts?
My thought is they needed to put a very large parking garage at the King St metro.
If there were parking, people who live there would drive and park at the metro station and take metro.
I hate, hate, hate the magical thinking of "people will use public transportation to get to public transportation despite that adding anywhere from a half hour to an hour to their commute!"
There is no evidence that people in this area are going to abandon their cars even to go 1 mile.
No. The King/Callahan/Russell intersection is bad enough as is. There is nothing difficult about the 15-20 minute walk or 5 minute bus ride from Taylor Run. Talk about privileged.
How often do the buses come? I had this discussion with someone about Bethesda. I live more like 2-2.5 miles from the metro and drive in. It is too far to walk daily and the bus comes every half hour even in rush and would transform an 8-10 minute ride into 20+. Unless the buses came very frequently, which isn't realistic, there is just no way I am going to take the bus despite the cost of parking. This is particularly true since I have to get kids and get them to activities and the chance of bus routes lining up is very low.
It's simply a fantasy that some have that people will turn to public transportation to get to metro and restricting parking, as some advocate, is fool hardy.
If you live 2-2.5 miles from the metro, you are in Seminary Hill, not Taylor Run. I am in College Park, which is west of Taylor Run, and the walk to the metro is 1.3 miles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They really need to put one in. Thoughts?
My thought is they needed to put a very large parking garage at the King St metro.
If there were parking, people who live there would drive and park at the metro station and take metro.
I hate, hate, hate the magical thinking of "people will use public transportation to get to public transportation despite that adding anywhere from a half hour to an hour to their commute!"
There is no evidence that people in this area are going to abandon their cars even to go 1 mile.
No. The King/Callahan/Russell intersection is bad enough as is. There is nothing difficult about the 15-20 minute walk or 5 minute bus ride from Taylor Run. Talk about privileged.
How often do the buses come? I had this discussion with someone about Bethesda. I live more like 2-2.5 miles from the metro and drive in. It is too far to walk daily and the bus comes every half hour even in rush and would transform an 8-10 minute ride into 20+. Unless the buses came very frequently, which isn't realistic, there is just no way I am going to take the bus despite the cost of parking. This is particularly true since I have to get kids and get them to activities and the chance of bus routes lining up is very low.
It's simply a fantasy that some have that people will turn to public transportation to get to metro and restricting parking, as some advocate, is fool hardy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They really need to put one in. Thoughts?
My thought is they needed to put a very large parking garage at the King St metro.
If there were parking, people who live there would drive and park at the metro station and take metro.
I hate, hate, hate the magical thinking of "people will use public transportation to get to public transportation despite that adding anywhere from a half hour to an hour to their commute!"
There is no evidence that people in this area are going to abandon their cars even to go 1 mile.
No. The King/Callahan/Russell intersection is bad enough as is. There is nothing difficult about the 15-20 minute walk or 5 minute bus ride from Taylor Run. Talk about privileged.
How often do the buses come? I had this discussion with someone about Bethesda. I live more like 2-2.5 miles from the metro and drive in. It is too far to walk daily and the bus comes every half hour even in rush and would transform an 8-10 minute ride into 20+. Unless the buses came very frequently, which isn't realistic, there is just no way I am going to take the bus despite the cost of parking. This is particularly true since I have to get kids and get them to activities and the chance of bus routes lining up is very low.
It's simply a fantasy that some have that people will turn to public transportation to get to metro and restricting parking, as some advocate, is fool hardy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's still a long walk to the metro even if it is a mile. How come they cant put a station there?
One mile is no a long walk at all, OP. Do you ever exercise?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They really need to put one in. Thoughts?
My thought is they needed to put a very large parking garage at the King St metro.
If there were parking, people who live there would drive and park at the metro station and take metro.
I hate, hate, hate the magical thinking of "people will use public transportation to get to public transportation despite that adding anywhere from a half hour to an hour to their commute!"
There is no evidence that people in this area are going to abandon their cars even to go 1 mile.
No. The King/Callahan/Russell intersection is bad enough as is. There is nothing difficult about the 15-20 minute walk or 5 minute bus ride from Taylor Run. Talk about privileged.
Anonymous wrote:That's still a long walk to the metro even if it is a mile. How come they cant put a station there?