Good post, but LOL at “all the retail that will be around the new pedestrian mall”. Speaking of blue-sky renderings…IcedCowboyCoffee wrote: ↑11 Jun 2024 11:30 "SECTION 1. That, at this time, except for streetcar expansion projects currently under
consideration, City Council does not support construction of any aboveground rail lines
through the Downtown, Uptown, and Victory Park areas of Dallas.
SECTION 2. That many large projects are underway in the city and, except for streetcar
expansion projects currently under consideration, City Council is prioritizing
redevelopment of the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center and the needs of Fair
Park and other historically significant parks and residential neighborhoods ahead of any
construction of new aboveground rail lines through the Downtown, Uptown, and
Victory Park areas of Dallas.
SECTION 3. That City Council commits to revisit the Dallas to Fort Worth high speed rail
discussion after it recieves the economic impact study requested by City Council at the
March 6, 2024 City Council briefing."
okay. lol. You could have just waited for that economic impact study?
Won't someone think of poor little Hunt Realty?! They had been waiting on their hands patiently like a good developer for the undoubtedly assured financial windfall that a new convention center would someday bring this bizarre corner lot, but now one elevated track comparable only to the great ice wall of Westeros is threatening to ruin all of downtown.
It's frustrating because obviously the more desirable land will be on the other side of the future convention center where all the newly opened up land is going to be. So, all this "concern" threatening to stop a Fort Worth connection stems from a Reunion lot that will still be in the neglected corner of everything when this all shakes out, a lot that will still require a pedestrian bridge to cross the half dozen train tracks already there in order to reach.
No amount of blue-sky renderings will change the fact that the face of the new convention center will be directed away from this area, and people's instinctive pedestrian impulse will be to go towards downtown in the direction of where they see activity: the dart station, the memorial auditorium, and all the retail that will be around the new pedestrian mall. I think there is plenty of effective work that could be done with the Reunion lot, none of which has ever been dependent on a new convention center happening, and none of which is inherently hampered by a meager elevated train track.
Anyways, I half expect the economic impact study to come back suggesting it would be economically stupid not to make an aboveground connection to Fort Worth and for city council to disregard it anyways.
And, as to economic impact studies, it's hard to imagine how any legitimate economic impact study of this project will suggest HSR between D and FW makes any economic sense whatsoever, unless of course, they completely ignore the cost.