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[溫哥華本地新聞] Vancouver unveils plan to replace viaducts with 'super road', more housing
Vancouver unveils plan to replace viaducts with 'super road', more housing
‘Super road’ may mean early death for viaducts ‘Super road’ may mean early death for viaducts ‘Super road’ may mean early death for viaducts
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Vancouver+unveils+plan+replace+viaducts+with+super+road+more+housing/6983485/story.html#ixzz21e6xB48R
The Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts could be demolished almost immediately, paving the way for new housing and a neighbourhood park system, if the plan is approved by council this fall.
On Tuesday, city transportation planners unveiled a new plan to create a “super road” around the north end of False Creek that would allow for the accelerated destruction of the viaducts and create more than 850,000 square feet of new housing space in Strathcona. It would also affect several other planned changes, including the construction of a long-awaited truck bypass route along Malkin Street.
The plan has yet to be approved, and the planners will bring back a final version within months, but the general proposal received thumbs up from both Vision Vancouver and Non-Partisan Association councillors.
Mayor Gregor Robertson said the ambitious project still has to meet the support of neighbouring residents as well as downtown businesses affected by the removal of the viaducts.
“I’m not prepared to say we’re there yet, but I think we’re getting closer,” he said. “This is a big, big decision for Vancouver and the future of the eastern core. It will be a big influence on how we connect and how we respond to the needs of neighbourhoods like Chinatown, Strathcona, Grandview-Woodlands for many decades to come.”
In removing the aging elevated roadways, the last vestige of Vancouver’s short-lived fling with a freeway, the city would unlock land that could either be turned into parks, traded with adjacent landowners or sold in order to create more affordable housing in the neighbourhood.
The plan calls for a new road that sweeps north from Pacific Boulevard and links up with Prior, Main and Quebec streets. Georgia Street would be extended to Pacific down a five per cent grade so gentle planners say it will accommodate people in wheelchairs.
Westbound vehicle access to Dunsmuir would stop, but a bicycle and pedestrian bridge would connect from a planned park to Dunsmuir Street above.
The proposal also calls for a broad bicycle and pedestrian mall on the west side of a future park linking Carrall Street with False Creek, and an additional 13 per cent park space could be added to the 9 hectares (22 acres) already committed for completion.
Transportation Planning Director Jerry Dobrovolny told council removing the eastern approaches of viaducts would also give the city back two blocks between Quebec and Gore streets, including Hogan’s Alley, that were once part of the city’s vibrant black population. Those two blocks, if developed correctly, could generate 850,000 square feet of housing and retail space and could help pay for the cost of demolishing the viaducts.
A previous plan considered by the transportation department would have kept the viaducts in place for 15 years. But Dobrovolny said under the new scenario, the viaducts could be removed almost immediately as the neighbourhood parks are built without negatively affecting traffic. He said public consultation surveys showed that nearly 70 per cent support or strongly support the plan.
Dobrovolny told reporters later the timeline for removal was contingent on other development and reconstruction in the neighbourhood, but that there was no long-term obstacle to removal of the viaducts. He suggested the project could cost up to $100 million, but much of the money could come from the city’s sale of development rights on land currently under the viaducts.
Robertson said before staff come back in the fall for a final decision he wants to make sure five issues are addressed, including advancing work on the long-planned Malkin Street connector, a truck bypass route from Clark Drive around the north end of the False Creek flats to Main Street. That route would take much of the traffic that now uses Prior Street, which has been a constant source of anger for local residents.
The city also expects the Malkin connector, which could cost $40 million, would attract financial support from the federal and provincial governments as it would eliminate several at-grade rail crossings and give the province better access to land it wants for a new health centre. |
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