Good for traffic, bad for pedestrians
The consultant who drafted the city’s
Downtown Master Plan sharply criticized an early design for the
Second Street improvement project slated for construction starting
this fall.
The project calls for new Baker,
Central and Spokane avenue intersections, as well as replacing
underground utilities and rebuilding the roadway. A $3.5 million
federal TIGER grant is expected to cover the costs, but the project
already shows signs of being over budget.
Portland-based urban planner George
Crandall e-mailed Whitefish public works director John Wilson and
members of the Heart of Whitefish downtown merchants association
about his concerns on April 4.
“It is obvious to me that there has
been some confusion about the design priorities for downtown
Whitefish,” he said.
Crandall noted three problems with the
Baker and Spokane avenue intersections in the latest design —
longer pedestrian-crossing distances, larger turning radii that
created “out-of-direction pedestrian travel,” and unsafe pedestrian
conditions.
“The result is pedestrian-hostile
intersections at Baker and Spokane and an erosion of the downtown
economy,” he said.
The city had three choices, Crandall
said — accept the design, build only the Central and Second
intersection, which has bulbouts and raised pedestrian-crossings
like other intersections on Central Avenue, or “take a moment to
explore a fix.”
Delaying a decision on the project
design is one of Wilson’s biggest concerns. The design work is on
an accelerated schedule. The Montana Department of Transportation
supports the accelerated schedule and has shown flexibility in
approving pedestrian-friendly ideas on its highway.
Responding to Crandall and the Heart of
Whitefish, Wilson noted that the larger intersections are not just
for trucks but also for “increasing traffic capacity and relieving
traffic congestion.”
“I believe most people agree with the
goal to relieve congestion,” Wilson said, adding that “we’ve added
left-turn lanes at every leg of those intersections.”
As for Crandall’s suggestion that the
Baker and Spokane intersections be left as they are today, Wilson
said he appreciated “the rhetorical point,” but “a literal
interpretation overlooks our problems with congestion at these
intersections.
Wilson told the Whitefish City Council
on April 4 that MDT had accepted smaller turning radii on Baker but
modeled the Spokane intersection for a “full 18-wheeler” because
the south and west legs are part of U.S. Highway 93.
Wilson also said the project could be
about $283,000 over budget at the current 30-40 percent design
phase. That included a 10 percent contingency and $85,000 for
additional sewer work under City Hall that would enable future use
of the site.
He provided the council with seven
options that could reduce the cost of the project by about
$237,000, including roadway, concrete crosswalks, decorative
lighting, green traffic signal poles, landscaping, irrigation and
$62,900 for street furniture that matches what’s been used
elsewhere downtown.
Wilson also noted that additional
funding sources could be found to supplement the TIGER grant,
including tax-increment financing (TIF) money and resort tax
funds.
Whitefish senior project engineer Karin
Hilding described the loss of parking spaces along Second Street,
noting that MDT “has bent a lot of their rules already on parking.”
She also pointed out that the sidewalks along Second Street will
not be widened.
Five Heart of Whitefish members
addressed the council. Ian Collins pointed out that the $3.5
million TIGER grant provided a unique opportunity for Whitefish to
complete the Downtown Master Plan, but he questioned design changes
for 18-wheelers that account for only 1 percent of the traffic.
Rhonda Fitzgerald warned that each lost
parking space represented $285,000 a year in spending at downtown
businesses.
The council unanimously approved
spending up to $2,000 to bring Crandall to Whitefish for a workshop
on the project. The Heart of Whitefish agreed to pay half of
Crandall’s travel costs. The council also reached a consensus on
using TIF money for decorative street lights, just like they had
for the U.S. 93 West project from Lupfer to Karrow avenues, and to
pay for the sewer work under City Hall.
The council, however, rejected the
Heart of Whitefish’s suggestion that the City Hall awnings be taken
down. Wilson had noted that the current City Hall “isn’t much to
look at” and “would look even worse with the canopy removed.”