Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pittsburgh, agencies to study future of Downtown streets

- By Ed Blazina

What should Downtown Pittsburgh streets look like and how should they be used over the next few decades?

The Pittsburgh Downtown Partnershi­p is leading a yearlong study with the city, Port Authority and the Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Commission to develop a joint approach that all the groups can live with. The study will look at such things as reducing single- passenger vehicles, creating stopping areas for shared services such as Lyft and Uber, and deciding where future bike and pedestrian paths should be located.

Chris Watts, vice president of mobility with the partnershi­p, said the study is needed because of all of the activity going on in and around the Downtown area: Port Authority’s developmen­t of a long- range plan and the Bus Rapid Transit system between Downtown and Oakland; continuing growth in the Strip District, Lawrencevi­lle, the North Shore and South Side; ongoing testing of self- driving vehicles in the city; and the recent completion of the regional commission’s longrange transporta­tion plan.

“With all of these things, Downtown is essentiall­y in the center of how all of this works,” Mr. Watts said Thursday after he presented plans for the study to a Port Authority committee. “The whole nature of the game is collaborat­ion.”

The committee recommende­d the authority board approve the study when it meets Friday.

The partnershi­p’s request for proposals said the Downtown

area has had $ 5.2 billion of investment in the past 10 years with another $ 3.5 billion “in the pipeline.” The city needs a formal plan to manage transporta­tion around that growth, it said.

“We envision this plan serving as a catalyst for enhancing the existing multimodal transporta­tion network that is optimized for new developmen­t opportunit­ies while still retaining the historical and natural assets of Greater Downtown,” the document reads.

David Huffaker, the authority’s chief developmen­t officer, said the timing of the study is “great” because so many mobility projects are just beginning.

“It’s a chance for all of us to have input,” he said. “This helps facilitate getting us all together and talking at the same time.”

Mr. Huffaker said the route for the Bus Rapid Transit system, a $ 195.5 million project awaiting federal funding, won’t change as a result of the mobility study. But the routes for other buses could change as the study develops a workable system in the Golden Triangle to accommodat­e all methods of getting around.

“The study covers the whole gamut of how people move around in our system — transit, personal vehicle, shared services, pedestrian­s,” he said. “It’s part of getting all of those systems synched up and working together.”

How the adjacent neighborho­ods link with Downtown Pittsburgh is “critical” to the region, said Andy Waple, director of transporta­tion planning for the 10county Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Commission. He noted that about 110,000 people work Downtown every weekday.

“We need to get people around efficientl­y,” he said. “It’s important that all modes are considered.”

Karina Ricks, the city’s director of the Department of Mobility and Infrastruc­ture, couldn’t be reached for comment.

The study should take about a year to complete, but it likely will be a living plan that changes as projects and issues develop. The Downtown Partnershi­p, which is paying for the study, has received proposals from consultant­s and expects to choose one by September.

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