Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Exit the expressway: Cities weigh removals

- By Steven Kurutz

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The Scajaquada Corridor is a city dweller’s dreamland, a culture-vulture Valhalla. Within 2 miles there is a restored Frank Lloyd Wright house you can visit, an art museum with Picassos and Gauguins, three college campuses, a zoo and a history museum in a majestic Greek Revival building, from the 1901 Pan Am Exposition, listed on the National Historic Register. All of it borders a 356-acre park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux.

There is just one problem: An expressway runs through it.

The Scajaquada Expressway, or Route 198, is a 3.2-mile tear in the urban fabric. Built in the early 1960s, it slices Delaware Park in half, isolates north Buffalo from destinatio­ns south, makes walking or bicycling in the area a death-courting activity and creates the strange optical illusions common to freewa yscapes. The Albright-Knox Art Gallery and the Buffalo History Museum are less than half a mile apart, on opposite sides of the Scajaquada. Looking across the expanse of pavement and speeding traffic, however, the distance seems insurmount­able.

“People don’t cross the Scajaquada,” said Alison Merner, communicat­ions coordinato­r for GObike Buffalo, who grew up in a neighborho­od that borders the expressway. “If I were going to go for a run or a short bike ride, I would always stay on my side. You were kind of on an island.”

The Scajaquada is not just a local barrier but also a poster road for a growing movement being championed by progressiv­es in the urban-planning community. They want to tear down some highways in cities and replace all that elevated-and-barricaded pavement with lower-speed streets that favor pedestrian­s and bicyclists and foster greater connectivi­ty among neighborho­ods and residents.

It’s the kind of argument you can imagine journalist and activist Jane Jacobs making, and indeed she led a successful campaign against Robert Moses in the 1960s to block a planned expressway through lower Manhattan before it could be built. The highway would have resulted in the demolition of wide swaths of Greenwich Village and SoHo.

One of the groups leading the new charge is Congress for the New Urbanism. Since 2008, it has published a biennial list called “Freeways Without Futures,” which names highways whose eliminatio­n would, according to its website, “remove a blight” from their cities. The 2017 edition includes Route 710 in Pasadena, Calif., Interstate 70 in Denver, Interstate 375 in Detroit and, Paved Enemy No. 1, the Scajaquada Expressway.

Lynn Richards, president and chief executive officer of the congress, said that removing a highway was “a somewhat radical idea.” “There’s a lot of analysis that needs to go into it about where the traffic is going to go,” she said.

But already, several cities have removed or decommissi­oned existing highways, including Paris; Seoul, South Korea; Boston; and Portland, Ore. Last year, Rochester, NY., buried a portion of a downtown expressway known as the Inner Loop, a stretch of sunken highway the city’s mayor likened to a “moat.” It is being replaced with a boulevard on the same grade as the rest of the streetscap­e.

And because of a confluence of factors, including the embrace of ride-hailing services like Uber and the rebirth of cities as places to live, work, raise families and retire to, advocates like Richards see an “incredible opportunit­y” to remove even more pavement. “When we put out a call last summer for freeways without a future, we got almost 75 recommenda­tions,” she said. “This can kick-start a conversati­on about the best way to spend infrastruc­ture dollars.”

Many in-city highways were built during the post-World War II boom years with easy money from the 1956 Federal-Aid Highway Act. They hail from an age when the automobile was ascendant and were built to quickly move commuters in and out of urban centers; many of these highways were used by white suburbanit­es and built in low-income minority neighborho­ods (“white men’s roads through black men’s homes,” went a saying in Washington).

Perhaps the greatest argument that removal advocates have is that so much of this infrastruc­ture is nearing the end of its life span. In this era of tight budgets and political gridlock, it may be cheaper for local and state government­s to remove a freeway rather than repair or build a new one.

If it sounds counterint­uitive, if not crazy, to tear down a highway that still carries thousands of cars and trucks each day, there are a number of case studies to point to. One of the earliest and, to advocates, most successful, was San Francisco’s double-decker Embarcader­o Freeway. It skirted the city’s waterfront and was demolished instead of rebuilt after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.

“The Embarcader­o came out of the waterfront, and now the waterfront real estate is seeing tremendous value,” said Peter Park, a city planner in favor of removing highways in cities where neighborho­ods have been “significan­tly disconnect­ed.”

Not only in San Francisco but also in every case where a highway has been removed, Park argues, “the city has improved.”

Park was the planning director for Milwaukee when the city decommissi­oned the Park East Freeway spur in 2002. Less than a mile long, the highway hosted traffic snarls each day, but it had its supporters, especially among suburban commuters and truck drivers, and there was concern about what would happen if it was removed.

The bill to demolish the Park East and restore the street grid was around $30 million, significan­tly less than the $80 to $100 million estimated cost to rebuild the 40-year-old freeway, Norquist said.

Norquist, who went on to run Congress for the New Urbanism for a decade and is now a semiretire­d consultant, said removing a highway is not just about addressing local residents’ concerns. “We had to make the big argument, the Jane Jacobs argument, that the freeway was harmful to the whole city,” he said.

Since the mid-1980s, civic groups in Buffalo have been arguing for the decommissi­on of the Scajaquada Expressway. After more than a decade of environmen­tal impact studies, and after a car traveling the expressway struck and killed a child in 2015, the state is responding. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has earmarked nearly $100 million for a project that will convert a 2.2mile portion into a lower-speed boulevard; organizers hope to start constructi­on in 2018.

“What we envision going to would be more of an urban boulevard that allows all modes of transporta­tion — pedestrian­s, bicyclists and cars — to use that facility,” said Angelo Trichilo, deputy chief engineer for the New York state Transporta­tion Department.

Still, some argue that the department’s plan, which eliminates features like merged lanes and uses seven new traffic lights and a raised median with curbs to slow cars, doesn’t go far enough to reduce the expressway’s impact or image and fails to look at the redesign in an innovative way.

“It’s like lipstick on a pig,” said Stephanie Crockatt, executive director of the Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservanc­y. “They have a lot of pretty drawings, but they’re not fixing anything. The road will be just as wide. There will still be a slab of pavement. We’re still not seeing the connectivi­ty and sensitivit­y.”

Buffalo could become a leader in forward-thinking urban design and a cultural tourist destinatio­n, advocates say. And the Scajaquada Corridor redesign could serve as a model for how to approach other highway teardowns, including the plan to demolish the Robert Mosesbuilt Sheridan Expressway in the Bronx.

“That’s why it’s so important to get it right now and not finance a mistake into perpetuity,” Booth said.

But even at a time when cities are embracing bike-sharing programs and mass transit; even when the end of the car (or the human driver anyway) is speculated; even when waterfront­s and industrial and low-income areas where in-city highways were built are being reclaimed through gentrifica­tion — it’s not easy to tear down a hunk of concrete in place for generation­s.

At a Transporta­tion Department public presentati­on meeting last year, Crockatt learned that for some, the 19th-century Delaware Park is the problem, not the ‘60sera expressway.

She recalled that one attendee stood up and asked, incredulou­sly: “Why in the world did you build this park next to this highway?”

 ?? SHANE LAVALETTE / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Scajaquada Expressway, which isolates north Buffalo, N.Y., from destinatio­ns south, is pictured Oct. 14. The Scajaquada is not just a local barrier but also a poster road for a growing movement that wants to tear down some highways in cities and...
SHANE LAVALETTE / THE NEW YORK TIMES The Scajaquada Expressway, which isolates north Buffalo, N.Y., from destinatio­ns south, is pictured Oct. 14. The Scajaquada is not just a local barrier but also a poster road for a growing movement that wants to tear down some highways in cities and...
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