Ryan
Court Jester
I don't think any food vendors were being relocated.
Are they actually expanding the food court area at WAS? I'm glad to hear that, because I was under the impression that they were just booting out the food vendors to make room for Walgreens, and was disappointed in the selection when I was there back in May, compared to a previous visit.
And I've never found Walgreens' menu to be quite up to the standards for a proper restaurant.
Aah. So they were vacant, but because the landlords were deliberately kicking stores out to make way for future stores with higher rent. I have seen that happen elsewhere; the old storeowners tend to be very bitter about it.At present there is a chage-over going on from one set of stores to another both upstairs and in the basement, which might give one an impression that spaces are unoccupied. but the impression is mistaken in the long run. For example, it would be a mistake to believe that the space where Walgreen's is moving in in the basement is "unoccupied".
Well, if Amtrak isn't planning to spend any of1) its own money,How much of that $7B is coming from a source that can reasonably spent on the rest of the system?
Yeah. It is the equivalent of gentrification of localities that often happen when infrastructure is improved. The existing tenants are bitter about it and a small battle ensues. I saw this happen when HBLRT gentrified Jersey City water front. But inevitably the existing order loses and the higher rent payers move into new constructions.Aah. So they were vacant, but because the landlords were deliberately kicking stores out to make way for future stores with higher rent. I have seen that happen elsewhere; the old storeowners tend to be very bitter about it.At present there is a chage-over going on from one set of stores to another both upstairs and in the basement, which might give one an impression that spaces are unoccupied. but the impression is mistaken in the long run. For example, it would be a mistake to believe that the space where Walgreen's is moving in in the basement is "unoccupied".
Yep, Amtrak, MARC and VRE will be spending plenty of their money to improve and expand the passenger circulation and waiting areas well beyond what the mall owners will do. Notwithstanding some beliefs that Union Station does not need such, it is self-evident that it does once you spend a couple of rush hours there. The Amtrak boarding even in non-rush hours is just a slightly controlled chaos these days, mostly due to lack of space for people to line up. They designed the current passenger circulation area for boarding four car trains, not 8 car trains.Sometimes it pays to read beyond the headline.
Also, nobody has said that Amtrak wasn't spending *any* money.
The lower level with the food court has a lot of unused space in the movie theater complex that closed 4 or 5 years ago, The announced plan several years ago was to relocate one or two of the restaurants located in the center of the front hall down into the movie theater space with escalators leading down from the front hall to the restaurants and expanded retail space. The Walgreens will probably be on the south side of the food court probably using part of the former movie theater space. What is going on is a major refurb and reconfiguration of the lower level along with a do-over of the front hall. When that will be completed and what the new layout will look like, don't know.When I visited last November I was amazed by all the food vendors down there. In May it looked like a number of those had disappeared and the area where most had been was boarded up, presumably where Walgreens is going.
I completely agree, but that's not the point I was trying to make. Rather, rail advocates may be shocked at the idea of spending $7 billion on a single station (even though the amount may be justified, and we certainly want to see major investment in passenger rail infrastructure) while small ticket items across the system - a few hundred thousand dollars to a few million, perhaps - beg attention for years where no money is available. It is not that scaling back the Washington project will make money available, but in addition to such big ticket projects, we are keenly aware of what even a fraction of that amount could accomplish if wisely invested across the nation.How much of that $7B is coming from a source that can reasonably spent on the rest of the system?Indeed, for $7 billion, we could have:-- bought a daily Sunset Limited at UP's exorbitant price several years ago ($0.5 billion upfront and about $0.02 billion/year)-- completed phase II of Moynihan Station (estimated at $1-2 billion)-- revived the Broadway Limited and run it for several years, ($0.01 billion/year)-- completed the Chicago Union Station Master Plan (estimated at $1-2 billion)-- built high platforms, freight bypass tracks, and new road overpasses at Hudson Station (less than $1 billion)-- and done a *dozen* other significant projects which would be of great benefit.Waste is waste. DC Union doesn't need $7 billion in improvement.Even airline fans objected to the gross overbuild of Denver Insane-national Airport, pointing out that it was designed for levels of traffic which would never actually arrive.So, when we hear of a $7 billion dollar project to be spent on one station it seems extravagant; We can imagine what a fraction of that $7 billion would do for the rest of the Amtrak system; You could "fix" all but the largest stations, buy new equipment, start new trains and routes, and make investment in tracks and infrastructure to permit faster running times - with money left over. Of course, you would still need to fix Washington too - and all the other big ticket Northeast Corridor items (Hudson & B&P tunnels, etc.). But again, as rail advocates we've been relegated to hoping for some crumbs off the table while billion dollar projects are spent on other modes; It is hard to imagine ever spending so much on a single station, much as we would love to see such things happen.
How much of that $7B is going towards massive overbuilding for nonexistent traffic?
(The answer to both is the same - "not much")
Having spent rush hour at Chicago Union Station and at NY Penn Station as well as at DC Union Station, I am *not* impressed by the crowding at rush hour in DC Union. (This should not be surprising: LIRR & NJT have weekday ridership of ~574K, Metra has weekday ridership of ~290K although only ~72K goes to Union, but MARC + VRE have weekday ridership of a mere ~43K. Amtrak has twice as many passengers at NY as at DC. Chicago has 3.4 million yearly Amtrak passengers versus 5.0 million at DC, but more Chicago passengers are hanging around longer to change trains.)Notwithstanding some beliefs that Union Station does not need such, it is self-evident that it does once you spend a couple of rush hours there. The Amtrak boarding even in non-rush hours is just a slightly controlled chaos these days, mostly due to lack of space for people to line up. They designed the current passenger circulation area for boarding four car trains, not 8 car trains.
There's an obvious solution to this, which is used in train stations all over the world. *Stop making people line up*.The Amtrak boarding even in non-rush hours is just a slightly controlled chaos these days, mostly due to lack of space for people to line up.
There's gobs of empty space in DC Union Station. Let's start with the big, wide platforms, and the giant largely-wasted open space immediately in front of them (before you get to the unnecessary and counterproductive "gates")... We can continue with the rotunda in the front. I might point out the vast, spacious corridors in the "off limits" part of the basement, big enough to drive trucks through (and indeed trucks are driven through there), which I've ridden on a Red Cap cart when being taken to the taxi stand. Shall I move on to the Railway Express building, or have I made my point?I'm not sure that there's a direct correlation between amount of crowding and the cost to correct it.
Edit: In fact, I'm pretty sure that there isn't at all. Regardless of how crowded CHI is, it's a big building with lots of empty space. Any fix would be cheap. WAS is a big building, but it doesn't have a lot of empty space so fixes are going to be more costly.
The whole point is that they claimed it would cost $7 billion!Nobody said that the passenger flow fix in DC is expensive or difficult.
Just price comparisons.But it is still worth doing. bringing in Penn Station and what not is just obfuscating the matter.
If it actually is a smaller investment, great, yay, go for it.i don't think anyone is suggesting that money should not be spent on Penn Station. But that does not mean that Union Station in DC needs to be robbed of the smaller investment needed there
The problem won't be solved that way. Most of the time it can't be predicted much in advance what track the train will leave out of as the equipment is being turned as soon as it comes in off the road. Engines are turned at the last minute too. Even if the equipment is there farther in advance it is not ready for passengers until close to the boarding times.
The support beams and access stairs/elevators block off an actual majority of the platform on most of the Penn Station platforms. There's typically 5 feet of walking space on each side. DC Union Station upper level platforms are pretty clear of such obstructions, though I can't speak to the lower level (for some reason I'm always coming or going on the upper level).Penn Station has support beams and access stairs/elevators that much more noticeably reduce space, though. My gut feeling was that NYPs platforms felt a lot smaller and more constrained than WUS' did.
Yeah....I am assuming that we still do not know the breakdown, but creating the retail space mentioned cannot come for cheap considering what they have to do to create the space. OTOH, I also don't know how much of the track rearrangement, platform widening and rearrangement of the lower level is included and what that costs. So we are probably getting ourselves worked up based on not much. It is also not clear where the overall funding is coming from. So just got to wait until more info is available I suppose.
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