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Richhamleigh, DC

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Posts posted by Richhamleigh, DC

  1. On 4/11/2024 at 7:53 PM, DCMetroRaleigh said:

    I wish Virginia shared North Carolina’s zeal for new interstates and freeways. If only the Commonwealth would construct a direct freeway/interstate between Danville and Northern Virginia, the Triad would have a quicker, more direct route to the DMV and Baltimore. US 29 would be a great candidate for such a route. Likewise, US 58 should be a freeway across the southern edge of the Commonwealth. At least, West Virginia and Michigan have expressed revived interest in making I-73 a true interstate.

    I am forced to use 95 between DC and Richmond every week.  I've concluded that VDOT is comprised of morons.  First, aside from 95, there's only one other north/south route, except for the perpetually clogged US1 within 50 miles of I-95.

    Next, VA counties keep approving 100's of subdivisions that are filled with cul-de-sacs.  They never got the memo about connectivity.  The lack of connectivity and dearth of north-south routes means local traffic has to use the interstate to get around the region.  Interstate highways aren't supposed to be an alternative for terrible land use decisions and fatal patterns of development.  (Don't travel north of Richmond at lunch or dinner time and god help you around Dale City during a weekend afternoon when people are out shopping.)

    Lastly, the "Express Lanes" are absurd - they should have followed New Jersey's model - Express lanes in BOTH directions.  

    Bless Virginia's heart. 

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 2
  2. On 3/21/2024 at 7:33 PM, KJHburg said:

    Question concerning the I-74 route near Wilmington:

    As I was just down there and was wondering why NC is proposing a sharp turn south of this interstate BEFORE it reaches Wilmington.  Why can't it at least go to I-140 outside of Leland before turning south toward Myrtle Beach?   I-73 as I understand it will leave NC near Hamlet and enter SC going near Marion before connecting up to SC 22 an interstate-quality freeway that is already there and goes straight to Myrtle and North Myrtle Beach.  I realize Myrtle Beach metro is the only I think metro area without an interstate connection but why would NC turn an interstate going towards Wilmington straight to Myrtle Beach?  

    NCDOT: I-74 Feasibility Study    see proposed route here.  Maybe some of transportation experts can explain this.  

    It's a good example of North Carolina not putting NC first.  Screw MB.  

    • Thanks 1
  3. How a $75 million infrastructure project in North Carolina could propel development along I-85

    https://www.bizjournals.com/triangle/news/2024/04/16/granville-county-i85-water-sewer-development-nc.html?cx_testId=40&cx_testVariant=cx_45&cx_artPos=0#cxrecs_s

    In general this just pisses me off.  We have got to start aligning our growth aspirations with our transportation realities.  I-85 north of the I-885 interchange is two-lanes and frequently stop and go traffic, or just plain stopped.  Part of this is the age and condition of the overpasses in Durham County.   NCDOT has ZERO $ to improve 85 north of Durham and won't have $ for at least 20 years.  Transportation $$ in the Triangle are dedicated to the widening of I-40 and I-85 west of Durham (in the Durham MPO area).  

    Fortunately, Butner's 2040 Plan does call for more connectivity and more overpasses (not more exits) over I-85 to help reduce the need for local traffic to use the interstate.  Butner 2040 also envisions bike and pedestrian connections over Falls Lake parallel to 85 to connect with Durham Greenways.   Development follows transportation.  Butner gets it.   Any town or city that doesn't prove that they have planned and have funding for transportation improvements should be penalized in some way. 

     

    • Like 2
  4. I've thought about how with the rapid growth if Wilmington-MB that one day a new international airport, midway between the two centers, might be a interesting option.  Imagine the airport connected to both by a commuter rail line linking the Wilmington and Myrtle Beach or at least, an interstate-standard freeway.  Currently, the 2 metros are rapidly nearly 1 million.

    • Like 2
  5. On 3/15/2024 at 6:44 PM, TCLT said:

    Huh? CLT has way more service than RDU  

    RDU-KEF is seasonal (and not daily) on a narrow body and Icelandair serves connections over its KEF hub onward to Europe. DL flies to CDG and connects to its partner Air France for onward connections. AA has their long standing flight to LHR. LH has the yet to start flight to its FRA hub (not daily). And that’s all the service they have to Europe. All of these carriers are relying on onward connections to other destinations in Europe or elsewhere  

    From CLT, AA operates daily service to 3x LHR (2x year round) and MAD with a partner on the other end for connections beyond plus MUC (year round), FRA, DUB, CDG, and FCO all on 777s. Plus LH serves their MUC hub. There is essentially zero untapped local demand for another carrier to go after. And there’s no reason for BA or IB to take over flights from AA because it’s more efficient to route AA’s planes over the massive hub and base than for the European partners to send a single plane that could be used on a different spoke. 

    Air France now flies RDU -CDG.  RDU has 8 international carriers lined up 2024.  Iceland, Lufthansa, Air France, Copa, Aeromexico,  Air Canada, Bahamasair, with AA operating the daily to London.  I think only Austin comes close to RDU among mid-sized metro non-hub airports. 

    • Like 4
  6. 41 minutes ago, CLT2014 said:

    Table 8 is metro area populations only. Atlanta has a MSA population of 6.3 million (reflected in Table 8), but a CSA population of 7.2 million in 2023 for example. 

    The largest numerical growth for CSAs were:
    DFW: +163,266
    Houston: +142,254
    Orlando: +107,035
    Atlanta: +83,570
    Miami: +61,993
    Charlotte: +55,017
    Phoenix: +49,321
    San Antonio: +48,434
    Washington-Baltimore: +45,946
    Raleigh-Durham: +39,865
    -- Note, Tampa and Austin do not have a CSA, but their metros compared against the CSAs would have been #7 and #8

    Indeed, CLT2014 -- I was seeing MSA but the metros are comprised of "metro divisions" not unique MSAs.  Which makes the separation of Raleigh and Durham even less logical. 

    • Like 3
  7.  

    5 minutes ago, KJHburg said:
    •  

    The Census Bureau compensated MYR by making it a CSA.  How, I have no idea but it basically keeps the population where it was before Brunswick was rightly returned to ILM.   

    Also interesting is how the Census Bureau in Table 8 uses the CSA population first DFW, HOU, ATL, TPA, etc. use the CSA populations.  If they had done the same for CLT, MCO, and RDU for example, that Table would be very different.

    • Confused 2
  8. 6 hours ago, KJHburg said:

    Here are the Macys locations in NC 2 in Charlotte Southpark and Northlake, one in Greensboro at Friendly Center, one in Durham at the Streets at Southpoint, 2 in Raleigh one in Crabtree Valley and one in Triangle Town Center and one in Fayetteville's Cross Creek Mall.

    I would say the risk of closure would be greatest at Fayetteville, possibly Northlake and Triangle Town Center both weaker malls and conversions to Bloomingdales at either Southpark and maybe Crabtree Valley.  

    Other states with more Macys will be affected much harder than NC like Georgia.  I do think even if one Macys is converted to Bloomingdales that one Macys remains in the market could make sense.  

    Full-throated agreement.  No Saks in Charlotte seems odd to me as well.  

    • Like 2
  9. On 2/19/2024 at 9:38 AM, Hushpuppy321 said:

    What exactly are we to believe when it comes to the City Population Estimates?  World Population Review estimates Charlotte has overtaken Columbus, OH in city limit’s population but do we wait for the US Census Bureau estimate?  Some cut n paste & links noted below:

    Columbus is a city located in Delaware County, Fairfield County, and Franklin CountyOhio. Columbus has a 2024 population of 917,811. It is also the county seat of Franklin County.Columbus is currently growing at a rate of 0.54% annually and its population has increased by 1.27% since the most recent census, which recorded a population of906,266 in 2020.

    https://worldpopulationreview.com/us-cities/columbus-oh-population

    Charlotte is a city located in Mecklenburg County North Carolina. Charlotte has a 2024population of 928,154. It is also the county seat of Mecklenburg County.Charlotte is currently growing at a rate of 1.67% annually and its population has increased by6.06% since the most recent census, which recorded a population of 875,115 in 2020.

    https://worldpopulationreview.com/us-cities/charlotte-nc-population

    Anyway - I used to be excited about Charlotte surpassing Jacksonville, FL to be most populated city in the Southeast but with their current rate of growth that may never happen…

     

     

    I take the site with a grain of salt.  For example, their entry for Durham...  https://worldpopulationreview.com/world-cities/durham-population.  There is a Durham, Ontario https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durham,_Ontario but it's not bigger than 3000 people.   I have a hard time imagining that Jacksonville, FL leapfrogged over Austin and Ft. Worth, TX to reach 1 million.  Did Jacksonville, FL annex even more territory?!

    • Like 1
  10. FWIW - Came across the strategy/progress report for Eastrans where NS was involved in talks with us to operate passenger service.  Given the success of Brightline, could this be the time for rail companies like NS to reconsider their positions on providing rail service in their corridors with specific infrastructure and development incentives?  I don't know, but it's a thought.

    EastransStrategyMainDocument.doc

    • Like 4
  11. K'burg -- you might enjoy this...  And, yes, I imagined the old bank building as the perfect station.  The station is also envisioned to be a gateway for something I created called the "NC Lakes District" - an economic development plan wrapped into a scheme to promote tourism, agriculture, and historic preservation.

     

    Henderson Center City Catalyst 10.15.12.pptx

    • Like 3
  12. Back in the early 2000s I put together a proposal for commuter rail in eastern NC from Wilson to Goldsboro via Raleigh.  NCRR, which owns the line between Raleigh and Goldsboro was on board.  NS owns the line to Wilson through Knightdale, Wendell, and Zebulon.  Before the proposal was hijacked by an incompetent politician and driven into the ground, NS entertained the idea of operating passenger service on their line in exchange for development rights along the corridor and public investment in improving the corridor.  Since the goal of the project was economic development (not reducing car trips) and to encourage compact, walkable development in outlying towns - the opportunity was real.  The way we got to that point wasn't by telling NS they had to do this or that but by engaging them in the vision and the role they could play in it.  The project/vision was called Eastrans - and until the politicians got involved, it could have actually worked.  

    • Like 4
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