Renaissance

Reason Magazine: M1 Rail One Of The Most Confounding Urban Projects Of Our Time

July 25, 2014, 10:41 PM

The American downtown’s allure is an ongoing distraction from what’s actually important for the health of cities, writes Jim Epstein in Reason magazine, the libertarian monthly.

It explains in part the twisted logic behind one of the most confounding urban development projects of our time, a $137 million 3.3-mile light rail line that breaks ground in Detroit next week. How else could sane people think a bankrupt city should build a wildly expensive rail line on a partially deserted avenue in a neighborhood awash in cheap parking?

Let's consider what the new light rail line will mean for the people who live and work in the Motor City. Today, the suburbanites who commute to downtown Detroit might be frustrated by their limited lunch options—vacant storefronts don’t facilitate much culinary variety—but at least they get to enjoy a congestion-free drive to the office. Under-utilized lots and garages occupy almost 40 percent of the land in downtown Detroit, so the walk from the car to the cube takes just a few minutes.

How will the light rail line serve the 26 percent of Detroit households that don’t own cars and depend on the city’s dreadful bus service? Detroit has a 139-square mile footprint, but the light rail line will serve only those travelers who happen to be going from one spot to another along one three-mile stretch on Woodward. Buses, on the other hand, have the capacity to weave through neighborhoods, giving commuters what they most desire, which is to move as quickly as possible from one location to another with the least amount of hassle. Buses are also orders of magnitude cheaper to operate and maintain, which is why Detroit shut down its last street rail line in 1956, when the city’s population was almost three times its current size...

If every train car were to end up packed with riders, the light rail line’s proposed $1.50 fare still wouldn’t come close to paying the system's operating expenses, so it’s destined to become yet another drain on taxpayers—just like downtown Detroit’s existing rail line, the "People Mover,” a.k.a. the “horizontal elevator to nowhere,” which has been burning city cash running empty rail cars in a three-mile loop since it opened in 1987.

Still, the federal government saw fit to hand over $41 million in subsidies to build more light rail in Detroit (that’s $25 million in cash and $16 million through a tax gimmick). 

Vox: Meet The Worst Transit Project in America. (It's not in Detroit, though the article takes a swipe at the M1 project.)


Read more:  Reason magazine


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