I don't see how developers can do better than they are.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @yfreemark
It’s by metro areas, so while the majority of multifamily in Dallas proper may be happening near transit, there are still the huge # of multifamily projects in the northern suburbs that are missing the key component of transit that gets their residents reliably around the region.
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Replying to @ArchiJake @yfreemark
1. That's on city government not developers imho 2. Dallas has a pretty expansive light rail network that no one uses. It goes out to the suburbs and from what I've seen it does attract more multifamily than areas without it
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @yfreemark
Point 1 we agree on, the failure is on a regional level to provide transit to support walkable urbanism. Point 2 is precisely an example of this problem, DART is expansive but only works as a hub & spoke so that its branches become further apart the further out you go 1/2
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Replying to @ArchiJake @yfreemark
meaning that reaching the suburbs is irrelevant bc it doesn’t connect btwn the suburban employment districts that have the most new multifamily apartments. The DART system doesn’t acknowledge that the DFW metroplex is a multi-nodal employment region & therefore few use it 2/2
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Replying to @ArchiJake @yfreemark
Your hub-spoke point is a good one. Notwithstanding the cost, I'd like to see a line that is basically a concentric circle around the suburbs. That said, I don't think that's the only reason why people don't use the dart.
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Given the current density of Dallas and high cost and time involved in building rail, BRT would more than likely be a better investment.
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Replying to @CourtneyCyclez @yfreemark
The mode should probably be dictated by compatibility with the existing system. If a route aligns w/ an existing rail corridor, then rail might be the best option. In other places a BRT corridor shared by multiple bus routes might be best.
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Replying to @ArchiJake @yfreemark
There are portions of the DFW suburbs that are as dense as many parts of Chicago, just separated from one another by very low density sprawling areas
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Replying to @ArchiJake @yfreemark
In 2010, Chicago had 39 neighborhoods with over 10,000 residents per square mile with many of those neighborhoods having over 30,000 residents. Dallas had 2, both with about 10,000 residents (uptown and East Dallas).
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Dallas has grown faster than Chicago between 2010 to 2018, but it's not just the connectivity between neighborhoods. The neighborhoods themselves are insufficiently dense to support walkability outside of 2-3 blocks.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @yfreemark
That’s what I meant you have this walkable density but only w/in developments like Addison Circle, Legacy Town Center, Downtown Plano & Frisco Sq. The density ends so quickly that over a census tract there isn’t adequate average density, but in these inconsistent spots there are.
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Replying to @ArchiJake @yfreemark
The neighborhoods you are mentioning are like...at most 2 city blocks worth of walkability. It's pitiful. And they are separated by like 5-10 miles. Forget connectivity, the neighborhoods themselves first must grow.
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