Friday, May 3, 2024 May 3, 2024
73° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Competence

Who Is In Charge of the Trinity River Project?

The Trinity River is a civic project that has way too many agencies and organizations with their hands in the pie.
|
Image
Photo by Scott Womack
Photo by Scott Womack

Over the weekend, Mark Lamster filed an illuminating report from Houston, comparing that city’s successful clean-up of Buffalo Bayou with our own ill-fated attempts to reclaim the Trinity. The whole thing is worth reading, but towards the end, Lamster raises an important question:

Who, exactly, is in charge of the Trinity Corridor project? There is no ready answer.

Indeed, as I mention towards the end of this piece from last week, one of the frustrating aspects of the Trinity River Project is that the plan’s so-called advocates, like The Trinity Trust, are mum when it comes to things like the proposed Trinity Toll Road, which is poised to ruin some of the more positive, park-friendly amenities they have already brought to the Trinity greenbelt. Lamster attributes this to a general lack of accountability with regards to a civic project that has way too many agencies and organizations with their hands in the pie. And what are the results?

While the Trinity River Audubon Center is a civic jewel, this process has also produced a pedestrian bridge that leads to a no-man’s land on its downtown side; a whitewater rapids that doesn’t work properly; a horse park that provides no value to the vast majority of Dallasites; and plans for lakes and fields and trails that languish as the city mulls an ill-conceived toll road that would cut those amenities off from the very citizens they are intended to serve.

In Houston, they have a park.

Related Articles

Image
Hot Properties

Hot Property: A Quintessential Historic Hollywood-Santa Monica Tudor 

Get a taste of the East Dallas neighborhood, which is celebrating its centennial this weekend.
Image
Commercial Real Estate

Serra Real Estate Capital, Dallas County Open Mixed-Use Parking Structure in Downtown Dallas

The current property is a prelude to further on-site development that is anticipated in conjunction with the $3.7 billion Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center expansion.
Image
Things to Do in Dallas

Things To Do in Dallas This Weekend

How to enjoy local arts, music, culture, food, fitness, and more all week long in Dallas.
Advertisement