Monday, May 6, 2024 May 6, 2024
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A Daily Conversation About Dallas
Have practical concerns about traffic obscured some of the beauty of the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge design?  Photo by Scot Miller
Have practical concerns about traffic obscured some of the beauty of the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge design? Photo by Scot Miller

Thanks to the DMN City Hall blog for pointing to this Bloomberg News article about the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge. While the writer has lots of nice things to say about the Santiago Calatrava design, he suggests that Large Marge may (because of Dallas’ “obsession with moving vehicles”) end up as nothing more than “an ornament on the skyline.”

And Calatrava himself doesn’t like how his bridge has been integrated into our road system:

On the other end, though, the road divides into a tangle of ramps that head in six directions to the intersection of two freeways. The ramps cost $100 million alone, half of which was land acquisition. This obsession with moving vehicles has filled Dallas and Fort Worth with a huge freeway landscape and epic traffic jams.

“I told them they didn’t need all those ramps,” Calatrava said when I spoke to him in his Park Avenue townhouse office after I returned to Manhattan. He said they could instead have sold the land next to the bridge and earned money on developments that feature bridge and parkland views.

But how practical is that viewpoint? Could we have gotten by without some of those interchanges? The primary objective of the bridge was always traffic relief, right? Once we decided to make Large Marge “world class,” should we have sacrificed some of that original aim?

You know what we need? We need a few more people on the City Council or the Uptown Improvement District board who are young enough to be awake after 10 p.m., when McKinney Avenue becomes a Survival Zone. Narrow sidewalks, consumers of adult beverages, taxis cruising for customers at 5 m.p.h., and bars with customers spilling out onto the streets make the avenue a target-rich environment for slightly inebriated drivers dodging the slow-moving taxis to pick off pedestrians trying to cross the street.

Now that Dallas finally has actual pedestrians I suggest we try to preserve as many of them as we can. Cedar Springs has crosswalks with flashing yellow lights embedded in the pavement (and, yes, flashing yellow traffic lights, too — a little bit of overkill, if you ask me).

(Hi, Angela Hunt. Yep, this is your district. Yes, I know, I could have just dropped you a note. But then I would have had to look up your email address since you don’t write me so much anymore. And that makes me sad.)

The Wilson Building. Photo by Justin Terveen
The Wilson Building. Photo by Justin Terveen

Ever since I friended photographer Justin Terveen on Facebook, my newsfeed has been filled with the amazing images he’s able to capture. Last night, he posted this gorgeous photo of the Wilson building. He took this shot early Sunday morning during a break in the rain. I love how he’s isolated the Wilson making it look like the tallest building around. Friend him. You won’t be disappointed.

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