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Thread: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

  1. #101

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    There are a lot of rumors and urban legends involved with DD.
    Such as.

  2. #102

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    How important Deep Deuce was to someone probably depends on exactly when they lived there, and what they were into. You could live in Norman during the height of the Bud Wilkinson era, and if you didn't like football, you'd think there was nothing to do. If PP's friend lived in Deep Deuce after it's glory days, well, it wasn't the construction of I-235 that led to its decline. 235 just finished it off.
    Do you know what ended Deep Deuce's glory days?

    I am curious if it just waxed and waned with the ebb and flow of the Black Renaissance.. in which case, modern-day gentrification isn't an unfitting legacy.

  3. #103

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by traxx View Post
    Such as.
    Charlie Christian playing with the Blue Devils. It didn't happen.

  4. Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    You know, I was driving around our expansive campus today between meetings and realized that we have a small freeway cap over WA-520 that connects both sides of Microsoft. I never even thought about it but today I did remember the cap not being there and there being a significant hindrance to getting around. It's just so commonplace today that one doesn't even think that it is indeed a 2009 or so construction because the expansive campus feels connected with it.

    I think something even as simple as our little Freeway cap could work in OKC at Harrison Avenue probably (similar diagonal bridge, similar freeway and somewhat similar development (now) on both sides). Looks like Microsoft paid for most of it ($17M) but we did use some federal stimulus money to help build it. I'd imagine it shouldn't be too expensive to build something similar in OKC. ...

    What's funny is even back then 'freeway cap' verbiage was not commonplace (or at least wasn't up here, since the Seattle Times calls it a bridge but it really is a landscaped, pedestrianized cap with bike trails running diagonally over 520).
    Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!

  5. #105

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Urbanized,
    Thanks for your like. This can become a hotly contested topic.

  6. #106

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by traxx View Post
    Such as.
    MLK leading a march over the Walnut street bridge into OKC in 1960.
    Yes, he spoke at the famous Calvary Baptist Church. That's a fact.

    At any rate, I can't find any information that MLK, whom I admire very much,
    ever led a march in OKC.

  7. Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    I know it won't be popular with some of you on this page, but I disagree with the notion of a highway splitting neighborhoods. I grew up with I-44 next to my house north of the fairgrounds and in no way have I ever felt the highway split those on the west side with those on the east side. I will agree that having no busy parallel roadways and frequent crossings of the highway helps so perhaps those crossings (that occur every 3-4 blocks near the CBD) could be redesigned and/or widened with ample pedestrian and bicycle lanes. The huge amounts of money needed to "cap" I-235 the way it was designed, would be far better spent speeding up reconstruction of other highway interchanges around town or replacing other areas of our city infrastructure. If money is to be spent on aesthetics, I'd rather see it go to burying power lines.

  8. #108

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    I know it won't be popular with some of you on this page, but I disagree with the notion of a highway splitting neighborhoods. I grew up with I-44 next to my house north of the fairgrounds and in no way have I ever felt the highway split those on the west side with those on the east side.
    With all due respect, your experience as a child is completely different than most because I 44 was largely built within the Grand Blvd ROW. Little if any homes were taken for this. Whereas 235 literally blasted through the middle of a neighborhood along no existing "grain" of development.

  9. Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by adaniel View Post
    With all due respect, your experience as a child is completely different than most because I 44 was largely built within the Grand Blvd ROW. Little if any homes were taken for this. Whereas 235 literally blasted through the middle of a neighborhood along no existing "grain" of development.
    I think one can probably make that same argument for I-35 in the Eastside of NE OKC and also I-44 in the Eastside section though it was less developed here. Perhaps I-35 in the Southside too?
    Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!

  10. #110

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by HOT ROD View Post
    I think one can probably make that same argument for I-35 in the Eastside of NE
    OKC and also I-44 in the Eastside section though it was less developed here.
    Perhaps I-35 in the Southside too?
    When I-35 was built I don't remember it taking out very many houses. The
    Moore area wasn't built up that much. I-40 was different.

  11. #111
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    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    I-35 wiped out a lot of housing on the east side along with Black Hawk Amusement Park.

  12. #112

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by adaniel View Post
    I 44 was largely built within the Grand Blvd ROW. Little if any homes were taken for this.
    Simply not true. Grand was a 2 lane path. The construction of 44 took maybe 16 houses per block.

    http://www.okctalk.com/images/1969/196923portland.jpg

  13. Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    In the section from 10th to 23rd, 44 took one house per block per side in most places. Its interesting to see my old house when I was a kid in that photo

  14. #114

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by mugofbeer View Post
    In the section from 10th to 23rd, 44 took one house per block per side in most places. Its interesting to see my old house when I was a kid in that photo
    I know the same thing happened just north of SW 29th Street. My aunt and uncle owned a house on the East side of Grand which was taken.

  15. #115

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Can we get back to connecting downtown to the Health Sciences Center?

    What's the most important factor in connecting the two?

  16. #116

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    urban fabric.

  17. #117

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by Spartan View Post
    urban fabric.
    Unless you mean the fabric of the urban area what do you mean?

  18. #118

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    I've always thought that NW 13 WAS the connection to the Health Sciences Center.

    Is there a part of the city that doesn't have a direct line to the HSC? Seriously.

    I honestly don't see any problem with getting to the Health Sciences Center from
    any part of OKC. That includes SE, SW, NE and NW OKC.

    Just what is the problem?

  19. #119

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Urban fabric relates to the built environment, which in this case is broken up by 235. While other states have found innovative ways to mitigate and bridge these urban expressways, Oklahoma has not, which could be an impactful thing to improve. Downtown is expanding, and the Health Sciences area would be a valuable connection, which means more than just an auto bridge, it needs to have buildings, sidewalks, and activity all the way across. This is the idea that healthy neighborhoods should be connected to other healthy neighborhoods, which the Health Sciences area is not.

  20. #120

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by Spartan View Post
    Urban fabric relates to the built environment, which in this case is broken up by
    235. While other states have found innovative ways to mitigate and bridge these
    urban expressways, Oklahoma has not, which could be an impactful thing to
    improve.
    Are you saying that it's hard to connect to the Health Sciences Center? I
    believe it's the easiest place in OKC to get to.
    Quote Originally Posted by Spartan View Post
    Downtown is expanding, and the Health Sciences area would be a valuable
    connection, which means more than just an auto bridge, it needs to have buildings,
    sidewalks, and activity all the way across. This is the idea that healthy neighborhoods
    should be connected to other healthy neighborhoods, which the Health Sciences
    area is not.
    Except for it being the most easily accesible place in OKC what do you believe
    makes it not so easy?

    Seriously.

    Day or night, the HSC is the easiest place in OKC to get to.

  21. #121

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Easy to drive there. Not so easy to walk there. Oh sure, there are like, roads and things. But studies have shown that big undeveloped areas and parking lots are impediments to walking. People are always thinking "it sure would be easy for a rapist or a serial killer to be hiding out here in the bushes". And then they don't walk there anymore.

    That's why you need an environment that makes people feel comfortable about walking. You need buildings, you need stores, you need a place where walking is convenient. Bricktown has that. The area between downtown and the HSC doesn't. It feels rapey.

  22. #122

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    Easy to drive there. Not so easy to walk there.
    True. OKC is a huge city. Most people don't realize that Chicago, NYC and
    San Francisco can all fit inside of OKC and leave room for another major city.
    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    Oh sure, there are like, roads and things. But studies have shown that big
    undeveloped areas and parking lots are impediments to walking. People are
    always thinking "it sure would be easy for a rapist or a serial killer to be hiding
    out here in the bushes". And then they don't walk there anymore.
    Which would make OKC like the major cities everyone wants it to be.
    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    That's why you need an environment that makes people feel comfortable about
    walking.
    Which OKC does.
    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    You need buildings, you need stores, you need a place where walking is convenient. Bricktown has that. The area between downtown and the HSC doesn't. It feels rapey.
    Thank you for telling us that OKC is better than most metropolitan areas.

    As soon as these folk realize the superiority of OKC, i.e. pull their heads out
    of the sand... Wait. Those people don't count.

    Never mind.

  23. #123

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    True. OKC is a huge city. Most people don't realize that Chicago, NYC and
    San Francisco can all fit inside of OKC and leave room for another major city.

    Which would make OKC like the major cities everyone wants it to be.

    Which OKC does.

    Thank you for telling us that OKC is better than most metropolitan areas.

    As soon as these folk realize the superiority of OKC, i.e. pull their heads out
    of the sand... Wait. Those people don't count.

    Never mind.
    You went off on an enormous tangent there. The point of the thread is to make it feel safe and convenient to walk from Deep Deuce to the HSC, because right now it doesn't feel safe or convenient.

  24. Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Don't feed the troll. There is no need to argue with someone who you know will never change their mind.

  25. #125

    Default Re: Connecting downtown to Health Sciences Center

    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    You went off on an enormous tangent there. The point of the thread is to make it
    feel safe and convenient to walk from Deep Deuce to the HSC, because right now it
    doesn't feel safe or convenient.
    Perhaps.

    What exactly is the reason people don't feel safe?

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