Ongoing Coverage:

Tagged: Changing Gears

Pages

Changing Gears
3:18 pm
Thu January 13, 2011

Why removing freeways can be good for cities

Credit flickr - Joe Shlabotnik
Is removing a highway progress?

(You can also see this story with more photos on the Changing Gears website)

Half a century after cities across our region and country built sprawling freeways, many of those roads are reaching the end of their useful lives.

Instead of rebuilding them, a growing number of cities are thinking about, or actively, removing them. That may come as a surprise.

When Clevelanders hear that the city plans to convert a coastal freeway into a slower, tree-lined boulevard, you get reactions like this one from Judie Vegh:

“I think it’s a pretty bad idea for commuters,” she said. “And if it were 35 mph, I would just be later than usual.”

Within the next few years, Vegh’s commute on Cleveland’s West Shoreway will likely look very different.

Cleveland City Planner Bob Brown says this is not the traditional highway project, "the traditional highway project is obviously speeding things up, adding more capacity, and often ignoring the character of neighborhoods."

It’s quite a change.

In the 1950s and 60s, freeways were seen as progress and modernity. They were part of urban renewal and planners like New York’s Robert Moses tore through neighborhoods to put up hulking steel and concrete roadways.

Today, cities are looking to take them down.

The list is long:

  • New Orleans
  • New Haven
  • Buffalo
  • Syracuse
  • San Francisco

These are just some US cities thinking about or actively taking freeways down. You can find more information about these projects on the Changing Gears website.

Read more
Changing Gears
1:31 pm
Thu December 16, 2010

Changing Gears talks reinvention

The Changing Gears team has put together a one-hour special Reinventing Our Cities.

It airs today at 2 pm eastern and 1 pm central. You can hear it on Chicago Public Radio, Michigan Radio and Cleveland's Ideastream, or, you can click this audio link to take a listen:

Here's how the team describes the one-hour special:

Read more
Changing Gears
10:37 am
Fri November 19, 2010

Can Detroit use lessons from Pittsburgh? - Part 4

Detroit entreprenuer Judy Davids
Credit Sarah Hulett / Michigan Radio
Judy Davids launched her business PostEgram in Detroit with financial help from a business incubator.

All week we’ve been looking at the reinvention of Pittsburgh. Now, we move west to see whether the ideas that worked there can work in other places. One such city is Detroit.

Like Pittsburgh, Detroit has always faced a challenge in convincing its talented citizens to stay. Many business owners try to buck the odds and keep their businesses in the city, only to find the hurdles too high. Others find it is simply too daunting to head out on their own.

Read more
Changing Gears
3:34 pm
Wed November 17, 2010

Reinventing Pittsburgh: Part 3

Credit Erika Katz
Pittsburgh's Hill District

Drive east from downtown Pittsburgh and you’ll pass a church. At least, it was a church.

Today, the alter has been replaced with stainless steel casks of beer, and the pews are now a bar and tables. It’s another Pittsburgh transformation. Saint John the Baptist Church is now the Church Brew Works.

It’s one of those places people tell you: you have to go when you visit Pittsburgh. So, it wasn’t a hard sell to get a bunch of young professionals to meet there.

Read more
Changing Gears
9:52 am
Tue November 16, 2010

Reinventing Pittsburgh: Part 2

Credit Zach Morris / Creative Commons
The University of Pittsburgh's Center for Biotechnology and Bioengineering sits on the site of an old steel mill. It's an example of how the city transitioned away from its industrial past.

When Dennis Yablonsky took over Pittsburgh's main development group last year, everyone was telling him it was time to brag.

Read more
Changing Gears
1:00 pm
Mon November 15, 2010

Reinventing Pittsburgh: Part 1

Credit User 1sock / Creative Commons
The U.S. Steel Tower is the tallest building in Pittsburgh, but the steel industry no longer dominates the city.

When I first got to Pittsburgh, I did something foolish.

Read more

Pages