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The Tyee: Vancouver, B.C. May Tear Down Two Viaducts
After the closure of two viaducts that connect Vancouver, B.C.'s east side to its downtown for 22 days during the 2010 Olympics, leaders in that city are considering closing the bridges for good, Vancouver's Tyee reports
. The city closed down the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts to traffic throughout the Olympics, and "nothing fell apart," Vancouver city engineer Peter Judd told the paper, which reports that "A preliminary Transportation Review unveiled April 7 shows that almost half of the traffic on the viaducts originates within the city of Vancouver, and there is unused capacity on parallel arterial streets like Expo, Pacific, and Hastings -- which suggest traffic could be accommodated if the viaducts were partially or completely removed."
Tearing down the two viaducts would, much like the removal of Seattle's Alaskan Way Viaduct, create five city blocks' worth of developable land in Vancouver's downtown.
The statements by Vancouver's anti-viaduct visionaries will be familiar to anyone who's followed Seattle's debate over how to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct. What's different in Vancouver, politically, is that there appears to be no real organized, pro-highway opposition to the proposal---instead, the debate centers on how much of the viaducts should be torn down, and how quickly. In fact, the only skeptical voice in the Tyee story comes from an anti-freeway activist who notes that the two viaducts are just "postage stamp[s]" compared to the freeways that are still being built elsewhere in the city.
Tearing down the two viaducts would, much like the removal of Seattle's Alaskan Way Viaduct, create five city blocks' worth of developable land in Vancouver's downtown.
"Let's make a bold decision to get rid of the viaducts," said Vancouver's visionary former co-director of planning, Larry Beasley, one of five speakers at the capacity-filled event presented by SFU's City Program. "Then, convene a great international urban design competition to design the eastern part of the core. Let's decide to design our city."
The statements by Vancouver's anti-viaduct visionaries will be familiar to anyone who's followed Seattle's debate over how to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct. What's different in Vancouver, politically, is that there appears to be no real organized, pro-highway opposition to the proposal---instead, the debate centers on how much of the viaducts should be torn down, and how quickly. In fact, the only skeptical voice in the Tyee story comes from an anti-freeway activist who notes that the two viaducts are just "postage stamp[s]" compared to the freeways that are still being built elsewhere in the city.