No Elevated Trail on McDowell Road

Elevated Trail on McDowell Road – Bad Idea 

Building an elevated trail on or near McDowell Road is a terrible and costly idea. Using New York City’s unused elevated train tracks to create a landscaped path was a great idea because the track were already there and would have cost more to remove. The urban density of New York is twice that of Scottsdale.

I have lived here for over 30 years and urban sprawl is the reason that areas decline in use. Attempting to jumpstart and area with an elevated walkway, which is not a destination, is incomprehensible. Phoenix has been redeveloping its downtown for over 20 years with limited success. Unless there is an event at one of the large venues the streets are empty. The big department stores and grocery stores left in the 1970s and 80s and probably will never return.

People drive from place to place they do not walk like in New York. The Light Rail is nowhere near. Connecting Indian Bend Wash to a little used Papago Park would not be used as a walkway. People drive to the Zoo and the Desert Botanical Gardens they would not walk from McDowell Road, let alone, from Indian Bend Wash.

Finally, making comparisons with this walkway to the McDowell Mountains is not comparable. The mountains have been there for tens of thousands of years; Scottsdale chose to pay so they were not developed with homes and buildings. Trails were improved or built so people could enjoy the natural wonders of the desert. The Discovery Center in the Preserve would also be a bad idea. Transporting the desert to a concrete structure under a noisy polluted thoroughfare is beyond comprehension. Please drop this costly and pointless endeavor. 


Comments

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Bob Block 7 months ago

Agree 100% with Bill.

This is a harebrained idea that will only enrich the two people who want to push it forward.

Suggest not even wasting the time or money to put it to a vote.

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Mike S 6 months ago

Bill is completely correct in his post.  The distances involved are too far for people to walk.

I attended a university (Univ of IL-Chicago) that had elevated walkways like this.  The architect's "plan" when this was built around 1970 was for students to use the upper level as an 'expressway' to cover longer distances on campus while the lower level was for shorter distances.  Students never used the upper level as it was envisioned and the university eventually admitted it was a bad idea and tore the walkways down over a decade ago.

Can Scottsdale learn from the mistake of another institution, without the time and expense of REPEATING the mistake?

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Dave Hochstrasser 6 months ago

What a nice job remodeling Chapman is doing since they took over the Ford delership and now we want to have something block their work. We are just starting to see privae business investment return to the area inspite of the Cities work to waste taxpayer funds on Elevated walkways and the like that will benefit developer and make sore short term construction jobs. With Mark Taylor rents developing the Apartments and the new ASU dorms going in at Skysong I'm sure we can have private funds fix the city'd "we need to kill the area to save it" philosophy that got McDowell in this mess to start with.

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D 6 months ago

This is crony capitalism at its finest and it must be stopped. 

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Andrea Forman 6 months ago

No.