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Friday, November 22, 2024 |
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All America City |
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Factguy
MUSA Resident Joined: Dec 07 2009 Status: Offline Points: 217 |
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And why was the city not considered?
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Trotwood
MUSA Resident Joined: Jul 22 2013 Status: Offline Points: 117 |
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The bolded is actually an excellent reason to justify a conversion on University Blvd. The route has already been separated by a nice, grassy median. So there would already be a decent degree of separation there, making it all the more perfect for a conversion. University runs in three lanes in most spots, so I could see a case being made for some sections having two lanes of traffic in one direction and one lane of traffic in the other. And again, same boulevard feel with all the landscaping, etc. you mention in your last paragraph, but instead of cars going both ways, it would be cars on one side and pedestrian use on the other. Great deal of separation, nice aesthetics, and total safety for both pedestrians and motorists. |
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Trotwood
MUSA Resident Joined: Jul 22 2013 Status: Offline Points: 117 |
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Sorry about not clarifying earlier. I'm a current Oxford student. Grew up in a poor, redneck neighborhood in Monroe - my family was not, but our neighborhood was. "Culturally tied" to Middletown - spent a ton of my days going to the fast food places on Briel, shopping at Towne Mall, going to the laundromat off Oxford State Rd, etc. I consider Middletown to be my hometown. But you would be correct if you assumed I never spent time near downtown. That is true, only really interaction with it was from looking out a car window driving down Verity. But to the Reinartz Blvd. point - why not just use University? It has good, if not better, access to the same area via 14th st. Also, I'm basing my points of view on the lack of demand for these roads to exist - simple economics. How many people used to work at AK in 1970? How many work there now? How many people live in parts of the city that demand these roadways? How many lived there before? Why pay for what you don't need? And why not utilize what you have in the most inexpensive and effective way possible? I'm seeing a lot of bare asphalt for no good reason, and an easy way for Middletown to gain a competitive advantage over every other city in southwest Ohio for young professionals and empty nesters. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
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