Friday, July 3, 2009

FasTracks Bringing National Attention to the Denver Story

FasTracks is bringing prestige and national media attention to Denver.
"This past week, Denver has been host to an annual gathering of the Congress for the New Urbanism, a nonprofit that promotes alternatives to sprawl. When it last held its conference in Denver a little more than a decade ago, few
people lived in the downtown core around the historic Union Station. Since then, Denver has embarked on a $4.7 billion expansion of its transit system, funded by a 0.4 percent sales tax increase approved by voters in 2004. The rogram,FasTracks, will add 122 miles of light rail, as well as new bus service, and is scheduled to be completed by 2017. The city is also overseeing a $1 billion redevelopment of Union Station.

Along the rail line, mixed-use communities have sprouted, such as Stapleton, a $5 billion development on the site of the former Stapleton International Airport, which closed in 1995. Shops and restaurants in downtown Denver are lively long after the workday has ended, and neighborhoods like Central Platte Valley, just northwest of downtown, are still being developed. “It’s been transformative,” said Tom Clark, executive vice president of the Metro Denver Economic Development Corporation. He anticipates 50 transit-oriented developments to be built around FasTracks over the next
decade."

Photos from Matthew Staver for The New York Times.
See full article, "New Rail Lines Spur Urban Revival," in The New York Times, June 13, 2009.

See my previous blog entry about a recent article in Slate which also mentions FasTracks.

Also see recent Denver Post article, "FasTracks Seen as Key to Denver's Repuation," from June 25, 2009, echoing this theme.

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