The '40th Street Multi Modal Project' Shows Emeryville Continues to Aspire to Be a Place to Travel Through On the Way to Somewhere Else
People Who Want to Travel to a Better Place Than Emeryville Will Be Helped by the $33 Million Infrastructure Project
"A stroad is a thoroughfare that combines the features of streets and roads. Stroads attempt to be both a high speed traffic connector (a road) and a place for business and people (a street) but fails at both. They are wide arterials (roads for through traffic) that also provide access to strip malls, drive-throughs, and other automobile-oriented businesses (as shopping streets do). They are the most dangerous type of urbanized thoroughfare and have come under near universal criticism among city planning professionals.” WIKI
News Analysis
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| A street |
The project, seven years in the planning and slated to begin construction in the new year, will cost $33 million, $5.5 million of that paid by the City of Emeryville and will likely result in higher speed traffic and more people moved per hour; part of the touted efficiency. But in so doing, it will create a reduced access ‘super-block’ grid out of existing small blocks, cutting neighborhoods off from each other with more traffic noise and more air pollution for people living nearby. The built out project promises to reduce desirability for neighborhoods close by, as these kinds of high efficiency arterials have been shown to do. People who don’t live in Emeryville but who travel through or commute to our town or who travel here to go to the auto-centric shopping malls Emeryville has built will benefit however.
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| A road |
City officials insist the 40th Street project will not just help regional shoppers and people cutting through our town headed to other (more desirable) destinations, but it will also help people traveling to the planned $1 billion Sutter Health Hospital planned for Emeryville.
Proponents of the project which includes four out of five City Council members (Priforce dissenting), tell us bikes, bus users and drivers will be helped because of, rather than in spite of, the closing of 40th Street side streets. The closing of the streets will create several 'super-blocks' of the sort that the late Canadian city planner Jane Jacobs warned us against. She has shown how this consolidation of small blocks into super-blocks in the street grid devalues the neighborhood. Discounting the Jacobs inspired city planning ethos (begun as a 1960's scrappy rebellion, now turned into orthodoxy), the proponents of the project have shown how traffic will move more efficiently, including bus traffic and bike traffic, with fewer (side street) conflicts. Between Adeline Street and Halleck Street, there are currently nine small blocks that intersect 40th Street. After the $33 million project is complete, that number will be reduced to six large super blocks.
Traffic engineers have long worked to increase flow rate efficiencies without concern for livability downgrades for people living nearby. The real estate market has long shown how major arterials, including stroads and freeways, reduce value for home prices and there is nothing about the 40th Street Multi Modal Project that would suggest the improvement for traffic efficiencies it will bring will be any different. Indeed, the market has shown people like their communities to be quiet as far as traffic goes, with the low speeds and volumes that low efficiency streets bring.
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| A stroad 40th Street in Emeryville |
Stroads are part of a rationally based modernist vision for cities. Traffic engineers are taught the rationality of efficiency in graduate schools. Towns that throw their transportation plans over to traffic engineers as Emeryville has done, tend to get less than desirable places. Robert Moses, the formerly great urban planning expert knew about moving people with the greatest efficiency; he's the godfather of the top-down urban renewal ethos of the 1950s and '60s that bulldozed entire neighborhoods to build massive freeways cut through all across America. His star however has been dimmed in recent years by people demanding more democratic control of their cities. In this milieu, stroads seem to be a part of the last vestiges of this heavy handed vision of how not to create livable urban spaces. The YIMBY movement too is part of the anti-democratic top-down Robert Moses vision but is not a vestige, rather it is a new iteration of the Moses vision. YIMBYists' propose stroads to be used to connect their apartment towers to freeways for 'easy in, easy out' commuting to help developers maximize profits.
The 40th Street Multi Modal Project calls into question what Emeryville is for. Is it a place for people to come to, get stuff and leave? Is it a place for people to travel through on their way to someplace else (more desirable)? Is it a place where the politics have tried (and failed) to create a nice place to live or to be? Stroads are built by municipalities that have no pride. They are built by towns that pay deference to corporations seeking to make a profit. After a couple of decades of Emeryville granting developers approvals to build auto centric sprawling shopping malls with big box retail surrounded by acres of parking lots, after another couple of decades building massive auto centric all-rental housing projects that are linked to the shopping malls and the freeway by stroads, after making Emeryville a place to get through in order to get to a place people desire to be, perhaps we should be turning stroads into streets as opposed to super-stroads.
After spending $33 million on this project, it would seem Emeryville's future is already decided for the next 40 years, the useful life of this expensive infrastructure. Desirability is out and moving people more efficiently by use of rational traffic management is in. Regardless, people don't like being near stroads, living or lingering and Emeryville residents will be able to use the 40th Street Multi Modal Project for decades to come to travel from the place they live to places they want to be....places not run by developers and traffic engineers.
The 40th Street Multi Modal Project is HERE.
Robert Moses is HERE.
YIMBY is HERE.
Jane Jacobs is HERE.



Thankfully we have Priforce as our Cuomo to try and stop these bike and bus people from taking away our car lanes.
ReplyDeleteNice try YIMBY haters!!!! You are exposed for evoking Council member Priforce in an article that does not mention him. He must really grind your gears! Let the man rest after a tragic accident. Have you no decency? Of course not! You were making fun of him on reddit. I'll vote for him again just for pissing you all off! At least he has character.
DeleteCar loving conservatives can't even read that Priforce is the only councilmember opposed to this written in this article. YIMBY endorsed Mamdani won in New York by promising to speed up busses and build 200,000 homes and here we have our Cuomo, Priforce fighting housing and fighting bus lanes.
DeleteDear neighbor (since you’re identifying so mightily) ~ the article focuses on Stroads that lessen a city’s sense of community building since paved, big box malls make ugly, impersonal and expensive to maintain cityscapes. It’s an industrial aged, old-fashioned urban planning based on car happiness, with low-value sustainability excluding not only safe biking and natural human experiences but also zero native habitats. Almost 35 years ago, we started the Emeryville Community Organic Gardens and later reclaimed old railroad tracks to create the greenways. The future vision was clear and integrated into community life, which included our schools. Now with little to no dialogue, and targeted disdain for those with different views - with two rotating Mayors denied their terms due to “perceived differences” - as new arrivals to Emeryville take a little interest to follow the history. How do we collectively create a qualified, sustainable, tsunami resistant city of the future? It’s not based on more concrete.
DeleteI agree with this reader's comment (4:41 AM) that there is targeted disdain from the City Hall elite towards differing views in Emeryville. At the Council and among the entire staff management there is a new culture of dismissal of any ideas or even now people who have different views on any topic under 'consideration'. Different ideas are dismissed and taken down hard to such a degree that dissent has been stifled and the population scared into submission. It's easy to see how this works: who would want to suggest a different idea when everyone can see what happens to errant ideas and the people who suggest them. There is a new culture of intolerance in our town. Emeryville did not used to be like this.
DeleteIt’s honestly wild watching YIMBYs twist themselves into pretzels trying to turn Councilmember Priforce into some Emeryville version of Andrew Cuomo. The comparison isn’t just ridiculous. Cuomo was an egotistical austerity governor who catered to real-estate interests - more like John Bauters (Didn't Priforce take him down? That's what really pisses you guys off).
DeletePriforce is a child of Haitian immigrants, a democratic socialist, and someone who has literally put his body on the line through hunger strikes and activist organizing long before any of you discovered the word “upzoning.” If anything, he’s closer to Emeryville’s Zohran Mamdani immigrant roots, movement politics, affordability at the center, also held hunger strikes, actual democratic-socialist values guiding his work than whatever racist caricature you’re trying to create here or on reddit forums. Priforce got hurt, and could have lost his life, but you YIMBYs were cheering outside his emergency room and then claimed you were only joking. Pathetic.
And since you brought up Mamdani: watching YIMBYs rewrite his politics in real time is embarrassing. Mamdani didn’t win in New York because he promised “YIMBY abundance.” Also, the YIMBYs heavily backed Cuomo. He won by building a coalition of tenants, immigrants, and working-class voters and by pushing public housing production on a massive scale. Yes, 200,000 homes - PUBLIC homes. Not luxury units. Not BMR crumbs. Not whatever developer-friendly pipeline East Bay YIMBYs in California cling to. The YIMBY bandwagon only discovered Mamdani after he proved that socialist politics can beat corporate-backed candidates. Mamdani doesn't belong to you. Neither does Priforce.
But the funniest part is your attempt to paint Priforce as “anti-bus” or “anti-bike” when Tattler articles have shown that he’s the only councilmember opposing the proposal in question and for reasons tied to equity and process, not cars. Pretending otherwise is a textbook bad-faith argument. But then again, this is what happens when White Angry AIPAC YIMBYs - the Sam Gould / Corry Frydlewicz / Zac Bowling echo chamber see anything related to Priforce or 40th Street: manufacture villains to project their insecurities onto because he's the lone dissenter. What exactly do they want? Unanimity?
Priforce has friends, and an entire community backing him, and I'm proud to be one of them. Every time you Abundance/YIMBY astro-turf attack him, he gets more popular and proves he's the guy we want to stand up to you astroturfs. If he wasn't effective, you all wouldn't care, would you?
Meanwhile, the man you’re attacking is literally recuperating from a major injury after being hit by a car and your immediate instinct isn’t empathy. It's desperate political smearing, the kind of politics we are tired of. He must have really hurt your fragile egos because it says everything about what you actually think of working-class residents, disabled residents, or anyone who doesn’t bend to your developer-first worldview.
You’re not exposing Priforce. You’re exposing yourselves and the contempt you hold for any leader who centers community over convenience, equity over expediency, and democracy over technocratic cheerleading.
You are right, Priforce would never take thousands of dollars from a real estate group to block bike lanes like Cuomo. Why can't Priforce vote on this project again?
DeleteWho ever is brilliant enough to leave a comment forced the YIMBY to reveal themselves when they claimed Mamdani's agenda. Brian is right, it is a lobby that is pushing this. They've got a hold of 1333 Park Avenue. Big money in politics is ruining our country and this city.
DeleteOh you mean the frivolous complaint Sam Gould (you) made? Didn't the FPPC throw it out? This the worst you can do Mr. Gould? Don't waste your time Council member - I got this!
DeleteWhich is it? $5.5 million or $33 million?
ReplyDeleteIt is $33 million, $5.5 million of which will be paid by the City of Emeryville. I changed a sentence to make that more clear. Thank you for the criticism.
DeleteI appreciate this story. It presents an idea that never made it through all the community meetings on this project. The idea that we should go towards livability instead of towards transportation efficiency is a legitimate and i would say compelling idea. Instead the community meetings were constituted with an eye towards rubber stamping what the staff had already decided on. Good for the Tattler for bring this up. I only wish you had brought this up earlier when it could have possibly made a difference. Thank you for a thought provoking story.
ReplyDeleteNo byline? Who wrote this piece?
ReplyDeleteThis story was written by the Tattler editor.
DeleteIt sounds like you are saying 40th street should just become a regular street instead of a major street. How will people get around? That will cause huge traffic jams.
ReplyDeleteThe fate of 40th Street is already decided. It will continue to vex Emeryville residents, being a permanent source of problems that come from having large expressways cut through the town. A better solution would have been to make it a regular street (with separate bike lanes and bus lanes). Traffic is what happens when people use cars. Every street has traffic. Traffic gets limited by people's patience to sit in traffic. The old way, to mollify drivers, was to help traffic move more freely (as the 40th Street Multi Modal Project will do). That inducement to drive simply causes more traffic.
ReplyDelete