Walking or biking from Old City to Race Street Pier will
become twice as nice later this year, as construction on improvements to the
north side of Race Street are set to begin this fall with a new $1.1 million
state grant.
The Central Delaware Waterfront Corporation - the quasi-city
agency that oversees both the city's long-range plans for the waterfront and
the development of the publicly owned parcels there – opened the south side of
the Race Street Connector project more than two years ago.
The improved lighting, landscaping and hardscaping are
designed to make traveling from neighborhood to waterfront more obvious and
pleasant, and the Race Street Connector was the first of a list of connector
projects up and down the Central Delaware, all called for in the city's
long-range waterfront vision.
The north side of the connector was never meant to open at
the same time. Physical realities involved with crossing traffic ramps made
that side more complicated, and also required permissions from city streets,
PennDOT, The Federal Highway Administration and the Delaware River Port
Authority.
But nobody at DRWC or the city thought it would take this
long to get going on the north side – particularly considering that in February
2012, DRWC received a $1.1 million grant from the Pennsylvania Communities
Transportation Initiative to cover the cost.
That grant had a time limit, though. And that time expired
before DRWC could reach an agreement with the Port Authority.
No extension could be granted because the entire state grant
program went away the next budget cycle.
Last week came a financial reprieve, said DRWC Vice Chairman
Joe Forkin.
He credited the work of Philadelphia Deputy Mayor for
Transportation and Utilities Rina Cutler, who also sits on the DRWC board, with
convincing PennDOT to grant $1.1 million for the Race Street Connector project.
Source: PlanPhilly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment