The Waterfront Trolley and TOD

Say, how many canaries have to die in this place to get a little service? Since they closed down the Waterfront Trolley, the Aquarium has gone broke, the Smith Tower has 13 vacant floors (including all the streetfront retail) and Danny Westneat was able to count 21 vacant storefronts in a stroll around Pioneer Square recently. Surely this is a neighborhood that could use a little TOD.

And it’s not like you have to build the trolley- it’s already there! At this point you might be thinking “We already have a trolley line that would probably cost $100 million to build and it’s just sitting there? What goes on here?”

It’s partly changing times and smart-ass “solutions”. The City could have renovated the public restroom that already exists in Pioneer Square and staffed it with restroom attendants, but chose to buy automated attendant-free restrooms. Problem not solved. Since the closing of several thousand rooms in flophouses and hotels that lined First Avenue and surrounded Pioneer Square, more people have been living on the street. Problem not solved.

At the same time, the proliferation of pricey art galleries was, in retrospect, overdone. There’s just a limit to how many $3000 pieces of art, or even $500 pieces of art, you can sell. Problem not solved.

But the trolley is a solution, not another problem. Extend it 10 blocks east and you’re in the heart of the International District with grocery stores and restaurants. Extend it two miles north and you’re picking up the passengers from the cruise ships and the workers at Interbay (another area the City is, amazingly enough, trying to keep pregnant, barefoot, and poor). It’s only a block from existing trolley track to King Street Station.

If the current leadership, and that means the Mayor, the Port Commissioners, and the King County Executive, can’t bring the trolley back we should put them in storage too. Seattle’s DOT worked up five potential new trolley lines fast enough- now put them to work making the trolley we already have run again.

Make some noise, people, make some noise.

6 responses to “The Waterfront Trolley and TOD”

  1. gwerner

    Keeping the current WSC route as is … and extending it North to Interbay … there are some issues that they would have to overcome.

    The Streetcar line would theoretically run along side the park … between where the Grain Elevator Yard tracks are and the bike path. There should be plenty of room for at least 1 track with intermittent passing sidings like along Alaska Way. The problem comes with the Grain Elevator. The Grain Elevator fills ships by means of a conveyor belt that runs over the walking and bike paths. The problem is that Grain Dust and Static Electricity tend to cause explosions.

    I do not know if it would be possible to have an open, powered electric wire right below the conveyor … but lets say they build some kind of snow-shed type structure that will allow the line to safely pass below …

    the next problem is where Pier 90/91 are located. The line would have to wrap around the end of the park … almost to Elliot Way … before running back west to the terminals. I don’t know if there is enough space there for that to happen with the roads etc …

    Now personally, I would love to have the line run out there … well actually I would love a tram line from Ballard to run down Elliot and then go up and over the rail yard to the waterfront and then head north to King St. Station … as well as a line continuing up Elliot and then down First avenue … but unless Paul Allen or Bill Gates steps up to fund that … we’ll probably never see it.

  2. Matt the Engineer

    It was really a shame when they mothballed it for lack of a place to park at night. Instead of north, why not take it south to the other ferry terminals? It should be cheap and easy to build a maintenance garage down there, and construction would be a piece of cake on that old open road.

  3. Matt the Engineer

    Oops. I meant the other cruise ship ports. There’s a large cruise ship terminal building down south a bit that drops off tourists in the middle of nowhere.