BURLINGTON’S (VT) NORTH AVENUE PLAN-- “GOING FOR THE GOLD CORRIDOR”
When the question of funding for Burlington’s (VT) North Avenue came up last
year during the early months of the study of the four-mile corridor, local and
regional planners sort of rolled their eyes and expressed with knowing glances
the dearth of federal funding. The
Advisory Committee pursued a quality approach focusing on a world class,
livable street featuring cycle track (protected bike lanes) and the superior
all-modes single-lane roundabout at key intersections. Community participants insisted on a “going
for the gold corridor.”
North Avenue now nears the goal line as the first Chittenden County
urban corridor to get in line for livable street funding behind Brattleboro and
Manchester Center. Putney Road in
Brattleboro, the Town’s busiest commercial corridor, thanks to business leadership
first received town and then Vermont Agency of Transportation support for a
full corridor with walk and bike mode facilities and all-roundabouts (four,
including the first built in 1999, Keene Turn).
In 2012 Manchester Center completed half its long time plan with the
State’s first “roundabout corridor,” three roundabouts along its commercial
stretch along Main Street—the first walkable State’s first truly walkable
all-mode street. The second half of the
Manchester Center plan, converting its only remaining signals to roundabouts along
Depot Street with a likely plan revision to include cycle track. Manchester Center and Brattleboro now compete
to see who gets to the finish line with the State’s first both walkable and
bikable urban street.
Meanwhile in Burlington retains a bright possibility of its own for
North Avenue as it is the only urban street in Chittenden County with a
neighborhood driven draft plan—soon to be accepted by the City Council—containing
walkable and bikable infrastructure.
The opportunity for Burlington lies in the fact that the Chittenden
County as a metropolitan area receives a separate stream of federal funding and
does not compete directly against Brattleboro and Manchester. Having the first walkable/bikable street plan
in the County puts the City in the driver seat for funding. Being the first in the State for a
walkable/bikable corridor still remains in the cards a real possibility.
Burlington long led the region and the State with its unique
contribution to transportation and recreation path development—the Marketplace
car free four block plaza completed in 1981 and five years later in 1986 the
completing of the amazing shoreline 7.5 mile Burlington Bikepath.
Stay tuned as it may well be Burlington and its North Avenue “going for
the gold corridor” on the quest for completing a State leading trifecta for
transportation and recreation innovation.
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