Title: Southeast Area Transportation Plan
1Southeast Area Transportation Plan
DRAFT
Spring 2007 Baltimore City Department of
Transportation
2Presentation Outline
- Study Area and Time Horizons
- Purpose and Objectives
- Existing Conditions Analysis
- Future Conditions Analysis
- Findings and Summary
- Recommendations Timeline
- Questions and Discussion
3Southeast Study Area
4Purpose and Objectives
- Document existing transportation network
including - Existing traffic patterns and traffic operations
- Existing public off-street parking locations
- Existing public transportation, pedestrian and
bicycle facilities - Identify current and planned development activity
- Forecast new traffic volumes generated by current
and planned developments - Assess the impacts on the transportation network
of future traffic associated with growth and
development in the SE area. - Evaluate all modes of travel vehicular, bus,
rail, water taxi, bicycle and pedestrian - Recommend proposed network improvements that
- Support economic development and vibrant urban
design - Mitigate potential development impact and
encourage multi-modal travel
5Current and Planned Development(projects in
development pipeline as of January 1, 2007)
Source Baltimore City Planning Department
6Current and Planned Development
YELLOW ITEMS not fully included in analysis
because they entered pipeline after initial
mapping and modeling in January 2007
7Existing and Future Demographics
- Existing demographics based on 2000 Census and
includes Butchers Hill, Fells Point, Greektown,
Highlandtown, and Canton neighborhoods - Projected demographics based on 1.5 persons per
household
8Level of Service Descriptions
1000 - 1150 Vehicles
lt 1000 Vehicles
1150 - 1300 Vehicles
9Level of Service Descriptions
1300 - 1450 Vehicles
1450 - 1600 Vehicles
gt 1600 Vehicles
10Existing Conditions Level of Service
11Future Conditions Analysis
Travel Demand Forecasting Process
- Identify current and planned private development
activity - Identify current and planned capital improvement
projects - Estimate traffic generated by each development
- Distribute and assign new traffic to existing
roadway network - Analyze future roadway capacity and level of
service - Evaluate select roadway improvements to mitigate
congestion
12Estimating Future Traffic
- Trip Generation is the most critical aspect of
assessing traffic impact - Several factors can reduce the number of new
personal vehicular trips generated by a
development - Availability of alternative modes of
transportation i.e. sidewalks, bicycle
facilities, public transportation - Pass-by traffic i.e. personal vehicles already
on the roadway network making a new stop at a
proposed development
13Projected Development Traffic(represents
projects in development pipeline as of January 1,
2007)
14Current and Planned Development
- Total Potential Buildout for Study Developments
in SE - 1,100,000 SF Retail 21 of total new traffic
- 5,500,000 SF Office/ Research and Development
54 of total new traffic - 4,000 Residential units 13 of total new
traffic - 1,000 Hotel Rooms 4 of total new traffic
- 2,700,000 SF Warehousing 8 of total new
traffic - 100 vehicle trips per peak hour
- 200 residential units
- 20,000 SF Office Building
- 10,000 SF Retail
- Source Institute of Transportation Engineers
Trip Generation Handbook, 7th Edition
15Existing Conditions Level of Service
16Year 2012 Level of Service
NOTE Assumes 50 buildout of Canton Crossing,
Bayview and Harbor Point, with no improvements to
roads, transit, etc.
17Findings and Summary
- Existing roadways operate at acceptable levels of
service only 3 of 34 critical intersections
fail in the PM peak - Lack of interconnected non-auto transportation
options - Over 6,500,000 SF of Office/ Retail and 4,000
residential units under construction or planned
by 2020 - Over 20,000 projected new private vehicular trips
in the critical PM peak hour - 24 of total projected new traffic is generated
by Canton Crossing, 19 by Harbor Point, and 16
by Hopkins Bayview - Over 22 of 34 critical intersections projected to
operate at failing level of service by 2012
without any improvements
18Approach to Plan
- Take a multi-modal approach
- Improve select critical intersections/
bottlenecks - Maximize use of existing grid network
alternative routes, one-way flow - Implement new and more frequent local shuttle bus
service - Emphasize non-SOV modes (bike, walking, transit,
water taxi, etc.) and seamless interactions among
them. - Support transportation master plan by developing
high-density mixed-use land uses with multi-modal
access - Provide transportation infrastructure,
development and policies which take advantage of
and encourage use of viable alternative
transportation modes - Be open-minded
19What we dont include
- Because we are looking at what to do toward a
2012 horizon, we dont include - Red Line
- Boston Street expansion to 4 lanes
- New MARC Station _at_ Bayview
- Central Avenue total reconstruction
20Recommendations Canton/Dundalk-area roads
- Intersection improvements
- (additional through or turn lanes, revised
lane assignments) - ODonnell at Conkling
- ODonnell at ODonnell Cut-Off
- ODonnell at Interstate
- Boston at Clinton
- Boston at Ponca
- Ponca at ODonnell
- Keith at Broening Highway
- I-95 NB Ramp at Interstate Ave
21Recommendations Harbor East/Fells Point Roads
- Encourage use of Central Avenue
- Central Avenue Light remove angled parking,
limit commercial vehicle parking, revise striping
plan, improve street lighting and directional
signage - Extend W/B Fayette Street turn-lane to
President/I-83 - Exclusive signal phasing N/B Central to W/B
Fayette - Reconfigure Broadway signals _at_ Aliceanna, Fleet,
Eastern, Lombard, Pratt - Reconfiguration of President Street for
continuous progression (i.e. 3 through lanes N/S
turns)
22Recommendations Traffic Management
- One-way Traffic Flow on Fleet Street and
Aliceanna between Boston and President - or
- Establish peak-hour parking restrictions on
Eastern Avenue - Improve wayfinding signage to suggest alternative
crosstown routes (Fayette/Orleans) to I-95/I-83 - Increase Special Traffic Employment Officer
deployment - Grow traffic camera network for better management
23Recommendations - Transit
- Improve frequency of service on 13 line between
Boston/Conkling and Johns Hopkins Hospital - Implement 11 line changes as previously proposed
- Prioritize major bus stops for improvements
(shelter, next bus, etc.) - Move aggressively on water taxi infrastructure
and commuter service improvements - Establish Guaranteed Ride Home Program for
transit users - Establish a system of neighborhood shuttles
24A Vision for Neighborhood Shuttles and Connected
Water Taxi in Downtown and Waterfront Baltimore
25Vision for Downtown/Waterfront Transit
- Shuttle bus and water transit
- Operated by a single entity
- Branded as a special service
- Publicly-available, serving a variety of markets
- Fast and frequent
- Transfer locations and parking
26Recommendations - Other
- Construct southeast portions of Bike Master Plan
next and examine existing/planned new garages for
possible bike parking. - Move forward w/ car-sharing program
- Review residential parking permit zones and
increase enforcement - Increase on-street parking supply w/ selected
angled-parking conversions - Establish/encourage fringe parking locations
- Establish a Transportation Management Association
to educate and support TDM measures including
carsharing, employee transit subsidies,
smart-commute/live near work tax credits,
brochures and kiosks, etc.
27Preliminary Cost Estimates
28Year 2012 Level of Service without improvements
NOTE Assumes 50 buildout of Canton Crossing,
Bayview and Harbor Point, and unimproved roadway
network
29Year 2012 Level of Service with proposed
improvements
NOTE Assumes 50 buildout of Canton Crossing,
Bayview and Harbor Point, and Eastern Ave Peak
Hour Restrictions
30Year 2012 Level of Service with proposed
improvements
NOTE Assumes 50 buildout of Canton Crossing,
Bayview and Harbor Point, and Fleet/Aliceanna
One-Way Pair
31Next Steps Summer 2007
- Build consensus on Southeast Transportation Plan
recommendations - Briefings w/ community associations, developers,
etc. - Briefings w/ elected officials (City Council
46th District) - Continue conversation w/ MTA and MdTA
- Strengthen work on ancillary issues (i.e.
commercial vehicle enforcement, traffic calming) - Identify funding sources
- Examine current CIP for fund sources
- Develop sustainable funding mechanism for
operating costs (transit, TMA, water taxi, etc.) - Identify developer contributions through TIS
mitigation negotiations or area-wide assessment - Establish flexible construction schedule and
contracting mechanism responding to development
needs - Evaluate 2020 Network Options and Establish
Long-Range Transportation Plan - Red Line build-out prioritization
- MARC Bayview vs. MARC East Baltimore Station
- Boston Street boulevard vs. viaduct
- Central Avenue
32Questions and Comments
- Please submit questions and comments on the
Southeast Transportation Plan to - Ms. Tia Waddy
- Southeast Baltimore Transportation Liaison
- Baltimore City DOT
- 417 E. Fayette Street, 5th Floor
- Baltimore, MD 21202
- tia.waddy_at_baltimorecity.gov
- Comments are due by Friday, July 13th