Ecosystems are communities of plants, animals and microorganisms that have evolved over billions of years so as to maximize their long term survival and sustainability. So a sustainable human community must be designed in such a manner that its ways of life, businesses, economy, physical structures and social institutions do not interfere with nature’s inherent ability to sustain life.









Under the bridge, ODOT is purchasing the entire right of way, which includes an industrial river bed with piles of stone that resemble a lunar landscape. How should a future landscape pay tribute to heritage of the industrial Flats? Should the natural areas that are reclaiming the slopes and crooked river banks be enhanced into a park? ODOT could invite some of our very talented local landscape designers and artists such as Don Harvey, who is leading an 
aesthetics AR'nT ODOT
Susan Miller Says:I looked at the list of bridge design committee members and saw only one person who would be considered art literate? Are they kidding!!!???
These cast concrete walls are horrid -- so if we lose the Breuer Tower but add tacky concrete barriers for the trench, we will have confirmed the brutalism of our county commissioners. Who among those listed would advance the idea of wind turbines or bioswales at the Central Interchange? Would they invite someone who might know to toss those ideas out for consideration?
I say scrap the whole thing and give the money back. Forward thinking planning would reallocate the funds to rail and public transit. But it seems ODOT is set on tearing down our history and replacing it with a conduit for poor air and water quality. Here's what we stand to lose as a result of the innerbelt project from the Phase II section 106 review of historic buildings in the area of potential effect:
4.3.1 King-Otis Cleveland Mounted Police Stables, 1150 E. 38th Street
4.3.2 Wasson Street Freight Station, 3615 King Avenue
4.3.3 Brooks & Company Structural Iron, 3000 Lakeside Avenue
4.3.4 Ohio Boxboard Company, 1400 E. 30th Street
4.3.5 Michael Groh House, 3043 Superior Avenue
4.3.6 Loft Building, 2800 Superior Avenue
4.3.7 Artcraft Building, 2530-2570 Superior Avenue
4.3.8 William A. Howe Printing/Graphic Arts Building, 2630 Superior Avenue
4.3.9 The Musterole Building, 1748 E. 27th Street
4.3.10 Sterling & Welch Company Warehouse, 1800-1802 E. 25th Street
4.3.11 Apartment Building, 1900 E. 30th Street
4.3.12 The League House, 2344 Prospect Avenue
4.3.13 Independent Towel Company, 1802-1822 Central Avenue
4.3.14 Cleveland Rapid Transit Storage Company, 1022 Carnegie Avenue
4.3.15 Tactical Rescue Station, 312 Carnegie Avenue
4.3.16 Marathon Gas Station, 300 Central Viaduct
4.3.17 Broadway Mills, 300 Central Viaduct
4.3.18 The Central Viaduct Pier Ruins
4.3.19 Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company Steam Plant, 2470 Canal Road
4.3.20 The Nickel Plate Railroad Viaduct (CUY-3257-02)
4.3.21 Distribution Terminal Warehouse, 2000 W. 14th Street
4.3.22 Ferry Cap & Set Screw Company, 2151 Scranton Avenue
4.3.23 The Norfolk and Western Railroad Bridge over Scranton Road
4.3.24 Scranton Road Proposed Historic District, Fairfield Avenue to I-90
4.3.25 Engine Company No. 8, 2599 Scranton Road
This is truly a case of paving paradise to put up a parking lot. People, it is time to talk to the new state government and put a stop to this ludicrous process! Imagine what $1.5 billion could produce in terms of rail and public transit… In the future, it will be too expensive for us to drive anywhere, only the elite will be able to fly. We’d better get hip to the future and stop living in the past, like the future is not already upon us. It is time for us to reconsider this one bridge at a time plan and begin Making Other Arrangements. By the time this process is finished (and it is not even all funded so it may not ever be finished), we won't be able to use it. Driving to and from the exurbs daily will not be part of our future. If we are going to discuss design, we should be talking about sustainable design for the 21 century. We are there afterall.
We can improve our highways: here's how
Marc Lefkowitz Says:Thanks for the list of properties that will be 'taken' because of the Innerbelt. I know your work on the Section 106 review is important - can you explain how that will alter the Innerbelt project as part of the Environmental Impact Study?
Also, I agree, there is no excuse for ODOT to not invite an artist, an architect/preservation expert, and a landscape designer to sit on its aesthetics advisory committee considering what they want to do. I have asked ODOT if they would consider adding a resident who has some professional qualification in one of these areas, but have not heard back yet. As an aside, I think Cleveland Planning Commission members Joe Cimperman and Lillian Kuri understand some of the design, historic preservation and environmental issues at stake—we all need to ask them to support these issues.
Bioswales and other innovative stormwater management practices including low-intensity native landscapes should be a matter of coarse for the aesthetics group—it can look pretty and function to slow the torrent of water that will pour from adding two bridges to the river valley and all of that new impervious surface.
While it may be nice to think this federal highway money could be used for something to reduce demand for the highway—such as a downtown housing strategy or commuter rail—ODOT will probably cite some federal regulation that prevents that from happening.
In lieu of changing the federal policy, let’s focus our efforts on reforming the policy of our state department of transportation. For example, the Ohio Constitution prevents the sharing of tax revenues from gas purchased for motor vehicles that don’t use highways (like lawnmowers) for alternative transportation. It must be used for highway building or reconstruction. Is that right?
Ohio's statute requires that "No moneys derived from fees, excises, or license taxes relating to registration, operation, or use of vehicles on public highways, or to fuels used for propelling such vehicles, [shall be used for other than traditional highway purposes]. The italicized language would allow any moneys derived from taxes on vehicles that do not operate on public highways to be used for purposes other than highway improvements.
Even though its the law in that state, Oregon’s attorney general determined that its not appropriate to use tax revenues from purchases of gas for lawnmowers, leaf blowers, and chain saws for highway construction or maintenance. In 2001, Oregon passed H.B. 3882 which amended its constitution so that off-road vehicle gas taxes are now unrestricted. After a financial review by their department of transportation, $5 million in gax tax revenue was made available to pay for the Cascades commuter rail line from Eugene to Portland.
Can we motivate the Strickland Administration and (as yet unnamed) new ODOT director with a reform agenda that includes an in-depth analysis of gas tax revenues? What are the barriers to change? Would you like to get involved with a local group working on a reform ODOT agenda?
lawnmower $ is a start
curatorius Says:and an ingenious way to get around the stupid constitutional limitations. Let's do it.
But why stop there? Wouldn't it be worth a shot to try to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot to repeal the constitutional limitation of gas money altogether? If that passed - and I admit, it might or might not - we'd potentially have access to much more of the gas revenues, limited only by how much lawmakers could be pursuaded to spend on transit.
There'd be little to lose in trying. In the meantime, going after the lawnmower revenue is a very welcome start.
ODOT's outbound view of the world
Marc Lefkowitz Says:Below links to the last letter from the outgoing ODOT administration regarding requests to design a bike & pedestrian multi-use path on the Innerbelt Bridge. In (perhaps soon-to-be changing) ODOT world view, transportation enhancement funds and urban design aesthetics should only be spent on window dressing to enhance areas around the bridge.
Cities that are attracting young minds have departments of transportation that invest enhancement money on bike/pedestrian access whenever a roadway project happens. Will ODOT's new leadership see the value of Complete Streets?
Page one of the letter
Page two of the letter