Our value and hopes are sometimes awfully embarrassingly very easy to read. They’re right there—in the storefronts, museums, temples, shops, and office buildings and in how these structures interrelate, or sometimes don’t. They say, in their unique visual language, “This is what we think matters, this is how we live and how we play.” Riding a bike through all this is like navigating the collective neural pathways of some vast global mind. It really is a trip inside the collective psyche of a compacted group of people.
From his book, "Bicycle Diaries"









A key ingredient to the University Circle Arts and Retail District will be transit – and artists. In the wake of Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority discovering transit-oriented development as a priority, New York-based urban design firm Project for Public Spaces appeared in April '07 with the major players from the Circle to burnish Euclid and Mayfield as a transit village. PPS conducted a workshop and a walking tour of the area around the current and future home of the E. 120th Street Red Line Rapid Station. 

very welcome news
curatorius Says:that Euclid-Mayfield is getting this kind of attention from people who are serious about TOD, urban living and a pedestrian/arts district.
I work for Case and currently live at Coventry Village from which I walk to work and carshare on the weekends. This kind of vision, properly executed and with access to sufficient services like groceries within easy walks, would make me look seriously at living down in this area.
A couple of questions: in the past several years I've heard several proposals for relocated RTA stations along the Red Line heavy rail between Cedar and Superior; right at Mayfield and Random, spanning Mayfield where the bridge goes over is one, but this sounds more like you're talking about having it slightly east of that, right about where the CIA and Triangle buidlings are? This allows you to make the Triangle apartments - however they look when all is said and done - truly TOD housing where a person might not even have to go outdoors between their home and Tower City, which many would welcome in January. Proximity of all this to CIA is very convenient and as you said allows you to decorate everything with class projects. I'm all for that too.
Presumably putting the station here kills the E. 120th station - essentially a relocation of that station(?). It also obviates the Mayfield-Random idea. Does it have any effect for the idea I and others have been trying to promote about making the Cedar-University station more welcoming and multi-modal?
Will there still be a Trader Joe's or something in the building that's been mooted by Case for the northeast corner of Ford and Euclid?
Anyway, details aside, all very good that this area is getting talked about in this way. Keep is posted.
TOD at University Circle
Marc Lefkowitz Says:Mike,
It was my understanding that UCI and RTA are both interested in moving the station closer to University Circle and closing down the current E. 120th Street station. I posted a map of the primary study area (above), although the planning exercise conducted by Project for Public Spaces also looked at the area to the east in East Cleveland and to the west along Mayfield. Because the RTA tracks are on the E. 119th side, the main entrance to the station would have to be from there, Reeves said. When I suggested a bridge or ramp to E. 117th Street, Reeves and an RTA official both seemed to like the idea. If you look at the image of the study area, just to the left of the letter "D" is the remnant of the rail spur that I think would be suitable for reuse as a pedestrian bridge to the platform. An RTA architect in our group also liked the idea. He started sketching out the possible alignment of the platform and stairs -- imagine it starting from the spur and crossing diagonally toward E. 119th and Mayfield. Now, UCI will need to make an arrangement with UH to take some of the surface parking, but that won't be a problem.
So, the entrance to the station will probably be visible from Mayfield as you look up the hill into E. 119th. On the E. 117th side, imagine CIA building their new classroom behind the factory on the surface lot. The spur/ped bridge could connect the train platform directly with the building at the second floor, so students and visiting artists could take the train from the airport directly to campus (it was mentioned that a CIA dorm on Euclid would be better to keep foot traffic on the street).
I'm not sure about Trader Joe's, but I did hear that the development across from the Triangle on Euclid will probably have two ground floor tenants, most likely a drug store and a book store. Oh, and finally, the RTA official told me that they're putting together the RFP for a planning firm to conduct a similar urban design exercise for the new University/Cedar Rapid station (which is supposed to break ground in September 2008).
TOD Cleveland
Jon Eckerle Says:Great report. I am sorry I missed the event.
During Defrag I walked the site. The site has the legs for development. There is enough land and the land is owned by the right people. I think this overcomes the fact that it has a lower visibility. The priority to me is that for the first real TOD site in Cleveland (other than the Terminal Tower). We need a ripe viable site. . I think that the site will need some creative integration into the exhisting transporation systems, (bike, bus, car, City Wheels and of course the Euclid Corridor "Space Bus."
If this project is successful it could spin interest in TOD. We could have TOD driven demand in Brookpark, W117th, and the completion of the Eco-Village concept. It may be that this is perhaps one of RTA's most important development driven projects.