Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
powell-stadium-parking
Full Text:
COMMENTARY: Best Football Stadium Parking Might Be No Parking At All
By Chris Powell
What will be done about parking in downtown Hartford once the football stadium
is built and 30,000 or more cars head there on many Saturday and Sunday
afternoons in the fall and early winter?
Already there is talk of building a lot of parking garages downtown. But the
best solution to the downtown parking problem might be simply no additional
downtown parking at all.
More parking garages downtown would solve only part of the problem; they would
only worsen traffic congestion. Getting all the cars in and out of the garages
would take hours and require a lot of expensive road and highway work.
It's probably not necessary.
For starters, much of East Hartford just across the Connecticut River has
become a parking lot, Pratt & Whitney's industrial and airport property being
largely vacant. There is plenty of room there for those fabled football
tailgate parties, and shuttle buses could have fans across the river at the
stadium turnstiles within ten minutes.
Then there's the Amtrak railroad line still operating between Springfield, New
Haven and New York. It is dotted with local railroad stations in deteriorating
downtown areas, as in Windsor Locks and Meriden. Schedule a few special
excursion trains on game days, as the railroads of old did, and lay trolley
lines from Union Station in Hartford a few blocks east to the stadium, and
suddenly there would be plenty of parking everywhere on the north-south axis
and plenty of easy access to downtown.
Further, the state-owned bus service in the Hartford area and commercial bus
companies might do well with their own excursion routes to the stadium from
the suburbs.
All this would dramatically reduce drunken driving, always a threat among
football partiers.
Putting the parking outside the city -- in East Hartford and along the
railroad track -- might even make money as long as nobody called it "mass
transit," which is unprofitable in Connecticut because of insufficient
population density. (Even the Metro-North commuter railroad service between
New Haven and New York City, the most densely populated area of the state, is
heavily subsidized by the government.)
Much less new infrastructure would be required for a stadium transportation
system built around shuttle buses, trolleys and the railroad than for parking
garages and road work for 30,000 or so cars.
The key to success for an alternative to parking garages would be the
frequency of shuttle bus and trolley service before and after football games,
so that people would have confidence that there would be a second or third
trolley or bus if they missed the first one and that they could safely leave
their cars at home.
The most complicated aspect of something like this -- a few blocks of trolley
lines -- is a technology that Connecticut mastered and then abandoned about 70
years ago but that could lead downtown Hartford "back to the future." Indeed,
a simple, frequent, reliable, and prominently marked trolley and bus system
around downtown Hartford with links to suburban parking lots, operating around
the clock or close to it, might arise from efforts on Game Day and eventually
contribute more to downtown Hartford's revival than the stadium itself would.
(Chris Powell is managing editor of The Journal Inquirer in Manchester.)