The Ben Franklin Parkway is Frustratingly Broken

  Рет қаралды 110,887

Alan Fisher

Alan Fisher

Күн бұрын

Never let anyone tell you that European planning should be copied 1 for 1 always.
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Music in this video:
• OMA - MF DOOM Instrume...
Dirt Rally - Replay
Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
1:00 Brief Explainer
1:54 History
4:13 Why Its Garbage
8:11 Design Solutions
9:53 How to Get Involved
10:42 Outro (Apologies out of audio sync)

Пікірлер: 546
@ErdTirdMans
@ErdTirdMans Ай бұрын
The funny thing is the reason the Parkway is low to mid traffic is not because there isn't demand for movement along that stretch of the city, it's because - speaking from experience - it's such an awful drive that people go out of their way to avoid it. The Parkway doesn't even work for the cars\drivers it's built for
@ThisisDevaan
@ThisisDevaan Ай бұрын
They could easily expand the bike lanes and sidewalks due to the low amount of traffic per lane
@rich453
@rich453 Ай бұрын
bring the meters back and traffic will increase- lose the bike lanes
@SuperRat420
@SuperRat420 Ай бұрын
@@rich453 no
@__supreme7
@__supreme7 Ай бұрын
The definition of a stroad
@SuperRat420
@SuperRat420 Ай бұрын
@@__supreme7 uh, no.
@nearby_emu4181
@nearby_emu4181 Ай бұрын
if they don't stop building wide urban roads... I'm gonna have to get involved.
@danswain6870
@danswain6870 Ай бұрын
Do it. We need you!
@drunknihilism7181
@drunknihilism7181 Ай бұрын
I've got a hi-vis vest, hard hat, and 20 year old pickup. Perfect for carrying around a jackhammer.
@batatanna
@batatanna Ай бұрын
The second emu war is coming
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 Ай бұрын
Made in America is NOT happening this year.
@Daniel-hj8el
@Daniel-hj8el Ай бұрын
Do IT mr President!
@s.lindland
@s.lindland Ай бұрын
car tornado fucking got me
@patchso
@patchso 29 күн бұрын
Accurate! Anyone who’s driven around it still suffers trauma.
@Mt.Dwezzy
@Mt.Dwezzy Ай бұрын
So when are we getting the acela body pillow? The missus is getting lonely
@UbinTimor
@UbinTimor Ай бұрын
@4:07 "I can feel your TikTok attention span waning!" Me: *Generally disappointed that the history lesson was abruptly cut off because I was into it from the start and wanted to learn more*
@patchso
@patchso 29 күн бұрын
Yeah, Id say most people who watch these vids are into the details. Give me history all day long. Appreciate the sarcasm though :-)
@alanthefisher
@alanthefisher 28 күн бұрын
I'm saving some of the history for another video, mainly because this one was taking too long to come out. There will be a follow up video about transit
@nicholasfield6127
@nicholasfield6127 Ай бұрын
Ope, the NJB call out 😬 lol
@GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub
@GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub 26 күн бұрын
Jason - goes full on doomer and leaves Alan on read Alan - "And I took that personally"
@zuluhyena305
@zuluhyena305 25 күн бұрын
Haha yeah, it was time NJB got called out. He seems to be stuck in this echo chamber where he gets more and more annoyed about cars exsisting. Like he's still good but he's not encouraging for someone unsure of the movement
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 26 күн бұрын
The Champs-Élysées wasn't meant to be built for parades. It and its gardens were originally laid out in 1667 by André Le Nôtre as an extension of the Tuileries Garden, the gardens of the Tuileries Palace, which had been built in 1564, and which Le Nôtre had rebuilt in his own formal style for Louis XIV in 1664. Le Nôtre planned a wide promenade between the palace and the modern Rond Point, lined with two rows of elm trees on either side, and flowerbeds in the symmetrical style of the French formal garden. The new boulevard was called the "Grand Cours", or "Grand Promenade". It did not take the name of Champs-Élysées until 1709. Until the reign of Louis XIV, the land where the Champs-Élysées runs today was largely occupied by fields and kitchen gardens! In 1846, Prince Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, who we know as Napoleon III, lived for a brief period in lodgings just off Lord Street in Southport in the UK's Merseyside. It is claimed the street is the inspiration behind the Champs-Élysées. And it was between 1854 and 1870 that Napoléon III orchestrated the reconstruction of the French capital, with the medieval center demolished and replaced with broad tree-lined boulevards, covered walkways and arcades. This transformation was supposed to facilitate troop movements and stop protests. Haussmann’s city makeover didn’t stop the 1871 Paris Commune, partly because the street-widening plan was yet to be finished. Many roads were still narrow and surfaced with tarred wooden blocks, which the insurrectionists used as weapons, in bonfires, and barricades. The barricade was built with setts, not a stone out of line, so the barricades used in the 1830s/June Rebellion-inspired Les Misérables are historically inaccurate as the actual barricades were made from oblong roadstones
@WOuter4ZWL
@WOuter4ZWL 19 күн бұрын
Good piece of history! And now a days these boulevards are used massively for demonstrations, especially in Paris. So the whole concept to control the crowd somewhat got lost, that’s karma 😂
@AverytheCubanAmerican
@AverytheCubanAmerican Ай бұрын
So those wondering why Alan mentioned Frazier, while Rocky was based on the true story of Chuck Wepner who once fought Ali and lasted until the 15th round, and the fighting style and the name was borrowed from Rocky Marciano, some of Balboa's training was taken from Joe Frazier. Frazier once had a job in a Philly slaughterhouse, and there he would be punching the hanging meat as training, and Frazier also talked about how he used to run up the museum steps! While Chuck Wepner did run up steps as part of his training, it was the 46 steps at the Stephen R. Gregg Park/Bayonne Park in his hometown of Bayonne, NJ! So if you REALLY wanna replicate Chuck Wepner's training (he also trained in the Catskills) and the REAL Rocky steps, go to Bayonne! Bayonne has a statue of Repner, but it's at Collins Park instead of Stephen R. Gregg Park. By the way, Chuck actually sued Stallone in 2003 because he wanted payment for being the inspiration, and they settled in 2006 for an undisclosed amount. Fun fact, Repner originally was into basketball because of his height, but got into boxing during his time in the Marines! Pretty wild fact that at one point in time, Philadelphia City Hall was the world's tallest habitable building when it was completed in 1894! Incredible video, the quality is chef's kiss! I quite love the addition of the different country flags on Ben Franklin Parkway! The flags were first added to the Parkway in 1976 as part of the city's bicentennial celebration, and Philadelphia became the US's first World Heritage City by the international Organization of World Heritage Cities in 2015! As an appreciator of flags, some of my favorite flags include Bhutan (not featured on the parkway), Kiribati (also not featured), Barbados, Brazil, Mexico, Albania, Seychelles (also not featured), Turkmenistan (also not featured), and Kenya! On the Barbados flag, the trident comes from Barbados's colonial coat of arms, and on the flag, it's broken off since it's just the top, meant to represent the breaking of colonial rule in Barbados and independence from the UK! On Mexico's flag, the eagle is eating a snake while perched on a cactus to represent Aztec god Huītzilōpōchtli telling the Mexica to look for a sign, an eagle on a cactus, that would tell them where to settle Tenochtitlan!
@iluomobravo
@iluomobravo Ай бұрын
Alan is being a virtue signaling cunt, that’s why
@patchso
@patchso 29 күн бұрын
Good stuff!
@ChrisGnam
@ChrisGnam 28 күн бұрын
The NJB callout is giving me life. He had some great videos, but the absolute doomerist attitude and rant telling us to just leave our homes has made me completely lose interest. Thank you for actually engaging with providing positive steps that can be taken
@PaulFisher
@PaulFisher 23 күн бұрын
get his ass
@garrettmaltby835
@garrettmaltby835 Ай бұрын
The zoom on the opening shot oh my god
@alfredogarbanzo2276
@alfredogarbanzo2276 Ай бұрын
mad clean
@Br-bs1xe
@Br-bs1xe Ай бұрын
This is a perfect Street for Trams!
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 Ай бұрын
Ll
@SuperRat420
@SuperRat420 Ай бұрын
We actually have a pretty good trolley network
@ianhomerpura8937
@ianhomerpura8937 Ай бұрын
That area once had lots of trolleys, until they were demolished to make way for the Parkway.
@DKGifford19608
@DKGifford19608 Ай бұрын
Phlash shuttle (bus trolley) and buses run on the Parkway. They connect to the pretty great underground, trolley, and regional rail system.
@johnchambers8528
@johnchambers8528 Ай бұрын
You pointed out many of the problems of their Parkway but it is a beautiful grand entrance to center city.i have both driven on it and walked to or from several of the buildings along it. It is a major asset in regards to big events held along it and while it could be better I still like it as it is.
@jetsons101
@jetsons101 Ай бұрын
As a tourist that has been to Philadelphia many times, the best way to visit is to park the car and walk everywhere, just like in Boston. Also, the vast majority of the people in Philly are more than happy to give directions and recommend a good place to eat.
@charliejag089
@charliejag089 Ай бұрын
Alan must have drank a redbull cuz the Editing skills are +11
@ConvincingPeople
@ConvincingPeople Ай бұрын
Philadelphia native here. Thank you for this. The Parkway has some interesting features and ideas going into it but it is so badly designed, especially in terms of foot traffic to and from the museums. Also appreciate the shade being thrown at tourists who only seem to know the Art Museum steps from Rocky and demonstrate little other interest in, y'know, the huge museum they're attached to. I know it's petty, but it bugs me. At least visit the armour room or something.
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 Ай бұрын
When it was first built there were very few cars. It should have never had any car traffic.
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 Ай бұрын
That's typical and it's their loss. If they don't care about real art( the Rocky statue is a movie prop) so be it.
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 Ай бұрын
It bugs me too. Maybe we should tell them that PMA and those steps were designed by a black architect, Julian Abele. 😅 That might get their attention.
@rich453
@rich453 Ай бұрын
Also a native, worked for decades on the Parkway, walked it every day never had a problem
@AmazingJayB51
@AmazingJayB51 Ай бұрын
@@rich453as black kid in growing up in West Philly in the 70s/80s, I rode my bike all over the city, never once cared about bike lanes. Bikers today are such babies. 👶
@literallyanythingelseother
@literallyanythingelseother Ай бұрын
That roads is crazy wide
@protowave
@protowave Ай бұрын
* road
@darksu6947
@darksu6947 26 күн бұрын
​@@protowaveStroad*
@FGH9G
@FGH9G Ай бұрын
Oh come on! I don't have a "TikTok attention span..." I actually liked the history lesson that got abruptly cut off at 4:03 😂😅🥺👉👈
@AverytheCubanAmerican
@AverytheCubanAmerican Ай бұрын
While the National Mall became what it is because of the 1900s McMillan Plan (and the 1850s Downing Plan), the original concept for a garden-lined grand avenue between the US Capitol and a Washington equestrian statue (now Washington Monument) was proposed by Parisian Pierre Charles L'Enfant! L'Enfant presented a vision featuring grand boulevards and ceremonial spaces reminiscent of Paris. This was much more than the simple federal town Jefferson had in mind. People thought Pierre was crazy, but not Washington! His design was based on European models translated to American ideals. The city was built around the idea that every citizen was equally important! The Mall was designed as open to all comers, which was unheard of in his native France. L'Enfant placed Congress on a high point with a commanding view of the Potomac, instead of reserving the grandest spot for a leader's palace like in Europe. Capitol Hill (once called Jenkins Hill) became the center of the city from which diagonal avenues named after the states radiated, cutting across a grid street system. These boulevards of course allowed for easy transportation across town and offered views of important buildings and common squares from great distances. And with DC Union Station designed by Daniel Burnham later added as well as an incredible, accessible Great Society Metro system by Harry Weese...truly master-planned. The Washington Monument ended up getting built beginning in 1848, dedicated in 1885, and opened in 1888. The construction was suspended from 1854 to 1877 due to funding challenges, a struggle for control over the Washington National Monument Society, and the American Civil War. When construction restarted, they used different marble, and because of this, you can see that the color of the marble at the bottom of Washington Monument is different if you look carefully at 2:59. The two sections closely resembled each other at first, but time, wind, rain, and erosion have caused the marble sections to weather differently. The monument was built with three different kinds of white marble. In the lower third, marble from Baltimore County, MD followed by a narrow zone of marble from the Sheffield in the Berkshires of Massachusetts, and, in the upper part, Cockeysville Marble also from Baltimore County.
@breaddocs
@breaddocs Ай бұрын
Pittsburgh area resident and, yeah, PennDOT pretty much would prefer business as usual on all roads it controls rather than having any changes. Have you ever put out a video about your thoughts on PA’s top-down approach towards road maintenance? To my understanding, it’s very unusual that a state level agency maintains so many roads that might be municipally managed in other states.
@ianhomerpura8937
@ianhomerpura8937 Ай бұрын
WTYP should make an episode centered mainly about PennDOT
@breaddocs
@breaddocs Ай бұрын
@@ianhomerpura8937 that would be pretty cool
@mattgisondi4519
@mattgisondi4519 Ай бұрын
They're terrible at maintaining the status quo even. I've been working for a few years with a municipal Public Works, and boy, do we hate PennDOT lol. We've had so many issues and lack of communication from them. Let alone improving pedestrian and bike infrastructure in our area and being stonewalled by the state
@paulmentzer7658
@paulmentzer7658 28 күн бұрын
​@@mattgisondi4519In the 1970s, Penndot's failure to maintain its road caused the City of Pittsburgh to put up signs stating "State Maintained Road" for the mayor had enough of people complaining to him about how bad these roads are. One of the problems with Penndot is how many roads they maintain. Several years ago in Cambria County I ran across a dirt road with a sign saying "No winter maintenance". That Dirt road was a Penndot maintained road. It barely had two eight foot lanes (I suspect it was two seven foot lanes, but I did not have a tape measure to measure it). Pennsylvania has a rule, all state maintained roads must have two eight foot lanes UNLESS there is not enough room, then you can have two seven foot lanes. West Liberry Avenue in Pittsburgh has four even foot lanes. Another situation with Penndot, in the days of the Streetcar boom (1980 to about 1920), the old Pennsylvania Highway Department would permit Streetcar companies to build 11 foot Streetcar right of ways between two eight foot lanes for horse drawn wagons (Total 27 feet wide). Starting in the 1920s, many of these highways paved the Streetcar right of way to produce "passing lanes" for automobiles. Most retained the Streetcar tracks till the 1950s but 27 feet wide highway is NOT wide enough for even four seven foot lanes (4x7=28). Given you still had the Streetcar tracks in the middle of the road, you could not install a center turning lane. Thus you ended up with roads that are technically to narrow for four seven foot lanes, so you had the two super wide lanes that people treat as four lane highways, when they are only technically two lane traffic (one lane in each direction). Ardmore Boulevard is an example of this (as is West Liberty Avenue, but for some reason Penndot found a way to claim West Liberty has four seven foot lanes). Modern roads are 12 feet wide for Motor Vehicles can be six feet wide. On a eight foot wide lane, that means only a foot on each side of the Vehicle. With seven foot lanes, that "Safety Margin" is reduced to just six inches on both side of the Vehicle Penndot should fix the above, making all traffic lanes at least eight foot wide, and quit maintaining dirt roads and similar low traffic volume roads. I do not see Penndot doing any of the above, for the state legislators will not permit Penndot to either abandon those non confirming roads, or supply the money to upgrade those nonconforming roads. Sorry about the rant, but the problems with the roads of Pennsylvania have existed for decades and just do not see anyone willing even to address the problems of the roads except when forced to do so by how bad the road had become.
@GLitchesHaxandBadAudio
@GLitchesHaxandBadAudio Ай бұрын
Was that a car driving through the pool at 0:29 ? Yikes.
@leaf821
@leaf821 Ай бұрын
green paint
@Poorgeniu5
@Poorgeniu5 Ай бұрын
I believe that is a painted parking lot.
@ProxiProtogen
@ProxiProtogen 26 күн бұрын
Green paint lol
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 26 күн бұрын
Paris's Arc de Triomphe was designed by Jean Chalgrin in 1806 and was inspired by Rome's Arch of Titus. Major sculptors of France are represented in the Arc de Triomphe including Jean-Pierre Cortot, François Rude, Antoine Étex, James Pradier and Philippe Joseph Henri Lemaire. Its iconography pits heroic French youths against bearded Germanic warriors in chain mail. In the attic above the richly sculptured frieze of soldiers are 30 shields engraved with the names of major French victories in the French Revolution and Napoleonic wars. The inside walls of the monument list the names of 660 people, among which are 558 French generals of the First French Empire. Also inscribed are the names of major French victories in the Napoleonic Wars, though the battles that took place between the departure of Napoleon from Elba to his final defeat at Waterloo are not included. The Arc de Triomphe is 50 m tall and it was the tallest triumphal arch until Mexico City's Monumento a la Revolución in 1938, which is 67 m/220 ft high. The Arch of Triumph in Pyongyang, completed in 1982, is slightly taller than the Arc de Triomphe at 60 m. Pyongyang's triumphal arch was built to commemorate the Korean resistance during the Japanese period, and was inaugurated on Kim Il-sung's 70th birthday, each of its 25,500 blocks of finely-dressed granite represents a day of his life up to that point!
@MLHunt
@MLHunt Ай бұрын
I'm a transplant to the area and i have never understood why that street exists in the form it does. So I really appreciate this piece.
@hudson5112
@hudson5112 Ай бұрын
For all of its many transit problems, the views up and down the Parkway between the art museum and City Hall are simply magnificent. Many years ago when I lived in Florida, and considered moving to Philly I distinctly remember visiting Love Park and being awestruck at the vista down the Parkway to the PMA The fountains, the flags, the artwork, the landscaping of the Parkway plus the two monumental civic buildings that terminate the vistas up and down the Parkway still inspire me whenever I visit Love Park or the Rocky steps. And I 've visited both many times since I moved to this great city over twenty years ago.
@connorparadis4804
@connorparadis4804 25 күн бұрын
I think we forget that many of these roads were designed for horse carriages and primitive cars that had a top speed of 20mph downhill
@Pensyfan19
@Pensyfan19 Ай бұрын
Incredibly well made video! The editing for features ranging from song choice to writing is a massive improvement when compared to previous videos. Keep up the good work and I hope to see some more rail related videos with this kind of editing in the future.
@dwc1964
@dwc1964 Ай бұрын
IIRC the Champs-Élysées was designed, along with a general redesign of Paris, not just for showy military parades, but for practical military purposes - to give regular army troops and equipment the advantage over barricade skirmishers who made tactical use of the older, narrow streets during the Revolution and subsequent revolutions.
@dantem4119
@dantem4119 Ай бұрын
Von Haussmann’s intervention is very interesting to read about.
@Furitokama
@Furitokama 26 күн бұрын
Avenue des Champs Elysses was designed in the 17th century. It's not an Haussmannian boulevard, it'sd much older. It's also wrong to assume that Haussmann plan was for military purpose. The main reasons was to embelish the city and to have a Paris fitted for the modern industrial time. That's means easing congestions for traffic of people and goods.
@GojiMet86
@GojiMet86 Ай бұрын
PennDOT: Look at this wide Boulevard for all these "definitely efficient" cars! Me: Looks like a very ideal place for streetcars and a subway! PennDOT: 😠
@ianwells5414
@ianwells5414 Ай бұрын
Lol @10:15 when I found out I made it into the inquirer for going to a bike lane protest 2 weeks ago. Would like to also add how bad the slip lane is from Elkins oval to 24th street for cars getting onto 676. The bike lane and crosswalks cross it, but it's very rare that anyone driving will ever yield, and the cars that do often get honked at or risk getting rear ended. Also, because of the timing on the lights, there are rarely any gaps in traffic. Really hoping this is addressed in the redesign.
@Benz2112
@Benz2112 Ай бұрын
Kudos on all the production upgrades you have made. This video looks fantastic.
@snekposts
@snekposts Ай бұрын
great video! production values on point my dude
@spicyempanadas2738
@spicyempanadas2738 Ай бұрын
Not super related, but my godfather is a trauma surgeon in Philly and he said that he frequently gets people with injuries sustained trying to run up the steps of the museum.
@SuperRat420
@SuperRat420 Ай бұрын
I'd trip on those steps stone cold sober, I believe it. They're too small and too deep
@ianhomerpura8937
@ianhomerpura8937 Ай бұрын
He would have enjoyed seeing people climb up the great stairs in Chongqing lol
@dj_enby
@dj_enby Ай бұрын
We missed you! I'm excited to see more from you no matter the wait or production quality
@davidn2612
@davidn2612 Ай бұрын
Incredibly well made video!!!!! Beautiful work
@ccityplanner1217
@ccityplanner1217 28 күн бұрын
The parallel roads should not be light-controlled, they should just be serviceways to access parking, like they are in Paris.
@trendy4tmrw
@trendy4tmrw 29 күн бұрын
Beautiful camera work and great video😊
@donaldcarletonjr.9047
@donaldcarletonjr.9047 29 күн бұрын
So glad you're back, I was beginning to fear this fine channel was defunct!
@tvelo128
@tvelo128 Ай бұрын
Great work! I really enjoy you channel and all the local content.
@Kevin_geekgineering
@Kevin_geekgineering Ай бұрын
good stuff, pleas keep creating these videos
@nomadsgalaxy
@nomadsgalaxy 26 күн бұрын
The quality of this vid was amazing. Keep it up!
@njtrainsandairplanes5355
@njtrainsandairplanes5355 Ай бұрын
Great video! And yeah that was a long break. The last video was uploaded before my Spring semester started, and now I only have two weeks left
@thetrainguy1
@thetrainguy1 Ай бұрын
I just wanted to say. I saw you at Newark Airport and I wish I could've told you in person but I love your videos and please keep it up. (I was the locomotive engineer running the train you rode)😅
@StillAnotherStudent
@StillAnotherStudent Ай бұрын
He returned!!
@weirdfish1216
@weirdfish1216 Ай бұрын
insane step up in the production quality of your videos. hope this can sustained 😳
@invention64
@invention64 28 күн бұрын
Glad you did a video on this area. I always hated going to the art museum cause of this mile walk.
@andrelukin6364
@andrelukin6364 29 күн бұрын
A great video! Thanks!
@jmchristoph
@jmchristoph 28 күн бұрын
DC is currently studying the same thing for Pennsylvania Ave NW. The center-median bike lanes sandwiched between 4 car lanes in each direction are going away. The replacement alternatives will only have 2 lanes in each direction (one of which may be a bus lane in some designs), along with fully-separated cycle tracks, with most of the remaining space converted to new parks & festival plazas. I'm pretty sure the public comment period is also concluded for that project study, but if you live in DC it's super easy to find and contact either your ANC rep or the Councilperson for your Ward.
@eugeneking1462
@eugeneking1462 Ай бұрын
Great video! Chicago's Logan Square is likely named after the one in Philadelphia. Keep those videos coming!
@mech-E
@mech-E Ай бұрын
Love the commentary. The bottom buttons are undone on your shirt at the end
@_Matt_Matt_365_
@_Matt_Matt_365_ 13 күн бұрын
Drone shots look fabulous!!!
@lilydix9769
@lilydix9769 25 күн бұрын
great video, you're doing good work!
@andrewrohe
@andrewrohe Ай бұрын
Great take on the Parkway, however, I totally disagree with you on making MLK Drive bicycles-only. It’s a critical pressure release route for both I-76 and Kelly Drive when traffic hits a gridlock, especially during rush hour times and major travel holidays like Thanksgiving Eve or Memorial Day weekend.
@ginj4ninj4180
@ginj4ninj4180 21 күн бұрын
Really great video! The quality was definitely noticeable and i enjoyed it, but agree getting more videos out is better than no videos for a while. Hopefully ypu can figure out how to slowly transition to a happy medium with the videos. Im mostly here to understand your opinion though, so don't always sweat perfection
@MichaelJEngelmann
@MichaelJEngelmann Ай бұрын
As a kid, my dad told me at Love Park it looks like he’s pissing. I’m 24 & it still makes me laugh 😂
@williamfay2725
@williamfay2725 27 күн бұрын
Loved this one. The redesigns offered by OTIS are so good. It would making connecting the the Schuylkill River Trail much nicer.
@kevley26
@kevley26 Ай бұрын
Great video!
@Maj_Kasul
@Maj_Kasul Ай бұрын
Nice video. Good ideas. I remember when Lincoln was still in the middle of Lincoln drive. lol
@larry4111
@larry4111 9 күн бұрын
Thank you, Alan. This was fascinating. I lived in Philly for 36 years and spent quite a bit of time on and around the Parkway. I was a DJ at WMMR and we often sponsored events there, like the July 4th concerts at the Art Museum, a defunct (I believe) event called Super Sunday where much of the Parkway above Logan was closed for a street festival, the Thanksgiving Day Parade (which I was in one year) when it went around the Oval, the Cycling Championship which I rode in every year (in a van doing live reports), and many others. That said, I don't remember much having to drive on it - which I guess was a big point of the piece. No matter where you needed to go there was always a better way to get there. It connected nothing to nothing.
@timwalks
@timwalks Ай бұрын
Lol'd at "Car Tornado"
@doctorwrm
@doctorwrm 22 күн бұрын
Great video! I wonder if it would better for pedestrians to close the center lanes instead of the outer lanes. The center lanes could make for a very nice Parisian linear park in the middle of the boulevard, and it would be a lot easier to cross 1-2 lanes of traffic at a time instead of 6-8.
@adithyavraajkumar5923
@adithyavraajkumar5923 22 күн бұрын
As someone who just moved to Philly a year ago and lives off of the Parkway, the short light cycle for pedestrians makes me fly into a blood rage. Every. Single. Time. No wonder so many people jaywalk here.
@paul1993willy
@paul1993willy 9 күн бұрын
Hot take: I’ve never been to Philly, so I never got to experience it by foot by myself, but I believe that the promenade has the potential to be the safest part of that boulevard. With proper traffic calming, the side streets could offer a great environment for active transit and commercial activities. They do need modal filters to discourage through traffic, they need to have at most one trafic lane, curbs cuts, raised pedestrian crossings and other interventions to slow cars down as much as possible and other interventions to make it clear that they should only serve local traffic. Ideally, that’d eliminate that confusion over whether drivers should drive down the center lane or side streets.
@Bdsteck
@Bdsteck Ай бұрын
I remember a couple months ago I filled out a survey about proposed redesigns of the road, I don’t remember exactly what I said, but I remember I suggested maybe a center running median/curb separated bus way, and more green space compared to what they were showing. I don’t know if there’s enough bus traffic there for a center running bus way to really make sense but I was kind of thinking more buses/pedestrians combined like the pedestrian mall or whatever they call it in Denver. I doubt they’re gonna take the suggestions of some random guy anyway though.
@KungFuIsland
@KungFuIsland 24 күн бұрын
Living in or near Philly for most of my life, the Penn Square death-vortex seem explicitly designed to cause accidents. When I was first learning to drive in my teens, I started thinking something must be wrong with me because surely no sane person would design this. I've had people hit by cars right behind me on those insane crosswalks, and, ironically, have seem ambulances almost clip people while swinging around those curves. It legitimately has no reason to exist, as eliminating it would require people to walk one block extra to access anything in Penn Square. The Parkway should be replaced with more park and possibly a light rail line.
@jimc.goodfellas226
@jimc.goodfellas226 Ай бұрын
Perfect timing man I was starting to zone out haha
@Myron90
@Myron90 28 күн бұрын
Great video! I love to see Philly get some shine
@diego001
@diego001 Ай бұрын
Ooh. Nice use of Mozart on the explanation about the origins of European boulevards.
@scottydude456
@scottydude456 Ай бұрын
Thank you Alan so much for actually sharing information into how we as a community can get involved
@markrahman9320
@markrahman9320 26 күн бұрын
@6:58 this is the gold of your videos. Thank you.
@DKGifford19608
@DKGifford19608 Ай бұрын
I used to live a few blocks off the Parkway and I love it. I have so many fond memories of events, biking it, walking visitors, and even sledding on the museum steps. I do agree it need improvement and think everything in the OTIS plan is spot on. Though, the tone of this video is off. The Parkway is a jewel and now that it better connects to the parks and river trails it's fantastic.
@mcbiscuits8015
@mcbiscuits8015 21 күн бұрын
I love walking along the schuylkill river park, but my return trip is always along the parkway. it's pretty much a deathtrap for me, especially when it gets busy
@a62dave
@a62dave 20 күн бұрын
I once had a 4-hour layover at 30th Street Station and decided to walk to the Rocky Steps, er, Museum. When I got to the Oval, I gazed across the great expanse and muttered, “WTF is this? Can I not walk to it?” Eventually, I found the shortest crosswalk and enjoyed dodging the cars who chose to ignore my “Walk” sign.
@user-fd1qi2hp4t
@user-fd1qi2hp4t Ай бұрын
Great content
@patrickshelffo7838
@patrickshelffo7838 3 күн бұрын
great video! love seeing actual balanced critique of specific urban designs instead of just generic more lanes more bad slop. where did you get the nj transit flag? i need it
@Swordfish_
@Swordfish_ 18 күн бұрын
Im glad you called out KoP
@UniquelyUnseen
@UniquelyUnseen Ай бұрын
Waited however many months for more Alan content.. and this is pretty damn good. Great job Alan, I hope life is going well for you :D
@Nonshannonical
@Nonshannonical 23 күн бұрын
I went to school at Moore college of art right on Logan square and in all the 4 years I lived on campus I so rarely walked north because I absolutely HATED crossing the parkway. The library was basically across the street and I think I went just like 3 or 4 times my whole time there
@mattwalker5252
@mattwalker5252 27 күн бұрын
I live a few blocks from the start of the BF Parkway. I think what makes the most sense is to have two trolley lines on the right (North) side and a protect bike path with bollards that disconnect/protect it from the road. The trolley could also go up 23rd to go under the art museum through an already built transit tunnel. As far as the bike path and road goes the bollards could be removed to make one solid asphalt surface for special events, like the NFL draft, etc. there are way to many road lanes as it currently stands.
@changster15
@changster15 25 күн бұрын
Looking at large phallic objects is my favorite thing to do in the city.
@strength9621
@strength9621 Ай бұрын
thanks for the clarity on the NJ transit flag
@charlie.dowd-lebow
@charlie.dowd-lebow 21 сағат бұрын
Thanks!
@ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031
@ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031 26 күн бұрын
8:42 I wouldn't really do away with slip lanes, but I would make them exclusive to bicycles and pedestrians. I would also keep the roundabout with the fountain, but in the form of a pedestrian promenade with bikelines.
@trainluvr
@trainluvr 27 күн бұрын
The first minute I biked the parkway as a tourist I knew something was greatly amiss. Many things about it are amiss as you so competently point out.
@kendellfriend5558
@kendellfriend5558 25 күн бұрын
4:04 why you stop? 😂 I was so interested
@davidburns8113
@davidburns8113 Ай бұрын
Well... I'm glad you said it! This is one of the prettiest sections of the city, especially from an aerial perspective and I almost never hang out there because walking around is a total nightmare. Shame that Victory has their brewery over there too because it's basically insufferably loud during rush hour. Thankfully center city is so gorgeous this time of year I just hang out at the other parks or at my favorite cafe.
@CalebFrey
@CalebFrey Ай бұрын
Glad to know it's not just me constantly confused how I'm supposed to walk from city hall to the art museum (why are there no trains that way???)
@sjones26573
@sjones26573 18 күн бұрын
Immediately recognized the music, but took a second to place it. Love me some DOOM, caught me a little off-guard in and AU video.
@srhorwitznj2
@srhorwitznj2 11 күн бұрын
Excellent video. I live on the Parkway. I am also a very frequent bike rider. Trust me when I say that the Parkway is downright hostile to pedestrians, especially at Eakins Oval.
@tdb7992
@tdb7992 Ай бұрын
I'm sure OBF will have a video entitled "Why Philadelphia is terribly designed" up in no time at all.
@duncanholden2826
@duncanholden2826 Ай бұрын
new intro is sick
@jonathanstensberg
@jonathanstensberg Ай бұрын
You should do a video on how they bulldozed a ton of the old city to make Independence Mall.
@ShawnBird
@ShawnBird Ай бұрын
I went to like the video during the Otis section and realized I'd already liked it during the history segment. Great video!
@ocsrc
@ocsrc 20 күн бұрын
I remember when Philly had no skyscrapers, and when you could walk around the downtown landmarks and it was wide open space. Now it looks like NYC with skyscrapers on both sides Very depressing 😢😢😢😢
@madmanmortonyt4890
@madmanmortonyt4890 Ай бұрын
God, I remember being driven through the parkway during a family visit. As a tourist, I was unable to follow where we were going the whole time (probably also didn't help that we went there during a huge protest).
@rhd244
@rhd244 27 күн бұрын
Isn't there like a little tunnel near the oval section. It has been a while since i was in Philly
@laurencefraser
@laurencefraser Ай бұрын
Traffic circles are just inherently awful in and of themselves, quite aside from any other problem. There is no situation where a roundabout isn't better... not that a roundabout is always actually suitable Either, but at minimum it massively cuts down on the number of ways the whole thing can go wrong. (mind you, roundabouts aren't great for pedestrians, especialy if they're supposed to be able to get into the middle of it).
@kurtphilly
@kurtphilly Ай бұрын
6:56 - 😂😂 - So true.
@Daniel-hj8el
@Daniel-hj8el Ай бұрын
Yo what about Amtrak equipment shortages is that for Nationalized vids, or NJ busses?
@roscalenecrailfanning8847
@roscalenecrailfanning8847 19 күн бұрын
Ik this is completely unrelated but I want to say my city is making a bad idea. In Miami, they are marking a brt with seperated roads, custom stations, heck even having rail road crossings so that way the buses can get the right if way. I don’t know why they could just expand the current metro, or just add a light rail. It Is a better solution tbh
@andrewmazzarini2742
@andrewmazzarini2742 Ай бұрын
The closest street to a Euro-style boulevard up here in Boston is Commonwealth Avenue, which also has slip lanes but, unlike The Franklin Parkway, Comm Ave is not as much of a pain in the ass for non-automotive commuters. It's still not very good but most of that comes down to how horrendously unoptimized the infrastructure on the Green Line B Branch is
@TigerofRobare
@TigerofRobare 28 күн бұрын
I like the Jon Bois style intro. I will definitely share this with my Philly friends.
@matthewmoskovitz7573
@matthewmoskovitz7573 Ай бұрын
I live in Mantua on the other side of the Schuylkill and there is ONE instance of traffic on the parkway I encounter regularly. The route 38 and 43 both cross the Spring Garden Bridge and navigate the parkway, and during rush hours it’s a miserable experience. The route 38 into Center City goes around the backside of the Art Museum and then around the front and down the parkway. This wastes about 2-3 minutes without traffic and even more with, while never really picking up a lot of people outside of weekend tourists. The deviation takes even longer during rush hour traffic, easily adding 10 minutes to the trip. The route 43 mainly goes up and down Spring Garden and way back in the day when it was still a trolley it ran down the median of Spring Garden and went under the Art Museum through a specific tunnel to avoid the parkway entirely. Now that the 43 is a bus that tunnel is open to all car traffic, but I guess the buses can’t fit in there any more because the 43 doesn’t use it. It goes down around Eakins Oval eastbound and around the front of the Art Museum westbound. I’ve gotten stuck in traffic plenty of times going westbound because of the mess around the front of the Art Museum and I always see the tunnel and wonder why we can’t use that for it’s intended purpose again. I don’t own a car but driving on the parkway is still a mess regardless. Whenever I get a ride from my sister I always have to explain to her how to navigate it and my parents still get tripped up trying to merge across two lanes of traffic in front of the Art Museum to get to the Spring Garden Bridge
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