RGRTA's Transit Center as seen from 'A Town Square'

RGRTA's Transit Center as seen from 'A Town Square'

This article was scraped from Rochester Subway. This is a blog about Rochester history and urbanism has not been published since 2017. The current owners are now publishing link spam which made me want to preserve this history.. The original article was published May 04, 2010 and can be found here.

Howard Decker is new to Rochester. He moved here last Fall after spending much of his professional life designing transit systems from Chicago to Houston to Washington DC. He is a lifelong historic preservationist, an FAIA, architect, urban designer, and former Chief Curator of the National Building Museum. As a self-proclaimed "transit-geek" he is now spending time familiarizing himself with, and blogging about Rochester and working with groups such as the RRCDC and     Reconnect Rochester    . Last week Howard attended the public input meeting on RGRTA's planned transit center on Mortimer Street. Today he posted his opinion on the whole thing. Read his article (below). And please attend the     final public input meeting    tomorrow night (May 5).

Buses and Subways and Trains, Oh My

Rochester's Main Street and Clinton Avenue looking South. 1929.

A Town Square (May 4, 2010)     -- Our home place here is in the midst of considering a change to its transit system. As usual, Rochester is the perfect case study of how cities can screw themselves up with the greatest of ease. My newly adopted city, like so many of its sister places, has made a vast litany of urban gaffes over the last century, and we are about to see yet another. Let me explain.

In the early 20th century, Rochester had a system of streetcars and interurbans and even a subway, all of which provided transit options to citizens. In those days, say the 1920s, the population of the city was quite a bit larger than today, though the region was much smaller - sprawl was only just getting started.

By the mid 1950s, everything was gone. Streetcars gone. Interurbans gone. Subway gone. Left on the roads? Cars, and buses. Retail was headed out of town, following all those who began to sprawl. Downtown's fate was sealed...

Read the full article at 'A Town Square'

Chris Gemignani

Chris Gemignani

Rochester, NY, USA