30 April, 2009

As Our Train Takes Off and Our Airplane Accelerates Down The Track...

F - T - S

Let me coin a new phrase here, "Flying Train Syndrome," or FTS for short. By now your probably wondering just what the heck the old blogger is up to, Flying Trains indeed. I would beg your attention to a relatively new phenomena. There is a knee jerk reaction to the new funding of Amtrak and the many State and Local governments that want to get in on the action.

Reading newspaper blogs, it seems that the long silent peasantry has scummed to FTS and their mad as hell. The trouble is we have one or two whole generations who have grown to adulthood with a skeletal rail passenger system that could hardly be called a network. Certainly one train a day, or even tri-weekly, on only one out of 4 or 5 possible mainlines is a far cry from what Arlo Guthrie experienced before the hit single "Riding on the City of New Orleans." I really want us as a Transportation Rich Community and America's Logistics Center, to end the confusion over what rail is and what it can do. Hurry along as we look at some of these FTS blog comments, our plane is leaving the station.

After a positive article on Jacksonville Commuter Rail, this comment:


"YAWN, that is the easy way out of saying the proof is in the site, somewhere, just because someone told me it was true....well it must be true. Nah, don't drink the Kool-aid, look around you and see if rail works ANYWHERE in the State of Florida and if it is successful, meaning profitable."

Response:
This little sarcastic treat comes from the same gentleman that described Amtrak Trains as just one step above bus travel.

Obviously, our friend has either done very little travel aboard Greyhound, Trailways, Jefferson or other intercity Bus Companies, or hasn't been aboard a train since 1932. The gist of his argument is profit, in fact the entire gauge of success in his mind is making cash money.

This ignores a primary fact in Transportation, a space - time - and public service continuum. In terms of space a rail passenger uses about 5' square feet of space to travel anywhere on the continent. The same person driving an automobile takes up some 85' square feet of space. There could be an argument made that because of the compactness of a train with 200 passengers aboard, it would quickly leapfrog the same 200 passengers in automobiles. This line of cars on the highway would stretch for 3.21 miles. The same load of passengers on the train could be condensed to 1,000' feet, or something just short of 1/5 of a mile. As the world population expands we are growing short on space that can be endlessly covered in asphalt and concrete.

The strongest argument is that rail travel is the most efficient and fuel wise system of transport known to man with the possible sole exception being Zeppelins! So the question becomes how much fuel do we save by train travel? How many acres are still green because of train travel? More pointedly, just how much money did our State Highway System "make" last year? I haven't seen anyone arguing that our airports should be abandoned due to a lack of profit, in fact they would be quick to tell you that the airport brings a city prestige and recognition.

Sorry folks then the measure being used is not a level field at best and at worst it is a type of Mass Transit Snobbery or as someone recently put it, Mass Transit Racism. Amtrak seems the easiest target and this nonsense has flown around the country for nearly 40 years. That trains don't fly is no excuse to abandon the technology. FTS?


From a news Blog Q and A:
"Are we (Jacksonville) ready for light rail, rail, etc.?" And if the answer is no (and in general I think it is), then we'd better put it on the back burner; and if the answer is an undeniable unmistakable strong yes, then build it! We can't just build something and hope that it's a success. I can't even tell (someone help me with this), whether there is a strong, sure public/commuter demand for rail in Jacksonville (is the public ready?).

Response:
When is a City, County or State "ready" for rail? Must we reach gridlock on our highways and air before we commit any silver to the rails? In this case Jacksonville is called out by name and that makes this an interesting comment. Jacksonville is the largest city in the nation without a rail transit system, either in population, MSA or land mass. We are told we are far to spread out for rail to work, yet rail works just fine in Los Angeles. Then we are told we don't have the density for rail, yet when we checked the US Census Bureau we discovered we land right in the middle of all cities that already have rail in terms of density. So are we ready? The East Coast Corridor web site just published a study that shows: Jacksonville, Miami and Tampa, drivers waste 200 Million hours a year in traffic. So how does the unknown Giant of Jacksonville rank with the well known cities of Florida, check out our MSA Counties. Oh the humanity:

JACKSONVILLE MSA COUNTIES:

Clay Commute: 33.4 min Statewide rank: 1
Putnam Commute: 30.6 min Statewide rank: 4
Nassau Commute: 28.2 min Statewide rank: 8
St. Johns Commute: 25 min Statewide rank: 19
Duval 23.1 min 25
Flagler 22.9 min 27
Source: Census Bureau 2006 American Community Survey

I think this answers our questions quite well, I'm waiting for that train, streetcar or zeppelin, but wouldn't that be sort of like Flying Amtrak?

From an Online Discussion:



"Anyone seen empty buses? When the buses are filled, demand is there for rail, till then, keep dreaming the dream!"

Response:
This is clearly a statement written in ignorance. Any thinking person could reason that a bus that is filled to capacity during the rush hours may be running light in off-peak hours. Even during the peak, bus passenger loadings may fill and empty at several points along the same route, thus not even this is an indicator of demand. Certainly the guy that wants profit in all things would pull out his hair if we were to buy big buses for rush hour and little buses for off-peak times. Frankly with the numbers posted on commute times, we are way behind the curve on getting rail up and running. This would then allow us to redeploy buses that must make the long traffic snarled trek from outlaying areas to the central or satellite city cores. Once this was done the buses would generally run at right angles to the most congested roads and transfer their inbound or outbound loads to strategically placed rail stations. Meanwhile new Heritage Streetcars and the Skyway, Jacksonville's tiny monorail system, completed just another 3 - 5 miles in several directions would serve as a complete distributor in the urban center.

From the Leading E-News:



"Does slower transportation really appeal to the masses? The only way for trains to get back in the mix is to get faster. It's easier to just hop in the car if it's a short trip, and it's faster to fly.Now, if you had a train that could get from here to WPB or ATL in 2 hours, THAT would shake things up and spark interest."
Response:
This is the ultimate case of Flying Train Syndrome. Airline style, point to point, non-stop jet set travel has caused the masses to ignore the booming markets of the smaller and medium size towns and cities. Today in California a trip from Fresno to Bishop is likely to be via Los Angeles. A trip from Wilmington, Deleware to Norfolk, Virginia, via New York City and likewise a trip from Jacksonville to Daytona Beach by way of Atlanta. What the train does is FLY THROUGH not over the country. If taking time to see what is in between isn't going to match your schedule so be it, but try and tell a resident of Ocala, St. Augustine, Macclenny or Palatka, that because you want to experience "fly over country," your needs are superior to theirs. Within the route of a single passenger train, there may be many micro-corridors hidden within the fabric of that single stretch of trackage. As a nation we can no longer afford the fuelish luxury of flying 500 miles to get 100 miles down the track, when this happens, it's train time. Flying Trains Indeed!

29 April, 2009

Hello Jacksonville This is London, France and Africa Calling...



THE PORT OF GOLD = JACKSONVILLE'S POT OF GOLD!

"Son Of A Sailor," Lyrics


"As the son of a son of a sailor
I went out on the sea for adventure
Expanding the view of the captain and crew
Like a man just released from indenture

As a dreamer of dreams and a travelin man
I have chalked up many a mile
Read dozens of books about heroes and crooks
And I learned much from both of their styles."


This just in from Clarksons International in London England, anyone with delusional thought that nobody is watching JAXPORT might want to read this:

Funding boost for Jacksonville port Authority
News - April 29, 2009

Jacksonville.com reports that a major dredging project that will deepen the St Johns River has secured up to US$14.8 million from the federal government’s stimulus package, giving the Jacksonville Port Authority a financial boost in its quest to attract ships with heavier cargo loads.

The report said that the US Army Corps of Engineers has also announced that stimulus money will go toward dredging the Intracoastal Waterway in the Palm Valley area of St Johns County and that it is doing a study of shoreline protection in St Johns County.

The projects will be funded through the US$787 billion package that President Obama signed into law on February 17th.

The Army Corps of Engineers received US$4.6 billion from that legislation and has been reviewing what projects would get funded.

Jacksonville.com said the money for the Port of Jacksonville’s will be used to deepen the channel along a 5.3 mile stretch up to the Talleyrand terminal. The depth will be 40ft after the project is completed.


"Now away in the near future
Southeast of disorder
You can shake the hand of the mango man
As he greats you at the border

And the lady she hails from Trinidad
Island of the spices
Salt for your meat, and cinnamon sweet
And the rum is for all your good vices

Haul the sheet in as we ride on the wind
That our forefathers harnessed before us
Hear the bells ring as the tight rigging sings
Its a son of a gun of a chorus"

"JUST ASK ANYONE IN CHARLOTTE THE WAY TO THE PORT...JACKSONVILLE!"


FROM THE QUEEN CITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, THE CHARLOTTE BUSINESS JOURNAL HAD THIS TO SAY:


The Port of Jacksonville’s newest shipping service provides the first dedicated container service to the Middle East and strengthens its existing service to West Africa.

Starting June 7, one of the world’s largest shipping lines,
CMA-CGM, will begin calling on the port weekly before heading up the East Coast and then to Tangier, Morocco; and Jebel Ali, Dubai; said Roy Schleicher, senior director of trade development and global marketing for the Jacksonville Port Authority. It hasn’t been decided which terminal the French shipping line will use.

The nine ships, which can handle about 5,100
TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent, a container measurement standard), will be the largest the port has received through a regular service. Schleicher estimated the largest ship that regularly calls on the port can handle about 4,500 TEUs.

CMA-CGM’s ‘Chateau Dif’ will make its last call on the TraPac Terminal April 27, ending its part in a shipping alliance involving the terminal operator’s parent company, Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. The French carrier’s restructuring of its service is a “beefed up” commitment to the port, Schleicher said.

He said the Port of Jacksonville is a good for
CMA-CGM because of the shipping company’s strong emphasis on refrigerated cargo and Jacksonville’s access to poultry and citrus markets. Plus, CMA-CGM’s car export business to West Africa mirrors the port’s own.

"Where it all ends I cant fathom my friends
If I knew I might toss out my anchor
So I cruise along always searchin for songs
Not a lawyer a thief or a banker

But a son of a son, son of a son
Son of a son of a sailor
Son of a gun, load the last ton
One step ahead of the jailer

Im just a son of a son, son of a son
Son of a son of a sailor
The seas in my veins, my tradition remains
Im just glad I dont live in a trailer"

Song and Lyrics By Jimmy Buffett, Thanx Jimmy - I'll see you at the dock.

27 April, 2009

Does High Speed Rail Meet "America's Logistics Center" in Jacksonville?

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It really wouldn't take a Transportation Genius to look at the proposed High Speed Rail Projects in the Southern United States and decide where the hinge pin is on rail passenger transport. As tempting a target as Atlanta might seem, once one is beyond Atlanta, on any side, they will be dealing with hundreds and hundreds of miles of beautiful tobacco and cotton fields. Regardless of the beauty of the Deep South, cotton and tobacco, don't by train tickets. Just to the South in the Sunshine State there is an equal several hundred miles of semi-urbanized growth. Indeed one could walk from the Alabama State Line, East almost all the way to St. Marks, some 200+ miles and never leave the sight of coastal resorts. Beyond the Panhandle, is Tallahassee, State Capitol, University Center and rapidly growing urban center. From Tallahassee to Jacksonville is about as rural as Florida gets, and even this area is dotted with small cities or large towns bursting at the seams.

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Jacksonville, as has been pointed out in several of these articles, holds the keys to the last great railroad Terminal in the Southeast. In fact so great is the opportunity in this hallowed Terminal, it dwarfs anything south of the Ohio River, Washington D.C. or East of Los Angeles. Once the busiest railroad station in the entire world (during the Great Florida Boom of the 1920's) today it slumbers oddly connected to a convention center of much more modest proportions. Plans have been floated to move the Convention Center to the East Side, of the Northbank, of Downtown Jacksonville. A Transportation Center of grand design may well take it's place, bringing with it a return of Amtrak to the heartbeat of the City. Government officials and CSX Railroad have already stated the Southeast High Speed Rail route will extend from the Northeast Corridor to Atlanta and Jacksonville Terminal. The other glaring difference? Atlanta no longer has any significant railway station forcing Georgia into the uncomfortable position of having to blow a hole right in the middle of that metropolis to replace what it once had.

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Moving South from Jacksonville, Florida becomes the Florida of legend. The beaches just get whiter and the resorts more plentiful. In fact as the Florida High Speed Rail project continues to focus on the Orlando - Tampa - Miami triangle, hardly an acre of ground from the Jacksonville City Limits 100 miles South to Daytona Beach, isn't already on some mega development map. Names like Palm Coast, Bartram Lakes, Nocatee, Flagler Center and World Golf Village literally cover as much as 10,000 acres each. If Florida High Speed Rail isn't terminated on the Northeast end in Jacksonville, one can easily sense the gridlock that is right around the bend. Miami, Tampa and Jacksonville, combined waste 200 Million hours in traffic each year. Incredible.

So what about Jacksonville, AKA: "America's Logistics Center?" Let's play a little map magic here, and imagine what could be. Perhaps no where else in the entire United States is the opportunity greater to bring 3 distinct High Speed Rail projects into one grand interchange Terminal then right here on the banks of the mighty St. John's River. A station already linked to the core via "The Jacksonville Skyway." a modern monorail system. A station that soon may be linked to the rest of the urban area with Bus, Commuter Rail and vintage streetcars. This is the place where trains or cars from Houston, could meet the trains from New York, and all routes could meet the Florida High Speed Rail Lines.

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So what needs to be done?

The Convention Center needs to move out as soon as possible, and reconstruction on the magnificent station's rail facilities started at once. The other Transportation Center components need to start their build out right in front of those 14 massive sandstone columns. Jacksonville and Florida need to get proactive, and create rail synergy. A summit of the 3 HSR planning agency's and every effected station on all 3 lines as well as standard Amtrak service.

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So in my crystal ball how likely is this to happen? I'd say just a glance at the map says VERY likely. Will there be 300 MPH trains? Perhaps someday, but in the meanwhile, I expect the bump of new cash being poured into HSR will really end up equalling "HIGHER" speed rail. Read that as "Amtrak on Steroids." Already north of our city between the Folkston Funnel and our current Amshack Station, the trains of Amtrak have no problem on the CSX racetrack, hitting 90 MPH. Maybe that's not your idea of HSR, but it's light years away from what we've seen over the last 35 years. Jacksonville, time to pull our collective heads out, we have been handed this on a golden platter, let's "Get R Done".

22 April, 2009

Jacksonville Mayor's Back Door To BRT

Looks just like Jacksonville to me. NOT!


It just had to happen, Mayor John Peyton, of Jacksonville finally showed his hand at the poker table. The long term disinterest in Mass Transit, the canceled LRT studies of the 1990's, and the sudden embrace of BRT as the be - all - save - all for our city. Nobody it seems can get to the king for all the Emperor's standing in the door. He has refused to meet with any group with an idea of Rail or any other alternate transit. Isn't this the behavior we would expect from this Mayor who's family owns both Gate Petroleum and Gate Concrete.


Here's the news release:


The city of Jacksonville has a new sibling.



Mayor John Peyton and Mayor Beto Richa of Curitiba, Brazil, signed an agreement making that Latin American city Jacksonville's seventh sister city.



The time is ripe.



Curitiba, located on Brazil's southern coast, is a river city. It is also a business center, having been chosen three times by the Revista Exame, a local business publication, as the best place in Brazil to do business.



But Jacksonville stands to gain more than enriched business opportunities from its relationship with Curitiba. It stands to gain lessons in sustainable living too.



According to Yes! Magazine - a nonprofit publication that focuses on sustainable environments -Curitiba has one of the world's best mass transit systems. Aided by a series of express lanes, its buses transport people quickly through town, and around 85 percent of the people use it.
Its urban planning model has been lauded by UNESCO as one that could be emulated in rebuilding Afghanistan cities, and its efforts toward recycling and conservation have earned it accolades as the ecological capital of Brazil.



One goal of Jacksonville's Sister Cities program is to stimulate economic development.
This new sister has the potential to offer the city more insights on strategies to put that development on a greener path.


Yeah, "Greener path on Earth Day 2009," more buses, more fumes, more pavement, more heat, more waste... This is pretty darn transparent, you can read between the lines for yourself.

11 April, 2009

Alabama Uses the "F" Word


In the early 20th century, Birmingham was served by seven railroads. Six of these joined together to form the Birmingham Terminal Company. The company hired Atlanta architect P. Thornton Marye to design the station. Its construction took two years and cost $2 million. Although the station's Byzantine style created some controversy, its opening in April 1909 was a major event for the city. A balloon race and a parade, led by Grand Marshal E. J. McCrossin, were held to celebrate. The Birmingham Terminal Station was the primary passenger station for Birmingham from 1909 until rail travel sharply declined in the 1950s. It filled two blocks of 26th Street North (now Carraway Boulevard) above the 5th Avenue North underpass. Originally the main train stop for out-of-town visitors, as automobile and air travel came in to prominence the building was neglected, it was finally torn down in 1969.


Architect Frank Milburne designed this Spanish Mission style station soon after 1900. It stood on West Trade St. and the railroad tracks, about where the Bus Station presently sits. Milburne fashioned a series of stations in this style. Indeed, Salisbury still has and has restored its Spanish Mission style railroad station. Legend holds that President Woodrow Wilson once asked whether the Charlotte Station was fireproof. When told that it was, Wilson supposedly said, "What a pity." The building was demolished in 1962.


Union Station in Atlanta was the smaller of two principal train stations in downtown, Terminal Station being the other. Opening in 1930, Union Station served the Georgia Railroad, Atlantic Coast Line (previously the Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Railroad), and Louisville and Nashville (previously the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway). It replaced earlier stations on the same site.
After the tenant railroads of Union Station had discontinued all their passenger trains -- the last such train operated the day before Amtrak came into existence -- the station was razed in 1972. Remnants of the platform may be seen behind the Atlanta Journal Constitution building although construction of Underground Atlanta and MARTA largely obliterated the site.


Terminal Station, designed by architect P. Thornton Marye was built in 1905. It stood at the northwest corner of Spring Street and Mitchell Street. After 65 years of service as a passenger railroad station, it closed in 1970 and was demolished in 1972.
The Richard B. Russell Federal Building, which opened in 1980, now stands on this spot.


Amtrak has offered Florida a pre-High Speed Rail plan of 5 trains each way per day, per route. Taken to the fullest possible extent, this would equate to 25 trains each way per day in Jacksonville's terminal, in other words 50 trains and that is without any Commuter Rail development.

It's time we held our own railroad summit meetings and pull every community from Norfolk, to Charlotte, Atlanta , Birmingham and New Orleans into a Jacksonville Hub promotion. Atlanta is making noise like they'd love to be the new rail center of the Southeast, but keep in mind Atlanta destroyed and complete buried any trace of both Union Station and Terminal Station. Birmingham wants in too but has the drawbacks that most of the current New York - Southeast traffic by passes them by as it moves up and down the East Coast. Charlotte and North Carolina have become leaders in their own regions by funding and then pulling Amtrak across the State to build a Carolina Corridor. Again, station and numbers still favor an East Coast city. So it all comes back to Jacksonville, the pin in the Southeastern hinge of rail transportation.

Even the planners on the side of other cities are savvy enough to know the "F Word" aka: FLORIDA must be included for them to have any chance of success. If we continue to fiddle in both Tallahassee and Jacksonville, they might just discover a way to cut us out of the majority of these new rail projects. We need a RAIL SUMMIT JACKSONVILLE, with confident city promotional figures to tour our great Jacksonville Terminal, and start planning how they can connect with this hub. Meanwhile over in Birmingham, planning for Atlanta, New Orleans and Houston, they still toss the bone to Jacksonville as every railroad line into the state passes through our Terminal.

From the Birmingham Business Journal:

The Birmingham City Council is getting behind efforts to bring high speed rail to Alabama.

Three weeks after the state reversed its position and released $120,000 to pay delinquent membership dues to the Southern High-Speed Rail Commission, Birmingham’s City Council will debate allocating matching funds for federal intercity passenger planning and construction programs. A resolution supporting the Southern High-Speed Rail Commission’s efforts to create a line between Atlanta and New Orleans is scheduled to be introduced at the April 14 council meeting. A Southeastern high-speed rail line could mean billions worth of construction projects with regional leaders negotiating with the federal government to provide as much as 80 percent of the funds.

The council’s Transportation and Communications Committee voted unanimously to send the resolution to the full committee. Councilor Carol Duncan chairs the committee and said the timing is right to back efforts to upgrade city, regional and national transportation infrastructure.

“We’re really moving and it is getting exciting,” Duncan said. “Funding should be put in place. We’re getting ourselves in place so it can happen in Alabama.”

Alabama’s Southern High-Speed Rail Commission chapter needs $1.3 million to complete feasibility studies, according to state commission representative Richard Finley. He said just the Atlanta-Birmingham line could be a $400 million project.

Duncan said the state and region are working to ensure the funds needed for Alabama to have a seat at the high-speed rail table are available.

Finley, chairman of the Southern High-Speed Rail Commission, will host the group composed of representatives from Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi in Birmingham on April 23. The commission will discuss a plan of action for seeking federal funding to transform Crescent Corridor into a high-speed rail line.

Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford has called his own summit of 15 Mid-South mayors to unite behind a line that could link Atlanta and Houston. Langford mailed invitations for his April 30 summit on April 3. The mayors of Atlanta, Houston, Tuscaloosa, Meridian, Miss., Anniston, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Biloxi, Gulfport, Miss., Mobile are among those Langford invited.

He hopes to forge a partnership with his peers to broker a major regional economic development project. With the federal government allotting $8 billion for high speed rail projects, Langford said a united effort is needed.

“We must join forces and agree to cooperate if the mutual interests of our communities are to be met and that we are to receive our fair share of the funds devoted to what I am calling the ‘Mid-South High Speed Rail Corridor,” Langford’s invitation said.

Meridian, Miss. John Robert Smith applauded Langford’s vision and efforts to help the region speak with one voice as it seeks its slice of the federal high-speed rail pie.

“The corridors that link Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Texas and Alabama are critical for the future development of the Southeast,” Smith said. “Mayors are the strongest and best advocates for rail in this country.”


You see Mr. and Ms. Jacksonville politician, ours still stands and it just awaits your call to become the hub of the Southeast. Just remember when looking for railroads and funding, the "F" word is Florida, and Florida Railroad is spelled J-A-C-K-S-O-N-V-I-L-L-E.

06 April, 2009

BLUEPRINT FOR JAXPORT IS FOUND IN COMMUTER RAIL



Unlike other Florida cities, Jacksonville alone is a sea of railroad tracks. One time home to the Worlds Busiest Passenger Terminal (during the Great Florida Boom of the Roaring Twenty's), and certainly one of the largest Terminal Stations in the nation. 32 tracks, split roughly 60/40 stub and through, the great station served every passenger train entering or exiting the state (with few exceptions) until 1974.

Today freight trains of Norfolk Southern, CSX and Florida East Coast still rumble past the silent platforms and pedestrian tunnels. The Jacksonville Transportation Authority has an eye on Commuter Rail, and has completed the first two studies which have laid out a 90 mile starter system on three distinct rail lines, North, Southeast, Southwest.


Meanwhile over at JaxPort, the talk is all about building a new rail yard that they suppose will whisk away 2 Million Containers a year. Currently ranked number 19 in North America in container volume and number 2 in automotive imports, the new terminals built around trade with the Orient promise to rocket us into the number 3 or 4 position in the Nation. Dredge the river channel for Post Panamax ships, build the new rail yard, and everything will be rosy... Well not quite.

So here is a recent headline article in the Jacksonville Business Journal, taken from the recent seminars, breakfasts and meetings on JaxPort. They elude to the unknown that dredging and another railroad yard will be the fix we need. Their going to be sorely disappointed.

Game on for Jacksonville
Jacksonville Business Journal

Jacksonville’s economic development marching orders came across loud and clear at the Global Trade and Transportation breakfast this week: Find $500 million from federal, state and local government to dredge the St. Johns River to handle larger ships, make sure the Hanjin shipping company joins Mitsui to cement the city’s Asian trade ties, and finish the road and rail improvements needed to maximize the port’s ability to move cargo.


Succeed at these tasks and cement Jacksonville’s future as a premier port on the East Coast, while broadening the city’s economic base considerably. Or fail, and watch the ports of Savannah, Charleston and Norfolk eat our lunch. Yes, the choice is that clear-cut.
The river dredging is the linchpin. Here’s why:

The reason the shippers Mitsui and Hanjin want terminals here is to develop a hub for direct trade from Asia to the East Coast. The Panama Canal is being improved to allow larger cargo ships through, which are more cost-efficient for the shippers. The canal improvements should be done by 2014.
So what is the fix?



Blue Lines = Florida East Coast

Green Lines = CSXT

Black Lines = Norfolk Southern

Red Lines = Shortlines
Pink and Purple Lines = Abandoned rail subject to rebuilding
YELLOW LINES = Subject of this article and JTA/JPA Future North Line Commuter Rail District


The fix for JAXPORT is Commuter Rail North, plain and simple, the City buying the entire former CSX Kingsland Subdivision, and perhaps the Norfolk Southern's St. Johns River Terminal rail lines. From the Export Yard near the Stadium, Grand Crossing in the Westside through the Springfield Yard, Talleyrand Terminals, over the Trout River, to Blount Island, TriPac and all the way to Yulee. Getting JTA and JPA to create The Jacksonville RAIL Authority, and getting said Authority to quickly rebuild the former "S Line" between Union Terminal, and Springfield Yard, establishing Commuter Rail, at least as far North as the International Airport.

So what does JaxPort have to do with Commuter Trains and railroads? Glad you asked. At this point over 1/2 of our port is locked into CSX. For all the railroad diversity we have downtown, the Florida East Coast and Norfolk Southern are effectively cut out of the game. Saying our port is served by 3 major railroads is misleading when more then half of the terminals are captive. What good is it to try and sell shippers on the 3 railroad package when CSX says it will take them 5 full days to move a box car from Blount Island on the City's Northside, the the FEC / NS interchanges near Jacksonville Terminal.


If the City of Jacksonville and FDOT bought the former Seaboard Air Line Mainline, replaced the missing link from Jacksonville Terminal to Springfield Yard (already in City hands), it would effectively open the door to ease traffic congestion. Moreover it could all be operated as the JaxPort Railroad, a terminal road with neutral switching access by all carriers. Who needs a new rail yard when we already have the largely empty Springfield Yard which could easily be rehabilitated into a first class container facility. Who needs a one railroad port, when we already have plans for Commuter Rail on those same tracks? Why not bust the port wide open and create a quick, responsive, shortline/terminal road.

Not only would CSX retain every carload that any customer currently requests via a CSX routing, The Florida East Coast and Norfolk Southern wouldn't have to bypass the Port and hustle everything to the new Titusville Intermodal facility in order the expedite shipments. Moreover by linking Port/ACE + Freight Railroad/FRA + Transit/FTA + Commuter Rail/FRA + Station Security/DHS, and beautification/FDOT, we open hundreds of more avenues by which to obtain those vital federal grants.

Then, and only then, will we be able to honestly claim we have 3 railroad service choices for our port shippers. Only then will we be able to control the destiny of our Commuter Rail and Passenger Terminal. The day that the first RDC car rumbles over the Trout River and the big diesels of FEC or NS freely mix with CSX out at Tri-Pac, JaxPort and JTA will have come of age.

TAMPA STREETCAR TO EXPAND

Large double truck Birney type car is leading Tampa's open car through Channelside.


Tampa Bay Online reports that the Hillsboro Area Regional Transit (HART) has received federal stimulus money to expand the TECO streetcar line.


About $1 million, will go toward extending the streetcar into downtown. The nearly $5 million project is poised to begin this summer. The board approved a contract with Kimmins Contracting Corp. this morning.


HART wants to extend the streetcar system about four blocks, from outside the Tampa Convention Center to Whiting Street, in the hope of boosting ridership between downtown, the Channelside District and Ybor City. Officials said the project will take about nine months.

KANSAS CITY SOUTHERN COMING TO JACKSONVILLE?


Is this a sign of the mega-railroad of the near future? Norfolk Southern + Kansas City Southern + Florida East Coast, would be one hell of a marriage. Such a merger would create a line from New England to Central Mexico, and from Kansas City to Miami. Of course there is no official word or even a good roumor that this might come about, but with the railroad industry continuing to be riding high, adding capacity and miles, anything could happen. Jacksonville's transportation watchers will enjoy seeing the occasional colorful Kansas City Southern Diesels rolling through our City. Someone at the Chamber of Commerce needs to remind KCS and NS where the nations fastest growth port is... Got wheat and corn? We have ships, lots and lots of ships.



Kansas City Southern Railway, Florida East Coast and Norfolk Southern Railway on March 30 began offering container and trailer service from Dallas to the Norfolk Southern - Florida East Coast, new Titusville, Fla., terminal. Traffic is routed over KCSR from Dallas to Meridian, Miss.; and over NS from Meridian to Jacksonville, and the Floridca East Coast from Jacksonville to Titusville. Previously, KCSR moved central Florida-destined intermodal shipments to Meridian, and NS moved the loads from Meridian to the Norfolk Southern's massive intermodal terminal in Jacksonville's Simpson Yard, where it was trucked to various distribution centers. The new routing provides intermodal marketing companies and asset providers a more cost-effective option, and enables KCSR to be more competitive with over-the-road carriers, the Class I said.

On The Grow In The Port of Jacksonville


Culled from the Jacksonville and the Charlotte NC Business Journal the following articles which give our readers an idea of things to come. With the second new Oriental Terminal moving into construction, it seems the sky is the limit. Even in these bad economic times, Jacksonville seems to have at least one guiding light. JaxPort.


Monday, April 6, 2009, 1:48pm EDT
Fascination embarks record number of passengers from Jacksonville
Jacksonville Business Journal
The Jacksonville Port Authority’s cruise terminal set a record last week when 2,623 passengers embarked on Carnival Cruise Lines’ Fascination cruise to Half Moon Cay and Nassau, Bahamas.

The previous record for a single cruise was 2,539 passengers, set earlier this year. The record-breaking cruise comes after the authority pulled back on its plans to build a $60 million terminal in Mayport Village to focus on its cargo business and see how the cruise industry weathers the recession.


Port of Jacksonville traffic edges up
Jacksonville Business Journal

The amount of traffic through the Port of Jacksonville in fiscal year 2008 increased by 1 percent to nearly 8.4 million tons, compared to 2007, according to its recently released annual report.

The port remains the nation’s second busiest vehicle handling port and 12th busiest container port.

The authority’s operating revenue increased by 6.2 percent to $42.4 million.

Its operating expenses increased by $5 million to $30 million, while its operating income fell from $14.5 million to $12 million.

Roll-on-roll-off traffic — mainly cars, trucks and heavy equipment — increased by 7 percent to its record level of about 567,000 units.

Bulk cargo, which includes crushed limestone and other aggregates, increased by nearly 10 percent to about $2.5 million tons.

Breakbulk cargo, which includes lumber, paper and steel, fell about 18 percent to 950,000 tons.

Container traffic remained steady at about 3.6 million tons.

23 March, 2009

GO TO THE BACK OF THE BUS - OVER THE TOP IN JACKSONVILLE

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COULD JTA BE A PIONEER?

For many years the phrase "Go to the back of the bus," had a terrible and racist connotation to it. Images of Ms. Rosa Parks, refusing to surrender her seat, and the subsequent race riots of the 1960's. From that point on, the terms used to describe poor bus service came to be either, "The back of the bus," or "The short bus".

According to City records, The Jacksonville Traction Company, was successful in ousting the segregation laws by 1930. At that time most of the States of the Southeastern part of the country had strict racial segregation on all public transportation. A recent visit to the Texas Electric Railroad Museum in Plano (north of Dallas) allowed me to see first hand some small brass flag like devices mounted over the rear passenger seats in the coach. When one pulls the lever down a etched sign drops out of the wall that says simply "COLORED".

Commuters as far west as Dallas were apparently separated well into the 1940's, 50's or early 60's. Not so on the true deep south streetcars in Jacksonville. The fact growing up in Jacksonville in this same era, I recall the typical fuss on the bus was who was going to get to sit in the back of the bus! Somehow, perhaps starting with our streetcar routes, we were "Back of the Bus pioneers."

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Once again we are toying with a back of the bus experience. As one of the most sprawled cities in the nation, largest in land mass in the lower 48 states, we have some pretty painful commutes. Among the leading congestion area's are service to our beach cities within Duval County, Orange Park in Clay County and Ponte Vedra in St. Johns County. There is simply no way to get to these bedroom communities via bus or car without spending an hour or so stuck in near gridlock.

12 years ago JTA took delivery on 3 MCI (Motor Coach Industries) over the road - Commuter Configured - Motor Coaches. No mere city bus these are the thoroughbred, air suspended, inter-city style rolling salons. People scoffed at the idea that the high rollers in places like Ponte Vedra or Sawgrass would ever ride the bus. Then they tried them out in a joint demonstration program between MCI and JTA.

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So what did Jacksonville think about them? Here are the surveys...

WS50 Free Ride Survey Results:

9 Total completed Surveys.


Did you like your ride?

Responses: 9 Yes

0 No


Comparable to other JTA buses:

Responses: More comfortable, Quiet, Nice, Climate Controlled, Smooth Ride, Cleaner, Smells Nice.


Like Most?

Responses: Comfort, Reclining Seats, Cleanliness, Quite, Smoother Ride, More Room, Climate Controlled, Spacious.


Like Least?

Responses: No Stewardess, Intercom System, NOTHING, Smell.


Other Comments: It was great, thanks for the free week. We want this bus permanent on WS50! Better bus for 30 minute trip. Great job. Nice to have this bus all the time. Please add TV’s to bus. Would be more inclined to ride bus with a bus like this on route.


BH50 Free Ride Survey Results

37 Total Completed Surveys.


Did you like your ride?

Responses: 37 Yes

0 No


Comparable to other JTA buses:

Responses: Wonderful, Better, Great Smell, Ride, Step Above, Don’t Compare, Smoother, Less Noise, Personal Space, Clean, Enjoyable, Green to the Environment, The Bomb, No Comparison, Nice Seats, Convenient, Better, More Seats, Want to see it in Service Soon, Computer Compatible, Less Noise, Cozy, Love the Details, Seems like a faster ride.


Like Most?

Responses: Seats, See more Sites, Cleanliness, Individual Lights, Quiet, Comfort, The Driver, Smooth, Coach Style, Luggage Bins, Leg Room, Nice Seats, Reclining Chairs, Electrical Outlets, EVERYTHING, Look, Smell, Fun,


Like Least?

Responses: NOTHING, Overhead Lights, Knowing it Won’t Stick Around, Narrow Isles, Entrance Steps, Not Equipped for Handicapped, Narrower Seats.


Other Comments: Thank You! Awesome Bus. BH50 is GREAT! Just thanks a lot! Wish all buses were as nice as this. Keep providing better service. Do not change this bus. With increased taxes, this is what JTA should be like. Want this bus permanent. Get more like this. I like the ride. Please keep this bus on route. Let’s keep going JTA, Thank You! Thank You. We need this everyday. Get more buses like this. We need more of these buses, please!


X2 Free Ride Survey Results:

29 Total completed Surveys.


Did you like your ride?

Responses: 29 Yes

0 No


Comparable to other JTA buses:

Responses: Quite, Roomier, Better, Nicer, Smoother Ride, Clean, No Ads on Windows, New Seats, No Comparison, Quieter, Cleaner, Superior, Additional Accessories, Heater works, This is the best, Smell good.


Like Most?

Responses: Seats, Smooth Ride, Very Pleasant, Quieter, Smoother Ride, Seats, It was new and smelled great!, Quite, Heater Works, Reclining padded seats, Reclining Seats, No wind noise, Reading Lights, Comfortable, Blue Isle Lights, Roomier, Bright and Clean, Great suspension, Kudos, High Back Seats, Reading Lights, Adjustable Vents, Smells Good.



Other Comments: Good to have new bus. You’re doing a great job! Love it! Overhead storage is seldom used. Very nice. Please consider adding to X2 route! We want TV’s showing news, sports, etc. Please remove ads from windows.Buses like this would encourage riders. Keep this bus!



X4 Free Ride Survey Results:

8 Total completed Surveys.


Did you like your ride?

Responses: 8 Yes

0 No


Comparable to other JTA buses:

Responses: No comparison, Clean, Comfy seats, New, Nice, Smooth ride, Likes handles, and reclining seats, Delux.


Like Most?

Responses: Relaxing, Smell, Comfy, Good condition, Everything, Tall backs, Cushioned seats, Quite, Clean, Lighted interior, Nice Bell, No PSAs.


Like Least?

Responses: Hope lights and AC vents last longer, Driver could not operate the AC, Not enough leg room.


Other Comments: I will only ride this bus or one comparable!

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That last comment, "I will only ride this bus or one comparable" says a volume about what is wrong with a City Bus on a long commute and what is right about a proper vehicle. As often happens on long commutes into suburbia the neighborhood end point may be higher income, white collar, executive type, choice riders. These are people who normally would never darken the door of a transit bus.

Many managers and executives see their automobile as a sort of cool down asylum. Though it might mean sitting in traffic for a hour, it's a chance to listen to music or catch up on the news in a familiar, non threatening environment. But what if we could do better? What if he or she could watch the TV news on the way home? What if they could catch up on their notes? Work an hour on the Laptop? Play a game? Use the restroom? Get a cup of coffee? Hold a meeting? Eat a pastry? Wash your hands? Sleep? What if all of this could be done while moving down the freeway in complete security?

While the brand name of the coach may vary from agency to agency, according to local preference, this could be done with MCI, Prevost-Volvo, Silver Eagle, Van Hool or any other line of fine motor coaches.

Until now the deluxe coach has been the exclusive world of the upper end charter and tour business. Maybe it's time for a change. Jacksonville is leading the way in this area, by considering a completely new type of coach.

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Maybe it's time for a hybrid, part commuter and part railroad lounge car? Ever heard it said that more major business deals have been brokered in the lounge cars of the New York area commuter trains then any other place on earth? Then why has it taken the industry so long to catch that attraction and wrap it up in a coach? While the idea is still in the developmental stage, it's interesting to speculate on the merits of this concept. Indeed if it's ordered in Jacksonville, it won't be a ride but more like a destination. Imagine the possibilities. Go to the back of the Bus? I can't wait.

Photos courtesy of MCI, PREVOST CAR - Volvo, SILVER EAGLE

18 March, 2009

What if Amtrak Catches Jacksonville with it's Terminal Down?

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Bringing back the last great station in the Southeast


In a great update from the Treasure Coast Palm, it appears that the long awaited Amtrak - Florida East Coast Route might be rolling through the city while we're still doing studies of our studies. The Terminal downtown (now called the Prime Osbourne Convention Center) sits empty except for the occasional boat, gun or home show. Just under 80,000 Square Feet of new space that could be recycled into a condensed multi-modal Terminal. The great part of this idea is that we wouldn't touch a single wall of the original Head House Station, leaving it to reopen for Passengers.

Here's the run on the progress with the FEC RY:


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This scene would remain the same with either plan


Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council to request stimulus money for passenger train service
By Jim Turner,
Tuesday,
March 17, 2009

Treasure Coast leaders hope to get passenger train service back on the Florida East Coast rails with federal economic stimulus money.
The Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council intends to ask Gov. Charlie Crist and Secretary of Transportation Stephanie Kopelousos, along with the area’s Legislative and Congressional delegations, to support efforts to use about $100 million in federal relief money for Amtrak to bring passenger service back to the FEC tracks between Jacksonville and Miami.
“It’s not a new idea, but it’s still a good one,” said Mike Busha, executive director of the planning council. “We’re trying to expand people’s options for getting around without having to spend so much money or energy.”
Amtrak and the FEC were close to a deal to put the rail service through the Treasure Coast in 2002, with stations to sprout up in Martin, St. Lucie and Indian River counties. But the proposal was quashed at the time because of questions over Amtrak spending and ridership.
But as gas prices rose the past two years, the service’s budget was doubled. Earlier this year, $8 billion in stimulus money was announced for developing new high-speed rail service nationwide, and Vice President Joe Biden on Friday announced that $1.3 billion in additional stimulus money would go to the government-owned service.
Included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act announced by Biden is $10.5 million to construct a new station for the Auto Train in Sanford.
State DOT Planning and Policy Analysis Administrator David Lee said Florida officials are awaiting the federal government to provide criteria for the high-speed corridor projects.
Busha said returning passenger service to the tracks along the eastern side of the Treasure Coast would improve transportation in the region, which translates into better business opportunities and improved quality of living.
“It’s building a mobile network, very attractive, low-stress, low-energy transportation system,” he said. “It’s very attractive to investors when they see a region that has all its basis covered, not just by the private automobile.”
Vero Beach, Fort Pierce and Stuart were all once stops on the line put down by Henry Flagler in the 1890s and local leaders believe the downtown in each area could be used for new stations.
But the Treasure Coast isn’t the only area seeking money for passenger rail service.
Led by state Sen. Andy Gardiner, R-Orlando, supporters of the $1.2 billion, 61-mile commuter rail project to run from DeLand in Volusia County through downtown Orlando to Poinciana in Osceola, will have a midday rally Wednesday in Tallahassee.
Amtrak’s current route north goes from Miami to West Palm Beach before branching west to Okeechobee, over to the Orlando area and then moving back east to Jacksonville, where the route mostly hugs the East Coast through New York City, stopping in Portland, Maine.
Treasure Coast passenger rail history
• 1892-94: Rail service was extended south from Daytona, running along the Indian River, by Henry Flagler.
• 1968: Passenger service was discontinued on the Florida East Coast tracks because of labor unrest.
• The plan to expand passenger rail service using the FEC rail lines was first proposed in 1994 and revived in 2000. There was talk about expanding to the Treasure Coast by 2003.
• Negotiations between Amtrak and the Florida Department of Transportation stalled in 2002 after the government said the rail company no longer could add new routes.
• 2008: Local officials asked Gov. Charlie Crist and Congressional representatives to ask Amtrak to include the Treasure Coast in a study of reintroducing passenger service on the FEC lines between West Palm Beach and Miami.

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Facing the former ticket counters in the empty Head House "Convention Center".

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The Front of the JTC as engineered by JTA and FDOT note that the tracks on the far left would be lowered to creek level, someone missed the story of the two previous stations that were flooded out. Almost 400,000 Cu Yd's of fill and "they" want to remove it?

So it's getting close to "put up"or "shut up" time.


If we keep the "Prime Osbourne Center" where it is, our Transportation Center will forever be crippled. It's the railroad and bus equal to building a new fast food restaurant at the junction of runway 4L 22 R and 9L 27 R at Chicago O'Hara International Airport.

The City of Jacksonville, has just recently started making moves to enlarge the Convention Center, and thankfully most of these ideas get it out of the surface Transportation Center of Florida. Se la vie.



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The State and JTA rendering with a scattered Transportation "Center" built around a useless Convention Center. When we looked at a redesign we didn't change a single element.

Everything done up to this point is planned around that poorly located, too small to compete, albatross of a Convention Center. So the resulting drawings with their several elements have been scattered over a 5 block area of La Villa in Downtown Jacksonville. IF we follow any of these plans which build around the historic train Terminal, we are going to build America's most sprawled "center"; a place where passengers regularly drag their bags 3 blocks up the hill.

Ennis Davis, an Urban Planner, and myself sat down at the dinner table and I laid out the concept. What if we move the Convention Center and use the same design plans and elements that the City and State have already done? What if we relocated those buildings into a dense, compact Transportation Village? Ennis thought it was a pretty cool idea and went to work putting the parts together.

The new plan doesn't touch a single plot of new ground North of the Depot. It would remove about 2/3 of the new exhibition hall behind the station and recycle the remaining part into offices and Intercity Bus Station. Everything else fits neatly on the grounds between the Depot and the Freeway to the West. The only other change which is going to be required no matter what happens, is the new Lee Street viaduct will have to be re-rebuilt to obtain clearance for 8 to 12 through tracks, hopefully without removing another spade of fill dirt.



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The Layout Above is the plan concieved by Robert Mann and Drawn in Rendering by Ennis Davis

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Skyway, photographed from Jacksonville Terminal, it's a snap to get downtown or to the hotels.

So here comes Amtrak and the FEC Ry, the Governor, The Treasure Coast, The Gold Coast and the whole Florida delegation... Where the heck is Jacksonville? We should be a the head of this pack as we stand the gain the most from it. It's do it or lose it time.
Photos: JTA, Ennis Davis, Metro-Jacksonville.com, Robert Mann




05 March, 2009

FERRY READY FOR BUCCANEER TRAIL CROWDS




Welcome home Jean. Early this morning March 5, 2009, the magnificent mid sized ferry "Jean Ribault", returned to regular service across the deep shipping channel at the mouth of the Saint Johns River, at Mayport, Jacksonville.


  • She was sorely missed by those many thousand commuters, fishermen, beach bums, and vacationers that venture along The Buccaneer Trail, Florida highway A-1-A. For those in far away places think of the famous Pacific Coast Highway, 101, in California with a definite Margaretaville influence. Without the Mayport Ferry, it simply had a great big hole in the middle of the journey.

    New fares and schedule for the St. Johns River Ferry, effective Nov. 1:
    FARES
    Pedestrian/bicycle.........................$1
  • Motorcycle......................................$3
  • 2-axle vehicle.................................$5
  • Each additional axle......................$1
  • Passenger bus...............................$10
  • Coupon book (20 crossings).......$60

    SCHEDULE

Mayport Village to Ft. George Island:
6 a.m., 6:20 a.m., 7 a.m. and continuing on the hour and half hour, with final departure at 7 p.m.
7 a.m., 7:30 a.m., 8 a.m. and continuing on the hour and half hour, with final departure at 8:30


Interesting that this was simply a regular "medical" check-up required by law. The Jacksonville Port Authority which has graciously operated the vital service since Governor Crist flushed the funding from the State of Florida. The grand little ship should have returned on Feb. 23, but once in dry dock at Atlantic Marine the inspectors noted greater problems then anticipated in regular maintenance, so she was laid up for the extra days to make her whole again.


While the details of the added work are not known all is ship shape and she is once again crossing paths with giant container, freighter, tanker and passenger cruise ships, offering some of the greatest maritime views of a busy shipping channel to be found anywhere.

The first European Settlement in North America was founded when Frenchman Jean Ribault and the Huguenots that were with him established a village at the Mouth of a mighty river. It was called Mayport, and it's comforting to know that after 450 years, his name is still sailing on these waters.

Bus and Tour operators should pay attention to this ship and it's highway, from Fernandina's Centre Street, Fort Clinch, and snow white beaches, within the next 100 miles you'll find:



Southbound American Beach (America's first African - American Beach), Amelia Island Plantation, Amelia Island State Park, Big Talbot Island, Little Talbot Island, Huguenot Beach, Fort George Island The Timucuain National Preserve, Kingsley Plantation, Huguenot Beach, Seafood, THE FERRY, Mayport, more Seafood and fishing fleet, Naval Basin 4Th Fleet Mayport, US Coast Guard Station Mayport, Hanna Park, Atlantic Beach - Neptune Beach Downtown , Jacksonville Beach Sea walk, Jacksonville Beach Pier, Amphitheater, Historical Museum, Ponte Vedra Beach, Sawgrass PGA home course and HQ, Guano State Park, Tolomato River Park, Vilano Beach, St. Augustine, Castillo De San Marco's National Park, French Quarter, Spanish Quarter, Lighthouse, Lighthouse Park Pier, St. Augustine Beach, Franklin B Butler Park, Crescent Beach, Fort Matanzas National Park, Marineland, Washington Oaks Gardens and rocky beach, Flagler Beach, Flagler Beach Municipal Pier, Gamble Rodgers State Recreation Area at Flagler Beach. Whoever said "There is nothing to do in Jacksonville," had obviously missed
A-1-A.

Great job Jax Port and just in time for the March madness, Spring Break and Summer fun in Jacksonville.

01 March, 2009

Monorail Ephemeral Sequences of Pure Ambient Transport.

I would like if I may to take you on a strange journey.
It seemed a fairly ordinary night when



I awoke early eager to talk about a new system of bicycle lanes in my section of the city. It's another crisp spring day in Jacksonville, cobalt blue sky's and a slight breeze in a cool 60 degree temperature. Since my drive from San Jose isn't that far away, I don't regularly use the alternative transit modes provided. I rather enjoy having my car "Skyway Close" for any business that may suddenly inspire me to head out of town. Parking my Avanti at the corner next to the Florida East Coast Railway and Atlantic Avenue crossing has been my early morning habit since they opened the new parking garage that vaults the railroad.

On the West side of the station, a steady stream of buses arrived and departed to and from neighborhoods, offices and industries throughout the city. It's easy to hear the distinct Detroit Diesel on the Silver Eagle motor coaches that come rolling in on the express lines from JTB, Beach and Atlantic, they sound different and offer so much more comfort then the usual city bus fare. The really sneaky buses are the Trolley Coaches that come humming up from Mandarin on the San Jose Bus lanes. No pollution and no more sound then our Skyway, these giant articulated coaches make the trek on several of the city's primary feeder routes.

The coffee and tea boutique at the Atlantic Commuter Station was crowded with a mix of every culture, class, race and purpose, though this particular line seems a bit heavy on the suit and tie or hospital uniform club. Several times each day the Southbank Line is called the "green train" due to the number of green uniformed medical professionals using it to access the Baptist Medical Center stations.

As a Southbound JAXTRAX Commuter Rail train rolls in on track 1, platform A, the early crowd is mesmerized by the alternately flashing headlights and JAXTRAX's unique Mars or Gyro-Lites. I have to confess watching this early morning train stop at the Atlantic Commuter Station while heading Southbound seemed an exercise in futility, yet as many as a dozen persons boarded headed to jobs or homes in the suburbs. I was having so much fun just watching the crowds that I hardly noticed the sleek 6 car monorail train sitting on the other side of platform A. But somewhere during the arrival and departure of the JAXTRAX show, the doors had been opened and it was now in the final stages of loading. Jumping on just before the doors shut seems to be a personal trademark of mine.
In the velvet darkness
Of the blackest night
Burning bright.
There's a guiding star
No matter what or who you are.
As usual my Skyway train, the star of this story, left the station a minute late, causing the inbound train to hold at the station switch until we got out. At least it wasn't me this time, but a group of German? businessmen that seem to have just discovered this little Jacksonville miracle. Then again perhaps not, as they disembark in the patio level station and beer garden of the Hilton Hotel. It dawns on me that like so many other visitors, they were simply aboard for the novelty of the small but most active monorail network in the United States. Already the gardens are full of guests or business people enjoying their special eggs Benedict.

It seems that we barely move until we are in the older Kings Avenue Station. Some of the local buses, especially those that shuttle from downtown just over the bridges to tap the edge of the Southbank business district, are already busy picking up passengers and dropping off others for the Skyway trek. Since this station was instrumental in a plan to make the buildings on Kings Avenue double faced, it has become a more popular stop. Those little boutiques and restaurants now face both the street and the Skyway, and it has brought both a great deal of life.

Our signal, visible from the front car blinks to green as another Southbound train rolls past on the other track. We pull North and click - clack through the switches to the Miccosukee Nations giant casino and Southern Rock Hall of Fame at a site I remember as an old JEA power plant, in fact it seems that in my earliest memories, there was once a shipyard there. We continue to bank around to the West and parallel to the St. Johns River. At a station called Riverplace, a new high rise is taking shape. For the time being the Skyway doesn't stop as the building is being built with the Skyway Station in it's atrium. A short skywalk will carry pedestrian traffic from the new Southbank Tower to the new Crown Plaza Hotel. All too soon the speculation ends as we clear the temporary plywood tunnels and emerge on our final approach to the Prudential Junction Station.

At Prudential Junction the Train loses most if not all of the medical professionals and a few more passengers. This being a unique three level station allows folks to access the mezzanine floor of the Prudential Headquarters building just one floor below our arrival level. The entire floor was converted into a micro-mall with several shops and tiny food vendor businesses that thrive off of a broad demographic mix of traffic. With the Naval and History museums, riverwalk and Friendship Park and the spectacular fountain, this station even does a brisk tourist trade. A local joke has it that JTA will someday install a roller coaster from the 3 level station to the park. Jaxon's are always teasing our guests when they ask for directions down on the riverwalk or park area, "Did you walk or ride the roller-coaster over here?"

As soon as our train departs from Prudential Junction Station we click or clatter through another switch and bank off to the Northwest. An inbound train from Baptist hospitals stations and Aetna is waiting for us to clear so it can shuttle in load and reverse it's direction back on it's single track line to the medical center.

Accelerating to a faster clip we no climb up and over the beautiful St. Elmo Acosta Bridge. Moving the blue lights off of this bridge and having local artists create two large orange colored gateways up and over the Skyway some 90 feet apart and connected by a fixed "bridge" resembling a light artistic version of the original Acosta Bridge or the current Alsop Bridge on Main Street, when it is in the lifted position. It's just a remarkable piece of work all of which has orange lighting at night just shouts a salute to Jacksonville's earliest and loudest transit advocate. Yes from the Beach Road now called Beach Boulevard to a never built high speed electric Interurban Railway and beach trolley buses, Acosta was the fighting commissioner of the late 1920's. The remodeled Acosta also has two other notable features, a protected bicycle and pedestrian lane, as well as water curtain formed by tubes and jets hidden up under the pedestrian cantilever on the Downtown or East Side. Whenever the City puts on a fireworks show or any other nighttime event downtown, laser projections send giant life like cartoons, and images dancing along the river under that bridge. I believe we claim that at times, the Acosta Bridge is the worlds largest movie screen.


As we leave the bridge, we are quite low to the ground to duck under the on ramps for the auto portion of the bridge, then we quickly rise and pass over Bay Street. Here we clatter through the metal moving beam switches of the Skyway maintenance, Brooklyn and Riverside Avenue line. As we are on what is today considered the mainline of the Skyway, there is another 6 car train waiting for us to pass so it can follow us off the Riverside line. We ourselves continue to roll toward Central Station as we turn back east into the Central Business District.

Central Station received a complete remake and today functions as much a part of the Omni Hotel and Parking Garage or CSX Tower Two as it does a commuter station. It certainly still forms a major transfer point with the people headed for Bay Street Station, Jacksonville Terminal and Transportation Center, Brooklyn - Riverside, or Hemming Plaza, Rosa Parks, FCCJ, or Shand's Medical Center. The new 3Rd floor deck of the Station has a large balcony that rings the second floor boarding platforms, a quick trip up the elevator or escalator takes on inside the aforementioned buildings and all the sundry small businesses that have sprouted in that new balcony-skywalk section that ties it all together.

Pulling away on the East Line our train continues above Bay Street to the unique Laura Street Station that is modeled after a Chicago EL Train from a 1935 movie. This mostly steel station vaults the entire intersection of Laura and Bay, with entry's to the Modis and Bank of America Buildings on the lower levels and all under a roof. I think this inspiration came from the rebuilding and beautification that the city did on the Laura Strip back when the prohibition of parking meters went into effect.

When we proceed we pass another train inbound from the East Side of downtown and at this early hour, it would appear that it carry's just as many passengers as mine started out with. We roll into the Newnan Station next to the Convention Center and the new InterContinental Hotel, which along with the Convention Center extend out and cover all of the old municipal or county property's along Bay. Newnan is the station where the streetcars come up from Water Street, much to the delight of the hotel and convention crowd on their way out to the fairgrounds, ball parks or historic Springfield. It's also possible to catch the streetcar here that loops back past the glass and steel county courthouse that finally got completed by a new mayor a couple of years ago. While my jury's still out on my feelings about it, the mayor did say he was going to change the design and complete it, something he did in record time. With that outside steel frame and black and silver metal work it stands like a giant on that edge of the business district. But to me it still looks like something from the set of the famous movie "Metropolis," or what I 'd call "a nightmare in an Erector Set".

Catherine Street Station is in the midst of the new downtown focal point. For it's here in a site once dominated by a JSO Police Station and Jail that a new version of a long ago proposed building called the St. John is topping out at 76 floors. Destined to be the crown jewel of Jacksonville, the Skyway even jogs through the future hotel portion of the building with a station that is going to look like something out of a Disney Space Movie set. In fact two stations on this newer extension have taken on these maverick proportions. Now that The long awaited "Shipyards" trio of towers has finally been built near the foot of A. Phillip Randolph Boulevard, it's a journey that must be experienced to be believed. On entering the Shipyards the Skyway rolls past an open door with air jets that keep the building climate controlled. Once past the jets one is suddenly plunged into the sea. Incredible as this may seem the new aquarium complex was worked into the Hotel portion of the Shipyards and our train pierces through the living sea within a glass tube. After the station, which is built so that passengers can pass onto a beautiful New Orleans Style balcony or down spiral stairs or elevator to street level where the Randolph-Gateway Mall streetcar line ends. It is going to be interesting to see how the future St. Johns building beats this for pure appeal but that is exactly what they claim they are going to do.


The darkness must go
Down the river of nights dreaming
Flow morphia slow
Let the sun and light come streaming Into my life.



Alas it's the end of my ride, the train pulls out for the anticipated crowds of commuters parked around the Municipal Stadium, but I can't see them, my vision is getting blured. I go out on The Shipyards balcony for a cappuccino. I'll sit and try to watch while I catch up on my rest. How I'd love to see the streetcar pull into this station this morning but my clock is ringing on the table. Oh God, REALITY! Just a tired old used up transportation planner and civic activist in a common sense yet delusional dream. Time to wake up and shake the dust off, there are critical decisions to be made this morning. Do I gird myself up for a mind numbing breakfast of Rebel Yell? Do I choose Southern Comfort? Do I dress for another day of warfare against Meso-proterozoic Municipal Morons, Cretaceous–Tertiary Transit Dinosaurs, and plenty of Pleistocene Planners. I was simply having the most pleasant dream of the Jacksonville that "could - be." Now I'm disgusted that I've awakened to the reality of 2009 and the sorry state our city and our country is in. Damn them all. Worse still, I don't even own an Avanti!
It's all over
Your mission is a failure.
Your life style's too extreme.
I'm your new Commander.
You are now my prisoner.
We return to Transylvania
Prepare the transit beam.
Comic excerpts from "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" (A Jacksonville Skyway Reality)

TAKE A FREE TOUR OF THE JACKSONVILLE SKYWAY

The arguments rage to this date, "Should have never been built," "waste of taxpayer money," "Doesn't go anywhere," "Nobody rides it..." etc. Bottom line is we have it, and it is finally showing signs of life. Simple extensions to the Stadium, San Marco, and the area of Blue Cross in North Riverside would turn this little train around. Addition of Park and Ride garages and multimodal transit terminals at the end points would bring on the crowds. The video must have been shot on a Sunday Morning, as downtown is certainly as packed with life as any other major City on weekdays. Jacksonville is a city of Bikes, joggers, walkers, buses and cars, one almost wonders how the photographer managed to find this quiet moment.


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