The city of Wilmington has evolved over the past 10 years – as high rises stretch skyward, new storefronts are christened and downtown entertainment venues receive modern makeovers -- and planners expect significant changes to continue over the next decade.
As the city changes, so must its transportation infrastructure, said Dave Gula, a senior planner with the Wilmington Area Planning Council (WILMAPCO).
To better understand problems with Wilmington’s current infrastructure and help plan for the future, WILMAPCO is conducting a downtown circulation study, the first major study conducted since 1997, he said.
When the last study was done, the city was playing host to a bevy of new businesses, drawing workers from the suburbs who needed more efficient routes to drive to work, said Gula.
Today, more residents are moving into the city – particularly in the newly constructed condominiums and apartments near the Riverfront – and they have different transportation needs, he said.
“When people move downtown, it’s not so they can drive four blocks to work,” he said.
More intercity transit routes and a more pedestrian-friendly downtown will need to be priorities as more residents flock to the city, he said.
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7 major downtown transportation concerns 1. Balance all modes of travel 2. Provide frequent transit service 3. Provide a vibrant, 24-hour downtown 4. Make downtown more walkable 5. Improve existing street system 6. Match parking demand with supply 7. Reclaim Rodney Square |
Additional shopping and entertainment opportunities – offered by the Riverfront shops and revitalized businesses on Market Street – also create a need for more weekend and evening transit routes, he said.
And mass transit, particularly buses crowding Rodney Square, has been identified as a problem that needs to be addressed, said Jeff Riegner, vice president of the engineering firm Whitman, Requardt & Associates, which is working with WILMAPCO on the study.
The group has polled dozens of city stakeholders, including DuPont, the Wilmington Renaissance Corporation, ING Direct and the Greater Wilmington Convention and Visitors Bureau, to create a list of transit concerns.
Rodney Square tops the list, he said.
“Rodney Square, in the words of one commentator, has become a bus shelter,” Riegner said.
Buses tend to park two or three deep around the square, making it difficult for travelers to find the bus they are trying to catch, he said.
Solving the Rodney Square issue will not be an easy task, he said, and could involve relocating or spreading bus service to other areas around the city or even building a new transit hub.