Metro
Planning: More Than Rail
Residents give input to metro
accessibility.
By
Mirza Kurspahic/The Connection - April 4, 2007

Photos by
Mirza Kurspahic/The Connection
David
Vanell records the main points his group brought
up at Tuesday night’s meeting.

Tuesday
night’s meeting was the first of the four
public meetings in which the residents are asked
to contribute their ideas to provide
accessibility to the future stations. The next
meeting is planned for June. |
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Local
residents and businesses participated in a workshop last week on Tuesday
night to plan access to the future metro stations at Wiehle Avenue and
Reston Parkway. Major points of concern included improved pedestrian
crossroads and providing a way to bring people who do not live within
walking distance of the stations to them.
“We need dramatic improvements for pedestrian crossings at major
intersections, such as the intersection at Reston Parkway and Sunset
Hills Road,” said David Vanell, a member of the Reston Metrorail
Access Group (RMAG). The group was appointed by Supervisor Catherine
Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill) as a citizens’ advisory panel to Fairfax
County and consultant Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc. (VHB).
“How do we get people from outer reaches to the stations?” asked
Vanell. Most of the participants, about 70 of them, voiced similar
concerns and offered that a well-planned feeder bus system was a part of
the answer. Other participants in the workshop suggested a circulator
trolley transportation system.
“Beyond the half-mile circle, metro doesn’t serve you without a
feeder system,” said Reston resident B.J. Silvey.
Barbara Rovin’s group concluded that both modes of transportation
would be desired. “Improving not just a local feeder bus system, but
also a circulator,” said Rovin. Her group also suggested designating
bike areas on the roads leading to the station. Kathryn Martin’s group
thought a trolley or a shuttle should loop around the two stations.
Silvey said elevated crosswalks should be considered to ensure
pedestrian safety. “Cars and bodies don’t mix,” he said. Also, he
added, red-light cameras should be implemented for enforcement purposes.
“We want to make sure there is more parking [at the stations],” said
Colin Mills about his group’s findings. “People will want to drive
to the stations,” he said. Mills’ group also concluded there was a
need for more vehicular crossings than currently exist across the Dulles
Toll Road.
The challenge of planning access for the two stations is that the
current plans for those two stations differ, according to Frank
Spielberg, a program manager with VHB. “Wiehle Avenue has [plans for]
a large parking garage and Reston Parkway has no [plans for a] parking
facility,” said Spielberg. “They have very different needs.”
Spielberg said that the goal of the access project is to balance the
needs of the pedestrians against the needs of traffic. He said VHB wants
to know more than just what the state standards are for providing the
community with sufficient access to the stations. “What does the
community want,” Spielberg said is what VHB wants to hear before
finalizing its plans for the stations.
“RAIL IS COMING and we need to be ready for it,” said Patty Nicoson,
executive director of the Dulles Corridor Rail Association. The purpose
of Tuesday’s meeting, and the subsequent ones, is to inform the
community on the planning process and to receive feedback from it.
“The need for rail and the need for public transportation has really
been spelled out,” said Rick Stevens, Dulles Rail Project Coordinator
with the Fairfax County Department of Transportation. In order to
provide meaningful feedback, community members needed to familiarize
themselves with the stations. “We need to understand in more detail
what the Wiehle Avenue Station will look like,” said Stevens as he
began his presentation on the Wiehle Avenue and Reston Parkway Station
Access Management Study. Both stations are located in the median of the
Dulles Airport Access Road, just west of the respective roads they are
named after. Stevens said he expects that construction on Phase I — an
extension of current Metrorail from east of the West Falls Church
Station to Wiehle Avenue — of the metro project would begin next
spring.
Stevens said the Wiehle Avenue station plans call for a 2,300-car
garage. For comparison purposes, the station in Vienna has 3,800 spaces,
West Falls Church has 1,900 spaces and Springfield has 6,000 spaces. He
added that all of the stations are designed to meet Americans with
Disabilities Act standards.
The workshop at Langston Hughes Middle School was the first of four such
meetings, coordinated by the Perspectives Group, a public involvement
consultant with the metro access project. “This process goes on for
some time,” said Paul LeValley, with the Perspectives Group.
Hudgins said she hoped the next meeting would attract more community
members, and therefore more input to the planning efforts of the county
and VHB.
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