![]() ![]() Big Service Improvements in Store for South Atlanta The Emory area became eligible for More MARTA Atlanta funding when it was annexed by the city of Atlanta at the beginning of this year. Interestingly, maps from the early 1960s detailing proposed MARTA rail lines show a connection between Lindbergh and Emory, but that rail spur was never built. More MARTA Atlanta allocates $350 million to run light rail from Lindbergh Center Station to the Clifton Corridor area, though the public funding is contingent on local sources raising another $100 million privately. The busy Clifton Corridor, home to Emory University’s campus and hospital, as well as the Centers for Disease Control, is the region’s largest job center not connected to MARTA’s rail network. An expansion of the streetcar line has always been seen as necessary to vault it from its current function as tourist shuttle to a vital commuter option. This extension also will link Atlanta University Center and the bustling Krog Street area. Fulfills Desire to Expand StreetcarĪ hefty $553 million has been earmarked to extend downtown’s Atlanta Streetcar footprint by five miles on either side to connect with the BeltLine’s Westside and Eastside trails. ![]() Another $200 million will be used to leverage additional investment throughout the rest of the Beltline circuit. Of that sum, $174 million will go to the northeastern section linking Ponce City Market to MARTA’s Lindbergh Station and $196 million to a southwestern stretch between I-20 and Oakland City Station. The bikers and skaters and joggers and baby strollers that pack the Atlanta BeltLine may soon have to learn to share their beloved space with transit vehicles.The biggest single chunk of the More MARTA funding – $570 million – is going to equip the BeltLine with the light rail that was central of its original vision for creating a new transit corridor around the city’s core. DeKalb County officials are considering a separate tax referendum to fund improvements in the rest of that county (a DeKalb contingent recently flew to Minneapolis to check out that region’s transit), and Gwinnett County has already scheduled a vote next year to finally invite MARTA into its borders. Here are seven notable nuggets about More MARTA Atlanta: Expansion Limited to City of Atlanta – for NowĪs the name suggests, all the projects are within the city of Atlanta, made possible by a half-penny sales tax approved by voters in 2016.īut others aren’t standing still. “What the process showed us is that there’s a hunger for more public transit across Atlanta and we intend to look for further opportunities to expand and improve the system,” he said. The board had to make several difficult choices about which projects to add to the final program roster. But More MARTA doesn’t necessarily mean “Enough MARTA,” explained MARTA Board Chairman Robert Ashe, who said the agency received a wish list that far exceeded the anticipated funding. If all that sounds like a lot of money, that’s because it is. Over the next 40 years, the spending plan will inject $2.7 billion – with a “B” – into the transit agency for a range of new light rail and bus projects, as well as improvements to existing stations, that is designed to reduce travel times, reach underserved areas, and bring the Atlanta BeltLine, Emory University and the Atlanta University Center into the transit network. The More MARTA Atlanta program is arguably the biggest boost the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority has received since the agency was approved by DeKalb and Fulton county voters in 1971. ![]()
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