As I usually do on Thursday, I threw a few questions out to Marc Fisher’s online chat at the Washington Post today. Since our most popular post this week was Phil’s open letter, I asked Fisher about that. He posted a link to Phil’s piece! Here’s my question and Marc’s reply:
Fairfax, Va.: Toll are going up on the Dulles Road to support extending Metro. What’s your take? Here’s what the President of the Virginia Club for Growth had to say:
Marc Fisher: At the very least, I like the fact that the PR campaign surrounding the toll hike is up front about the fact that the money is for Metro to Dulles. And even those who are wedded to their cars should welcome that, because it’s the only hope of holding down the rate of increase in congestion on the roads. Nothing will ease the traffic–only politicians pretend that that’s ever going to happen–but we do have some control over how much worse it will get and how quickly that happens.
Additionally, I found this exchange interesting:
McLean, Va.: Mark,
What’s the point of routing Metrorail to Dulles? There’s no long-term parking in Metro garages, and it’s just about impossible to get a cab to take you to-from suburban Metro stations.
Metro SHOULD be run through the Reston-Herdon business districts, focusing on Eldon Street and Monroe Avenus. Locating Metro stations at Interestate exits is a proven non-starter for smart growth. Look at the areas where Metro has stimulated urbanization, and you’ll find that the line and stations were placed along existing commercial strips. Runing Mero down the middle of a limited access highway with stations at the exists is not smart growth. It’s DUMB growth.
Marc Fisher: Agreed–superhighways do not mix well with pedestrian-oriented development or with mass transit. They’re doing it that way because the right of way exists and it’s therefore cheaper. But the Metro stops along 66 work reasonably well, so it’s all in the execution. The trick will be to build over the highways and create little villages around those stations. In Florence, they did this and called it the Ponte Vecchio.
McLean, Va. sounds like our kind of reader.


