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ALL OF WHICH suggests that viaduct visionaries need to think small. And in at least one instance—the so-called boulevard or surface option, which would replace the viaduct with a surface street along the waterfront—they have. The new boulevard would likely be six lanes, but could be four. It would probably have stoplights at major intersections to allow pedestrian access to the waterfront. Like all the options, it would include a partial seawall replacement. And it would cost hundreds of millions less than the other three alternatives, which range from $2.4 billion to rebuild the viaduct in place to $4.7 billion to tuck the viaduct underground through its crucial downtown segment.
Still the least specific of the four proposals, the surface option has its naysayers—most members of the Seattle City Council among them—and proponents. But considering the resounding defeat of Referendum 51, the gas-tax proposal rejected by voters in November, and the possibility that its companion regional measure might meet a similar fate next year, smaller might not merely be better. It might be all we have.
SIX MONTHS AGO, talking about a surface option would have been just short of heresy. The consensus, some might call it dogma, was that the only sensible solution was to bury the viaduct underground from Queen Anne Hill to Safeco Field and Seahawks Stadium, at an estimated cost of nearly $12 billion. "I think everyone was caught up in the dream—which I think was a good dream—of having it underground and being able to pay for that," says City Council Transportation Committee chair Richard Conlin. Now, they're waking up with the worst urban-planning hangover of their lives. "I think there's a fair chance [a surface street] could be dramatically less expensive," Conlin says, perhaps by as much as $1 billion. But would cutting corners now condemn us to a future of nightmarish gridlock and unending traffic misery?
Naturally, there are those who say yes. Steinbrueck, for one, couldn't be less enthusiastic about turning the viaduct into a boulevard. Characteristically, the council president doesn't mince words, asserting that the surface option "borders on insanity." Turning the central waterfront over to a raging six-lane highway with 110,000 cars a day—120,000, if you count the traffic that's already on Alaskan Way—"would destroy downtown and the central waterfront. It absolutely would not work," Steinbrueck says, "and I think it ought to be summarily abandoned as soon as possible." James Young of the Downtown Seattle Association, which still supports tunneling despite the cost, frets that turning the viaduct into a surface street will lead to "as much as a 40 percent reduction in capacity." Even Steinbrueck's colleague, Nick Licata, who strongly believes the viaduct should be retrofitted, not replaced, agrees with the council president on at least this point: "It will create incredible gridlock," Licata says. "You're going to end up with a waterfront you can look at across six lanes of traffic but never touch."