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Horrendously bad views from your front door due to roads

Started by jeffandnicole, April 02, 2019, 12:18:10 PM

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Beltway

Quote from: skluth on April 04, 2019, 09:08:03 PM
Quote from: sprjus4 on April 04, 2019, 08:45:38 PM
Quote from: Beltway on April 03, 2019, 09:45:17 AM
Those 4 houses close to the wall were probably given the option of being bought out.   Some people decide they want to stay.  Future buyers know what they will be facing.
Good luck to those who want to sell the homes. If they're even lucky enough to sell, they'd be loosing a lot of money. Their home values must have plummeted. I couldn't think of a person who would want to purchase a property at that location.
Unless they bought their home several decades ago, chances are it was already inexpensive for Springfield due to the traffic noise at that location. The area from the Beltway to the Springfield interchange has been a loud area for quite some time. They may even think it's better than before.

It seems surprising where people are willing to buy or build a home, all kinds of noisy places.

This was a quiet residential area, and this home was built within a year of this segment of I-476 being built near Villanova, I lived near there then and saw it all.  http://tinyurl.com/yybp5wsb
http://www.roadstothefuture.com
http://www.capital-beltway.com

Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)


sprjus4

Quote from: Beltway on April 04, 2019, 11:11:21 PM
Quote from: skluth on April 04, 2019, 09:08:03 PM
Quote from: sprjus4 on April 04, 2019, 08:45:38 PM
Quote from: Beltway on April 03, 2019, 09:45:17 AM
Those 4 houses close to the wall were probably given the option of being bought out.   Some people decide they want to stay.  Future buyers know what they will be facing.
Good luck to those who want to sell the homes. If they're even lucky enough to sell, they'd be loosing a lot of money. Their home values must have plummeted. I couldn't think of a person who would want to purchase a property at that location.
Unless they bought their home several decades ago, chances are it was already inexpensive for Springfield due to the traffic noise at that location. The area from the Beltway to the Springfield interchange has been a loud area for quite some time. They may even think it's better than before.

It seems surprising where people are willing to buy or build a home, all kinds of noisy places.

This was a quiet residential area, and this home was built within a year of this segment of I-476 being built near Villanova, I lived near there then and saw it all.  http://tinyurl.com/yybp5wsb
It still appears that specific example could still be a quiet area. That home you mention is buffered from the freeway by trees and a soundwall. Somebody on that property may not even recognize the soundwall because it's covered by the trees. Could be a nice property nonetheless. I-476 is also sunken, with County Line Rd bridging over the interstate.

Here's a more recent example of a similar situation with I-73 in Greensboro, NC. This segment of interstate was built in 2008, and required taking a path through this neighborhood. The highway is raised over the residential street, but an 70 - 80 foot buffer between the property closest to the highway, and the highway itself was provided. Some decorative planting and garden design, along with some trees were planted in these buffers, giving it some aesthetics. Soundwalls were also provided on the freeway and on the overpass. Somebody on I-73 wouldn't even know they're going over a residential street.

A good design concept IMHO when having to push a highway through a residential area, but also upkeep the area at the same time. A buffer is probably the most important thing. If those people wanted to stay though, then that's beyond VDOT, and it was nice of them to not evict them at that point either way.

Beltway

Quote from: sprjus4 on April 04, 2019, 11:34:38 PM
Quote from: Beltway on April 04, 2019, 11:11:21 PM
It seems surprising where people are willing to buy or build a home, all kinds of noisy places.
This was a quiet residential area, and this home was built within a year of this segment of I-476 being built near Villanova, I lived near there then and saw it all.  http://tinyurl.com/yybp5wsb
It still appears that specific example could still be a quiet area. That home you mention is buffered from the freeway by trees and a soundwall. Somebody on that property may not even recognize the soundwall because it's covered by the trees. Could be a nice property nonetheless. I-476 is also sunken, with County Line Rd bridging over the interstate.

This was about 1974.  There were no trees of any size, basically open field between the new house and the highway, and no sound wall.  The highway cut is about the height of a normal overpass.  You have to wait a long time for trees to grow from saplings to trees of that height and density.
http://www.roadstothefuture.com
http://www.capital-beltway.com

Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)

ErmineNotyours

In Seattle in the Green Lake neighborhood, there was a triangular park near the freeway called Freeway Park, until the park on the lid on I-5 in Downtown got that name, and the more modest park became Northeast 60th Street Park.  When noise walls came in, they stuck to the contours of the hill near the street and walled off much of the park, which was probably pretty noisy without the walls anyway.  Google Maps still shows the original park shape, even though it's split by the walls.

NWI_Irish96

Quote from: BrianP on April 04, 2019, 04:22:32 PM
It's probably worse to not have a wall since then you have to deal with the noise.
https://goo.gl/maps/LU8JF99QFR42

Living where I do I can tell you definitively the wall helps with the noise.
Indiana: counties 100%, highways 100%
Illinois: counties 100%, highways 61%
Michigan: counties 100%, highways 56%
Wisconsin: counties 86%, highways 23%

hotdogPi

Clinched, minus I-93 (I'm missing a few miles and my file is incorrect)

Traveled, plus US 13, 44, and 50, and several state routes

I will be in Burlington VT for the eclipse.



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