calimac: (puzzle)
calimac ([personal profile] calimac) wrote2011-12-09 03:35 am

seeking Seattle transportative enlightenment

The Potlatch web page says that "the handy new light rail ... doesn't go quite as far as the Hotel."

And the light rail's web page shows the line going only as far as the Westlake station, which is at Fourth and Pine.

Google Maps, however, appears to show light rail continuing up Westlake Avenue as far as the lake and then turning east, with the last station at Fairview and Ward.

However, the light rail project website shows an under-construction extension going not in that direction at all, but heading up Pine towards Capitol Hill.

Is the Google Maps extension a phantom, or what?, and will I get in trouble with all the Google apologists again if I suggest that their maps are not perfect in every way?

[identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com 2011-12-09 03:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you; when I Googled its name I found it, but the point is that I had to know its name first. Apparently it's a different transit authority, and how kind of the people who run the light rail not to intimate the streetcar's existence anywhere that I could find it, and the streetcar's feeling about the light rail seems to be mutual.
ckd: A small blue foam shark sitting on a London Underground map (london underground)

[personal profile] ckd 2011-12-09 04:28 pm (UTC)(link)
One of the several dysfunctions of the Seattle area's transportation "system" is the patchwork nature of the transit options. Metro, Sound Transit, the monorail, etc....

[identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com 2011-12-09 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
There are patchwork agencies in the Bay Area too; four agencies around the southern lobe of the Bay alone, and at least two to the north, plus BART and CalTrain which are each separate from any of them. But we also have this unifying schedule and planning site which is linked to from, as far as I've noticed, all the local agencies' sites.