Reconnecting a City Divided by Roads

}
01 - 30 - 23
Tony Kroeger is the Planning Manager for the City of Dayton.

The Dayton Riverfront Master Plan is, in many ways, a plan about connecting. This is a common theme among the many projects being advanced—connecting neighborhoods with waterways, connecting neighborhoods with one another and connecting residents with natural amenities. From the ambitious plans to connect two sides of the Great Miami River through Sunrise and Sunset parks and the Unity Bridge, to neighborhood investments that seek to capitalize on unique natural attributes, to roadway changes that will reduce barriers, the implementation of the plan ultimately means a Dayton that is more engaged with nature and neighborhoods are more engaged with one another.

Various historical events and choices have led to the fragmentation of American cities, and Dayton was not spared from this trend. For example, many of our roads and highways were not designed and constructed with riverfront access in mind. We see the effects of this today in how Interstate-75 was designed and located. We see it in the wide riverfront roadways that, while sometimes attractive from an automobile, are a completely different experience for those outside of a vehicle. Furthermore, land uses that have no practical benefit from being located on a riverfront were established, detracting from the usage and visual quality of the waterways. And while our vitally important levee system was understandably designed for the practical purpose of preventing another catastrophe, their inherently dividing nature caused neighborhoods to be separated from waterways.

All of this leads to opportunity. When we work towards infrastructure changes, new housing designed for the riverfront, and improvements to levees, we are working on addressing the fragmenting impacts of past events and choices—which will lead to the prevailing aspiration of a better-connected Dayton.

Send these updates to your inbox

News

Achieving a Healthy City for All

A major tenet of the Dayton Riverfront Plan is to achieve a healthy city where places and programs support health, safety, and wellness for all who live, learn, work and play along the riverfront. In the Miami Valley, more than a third of adults are obese and one in...

Winter 2022 Progress Report

The vibrant redevelopment of downtown is spilling up, down, and over our rivers to Dayton’s neighborhoods along all points of the compass. The Dayton Riverfront Plan continues to spur on this evolution. Below is the long list of the Plan’s projects that have been...