Lake Elmo's refusal to host the Gold Line busway out of downtown St. Paul is leading transit planners to propose sending a cavalcade of buses down a major arterial roadway toward the western end of Woodbury instead.
An advisory panel of local officials learned Thursday that serious thought is being given to building a new bridge over Interstate 94 connecting Helmo Avenue in Oakdale and Bielenberg Drive in Woodbury, and sending buses across it to a station near a major commercial concentration at Tamarack Road.
"And remember," said Washington County Commissioner Lisa Weik, "this is not light rail, confined to a track, so theoretically a bus could be free to go on to other destinations, such as Cottage Grove or even Stillwater."
With such a drastic change from past plans, officials from both Woodbury and the regional corridor commission promised extensive consultations with businesses and homeowners along the proposed new bus-rapid transit (BRT) route.
They also stressed that no decisions have been taken and other alignments remain in the mix. A public hearing is expected in November, followed by a formal recommendation and local cities' consent by December.
Militantly rural Lake Elmo decided in January to opt out of the Gold Line, whose planners had hoped to use the community's extensive open land to build busy new nodes of activity.
That raised the prospect of switching the route toward wide-open vistas still available on the eastern edge of Woodbury, where a major landowner would have been delighted. But Woodbury nixed that idea, which also would have alarmed the quiet neighboring suburb of Afton.
The Gold Line, if approved and funded, would be the state's first busway of its type — avoiding freeways but having dedicated lanes of its own in both directions. Buses are to run every 10 minutes during rush hour and frequently through the rest of the day.