Reclaiming Franklin Street
The Franklin Reclamation Authority
is a citizen led group committed to a realizing a redesigned Franklin Street that meets the goals of the Portland community.
In 2006 FRA worked to stop the proposed widening of Franklin Street to 8 lanes.
FRA lead a community-based visioning process in 2007 to successfully redirect city and state efforts for future transportation planning for Franklin.
FRA partnered with the City of Portland and Maine DOT from 2008-2015 to facilitate the public planning process for Phase 1 and 2 of the redesign process.
FRA has continued to build relationships with elected officials and staff at the city, state, and federal level, to advocate for the reintegration of Franklin St. into the fabric of the Portland peninsula.
Design and Planning
Portland’s 2015 Franklin Street Redesign Master Plan achieves many of the community vision goals:
-Reclaims 6 acres of un-utilized land for housing and public benefits.
-Reconnects historic neighborhoods and street grids.
-Restores land severed from Lincoln Park.
-Creates high quality bicycle and pedestrian facilities.
-Establishes safer and more predictable transportation patterns for all users
Franklin Street History
Portland’s Franklin Street was a historic street on the the Portland peninsula. In 1970 the low-income and immigrant neighborhood was demolished to make way for an urban expressway.
This arterial severed historic neighborhoods, cross streets, and walking routes. It is unsafe for people walking, biking, and driving. It is out of scale with the surrounding city, and covers 10+ acres of underutilized land in the heart of the city. It detracts from density, limits development opportunities, and cuts residents off from un-utilized open space.
Issues and Opportunities
to be explored in the 2025 redesign study:
Traffic projections
Urban design
Housing and Economic Development
Social Justice
Federal Grants and Funding Sources
Tactical Urbanism
Public Participation
Political Will