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SIF Fellows Trace a History of Atlanta’s Public Transit

With MARTA expanding into Clayton County and the agency now resting on a more sound financial footing thanks to efforts by Keith Parker, MARTA appears to be on an upswing. As the concept of transit oriented development gains momentum, more areas across metro Atlanta appear open to the benefits of transit, leading some to conclude that MARTA may expand further out across the region. However, since MARTA’s 1960s inception it was planned to be a far-reaching, regional transit system. In each decade since MARTA’s beginnings, the agency proposed routes that would have made MARTA a truly expansive system. A number of these proposed MARTA routes can now be visualized in Tracing a History of Atlanta’s Public Transit, a digital project by a team of Student Innovation Fellowship (SIF) students working in the University Library’s CURVE.

This SIF team gathered MARTA proposals from the library’s Planning Atlanta collection, located information from the Georgia Power streetcar system era, and collected material about the Atlanta Streetcar and the Atlanta Beltline. By tracing each proposed route, this team turned this information into geospatial data and created Tracing a History of Atlanta’s Public Transit, which clearly shows MARTA’s far-reaching intentions. As the state and the region begin to look more favorably on transit investment, this project aims to contribute to larger discussions taking place around the topic of public transit in Atlanta.

View the full-screen version of the project here or the embedded version below.

GSU President Mark Becker on CURVE

From the PresidentGSU President Mark Becker discusses the CURVE ribbon cutting ceremony and some of the innovative student and faculty projects happening here is his latest column for Georgia State University Magazine (Winter 2014).
He writes:

The technology is cool, no doubt, but it’s how it is applied that is truly transformative. With it, professors are taking students on big-screen adventures to Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula to scout Mayan ruins. They’re mapping systems in the human body, showing molecules and cells in new and different ways.

A big thanks to President Becker for participating in the CURVE opening ceremony earlier this semester and for acknowledging the transformative nature of CURVE’s cutting-edge technology as we work to transform research, learning, and the role of the academic library in the 21st century.