Principal, 2006-Present
- Multi-Modal Access and Transit-Oriented Development. Working
to bring Transit-Oriented Development (TOD), transportation
demand management (TDM) strategies and alternative modal access
programs and infrastructure to existing communities:
- Portland, ME. Leading the development of transit system changes, multi-modal access strategies, TDM programs and new parking policies to help the downtown embrace growth without compromising the character of the historic peninsula.
- Denver, CO. Leading an effort to implement on- and off-street parking management policies and TDM programs at a suburban TOD next to the new Belleview Station. This effort integrates directly with Nelson\Nygaard’s recent TOD strategy for the Denver RTD.
- Pacific Union College, Angwin, CA. Leading the development of a sustainable transportation and parking plan for a campus expansion and new residential “eco-village,” including a dedicated shuttle route, a shared parking plan, unbundled residential parking, and car-sharing.
- Yale University, New Haven, CT. Helping improve coordinated shuttle services and connect campuses with regional rail stations through a comprehensive suite of pedestrian, bicycle, transit and parking programmatic and infrastructure changes.
- Ithaca, NY. Building upon an existing vision statement for the Collegetown district, a multi-modal strategy is being developed that integrates land use and transportation policies with practical solutions for businesses, infrastructure, residents and Cornell University.
- TCRP Synthesis SA-19. For APTA and the TRB, conducting a national review and assessment of transit, parking, TDM, and sustainable transportation features on college campuses to identify technology trends and financing issues.
- Pawtucket, RI. Developed TOD, multi-modal access, and parking guidelines to support a proposed MBTA commuter rail station in downtown. Among the key recommendations were efforts to promote arts, education and medical opportunities that would interface with users along the Providence rail corridor.
Previous Experience
City of Cambridge, Traffic, Parking and Transportation Department
Planning Manager, 2000-2006
Head of all transportation planning operations for 80 staff. Responsible
for development approvals, certification of transportation studies,
long-range planning, construction plan reviews, enforcement of
parking ordinances.
- Transit-Oriented Development planning and design oversight
for several large land development projects in Cambridge that
required skillful negotiation and management of architectural
designs, transportation analyses, zoning compliance, and community
process. Notable projects include the following:
- North Point PUD. Led the approval of a 5.5M ft2 mixed-use transit-oriented project that brought transit access to a brownfield site with poor station connections. Included establishing the project’s analysis framework, trip-based build-out thresholds, on- and off-site multi-modal infrastructure mitigation, trip monitoring requirements, and path & street design requirements.
- Cambridge Research Park. Ensured the on-going compliance with TDM plans and special permit obligations for the build-out of a 1.4M ft2 transit-oriented mixed-use brownfield redevelopment. Oversaw redesign of Third Street, including a “road diet” of new curbs, curb extensions, on-street parking, & bike lane installations. Approved on-site non-motorized circulation plan. Located new transit stops. Developed neighborhood protection plan. Required various intersection and signal changes. Negotiated mitigation payments.
- Multi-modal transportation design. Specified designs and requirements in construction documents for over 100 off-site transit, pedestrian, and bicycle infrastructure improvements by developers and the City. Included safety reviews, zoning & ordinance compliance, ROW requirements, ADA compliance, multi-modal access dimensions, setbacks, fire access, drainage, etc. Detailed design knowledge for curb extensions, bus shelters, bike lanes, bicycle parking, crosswalks, sidewalks, multi-use paths, raised devices, traffic signals. Approved construction management plans and access permits and oversaw contractors in the field.
- Management of public processes. Coordinated development review of over 12M ft2 of public and private commercial and residential development for multiple City departments, including transportation, community development, public works, building, zoning, licensing, fire, and police. Evaluated and certified over 50 transportation impact studies and EIR’s. Developed planning board special permit conditions for over 60 large projects. Managed outreach to residents, public meetings, neighborhood charettes, and public presentations.
- Inter-agency planning coordination. As liaison to metropolitan & state transportation management and planning agencies, surrounding city governments, and redevelopment authorities, Schrieber represented the Department and the City on various multi-modal planning efforts, including the Urban Ring circumferential transit line, the creation of the North Point Parks, the planned Grand Junction rail to trail multi-use path, the Green Line transit extension, the Central Artery/Tunnel mitigation measures, and citywide rezoning.
- Travel Demand Management programs. Responsible for ensuring compliance with Cambridge’s innovative Parking & Transportation Demand Management ordinance, which requires any new non-residential development to implement and monitor a package of detailed TDM and infrastructure measures if a single new parking space is built or leased. Schrieber’s parallel efforts included implementing similar programs for residential projects, maintaining an off-street parking registry, regulating a commercial parking freeze, and developing on- and off-street parking strategies and rate structures.
Cambridge Systematics, Inc, Associate, 1993-2000
Project manager for planning & policy studies as consultant to local, regional, & national clients.
- Multi-modal corridor analyses, including cost, travel-time, and demand comparisons in MD, FL, MN, IN and NY.
- Identified federal funding sources for private and municipal intermodal project proponents, including CMAQ, NHS, STP, TIFIA, and other FHWA programs.
- Created national database of innovatively-financed intermodal projects and public-private partnering.
- Prepared multi-state database of public and private transit providers, mapped routes, and identified service needs for New England Transportation Initiative.
- Evaluated transportation impacts of land reuse alternatives at decommissioned Fort Devens, MA.
- Certified Planner, American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP)
- Member, American Planning Association, Massachusetts Chapter
- Member, Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals
- Member, Congress for the New Urbanism

