Showing posts with label cycletrack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cycletrack. Show all posts
Friday, May 18, 2018
A Tour of the New Sections of the Atlanta BeltLine
If you’re curious as to what the new sections of the Atlanta BeltLine look like, here’s a tour I wrote up on LinkedIn.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Complete Streets---Coming to Eat Your Shrubbery?
When you read the phrase, “Complete Streets”, what do you
think of? If you’re from a rural area, or a poorly-run major city, you might
think it refers to streets that are paved and free of Fiat-swallowing potholes.
It’s actually an initiative that’s simply common practice in other developed
countries: a Complete Street
takes into account all users, not just cars.
Those other users typically include pedestrians, cyclists,
and transit. For pedestrians, sidewalks and safe crossing points are installed.
Cyclists might get a dedicated bike lane or off-road cycletrack. Accommodating
transit could be as simple as creating pull-outs for buses or as elaborate as a
dedicated lane for the bus or streetcar.
| A crosswalk along the Fall Line Trace in Columbus, GA. Cyclists are protected by a HAWK signal. Photo by author. |
Allowances are also supposed to be made to allow for access
by those with disabilities as well. This could mean audible pedestrian signals
so that those with vision impairments can cross safely. For those in
wheelchairs, ramps would be installed at all crossing points.
These are just a sampling of the changes a Complete Streets
program can bring. You might think that there’s nothing even slightly
controversial about any of these. You would also be very, very wrong.
Even something as seemingly correct as transportation
accommodations mandated by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) can incite
opposition from organizations such as the Heritage
Foundation. If helping the most physically vulnerable in our society can
arouse irritation, imagine the anger at spending taxpayer dollars on those who
are simply trying to get about in something other than a car. In the run-up to
passage of a transportation funding bill in June of 2012, Senator
Rand Paul attempted to eliminate all funding for bike and pedestrian
improvements. The Senate rejected his
amendment with 60 Senators voting against it, but 38 Senators thought his
amendment was a good idea.
Their argument centered on the need to divert
the money to fix bridges, which by some estimates could cost $71 billion.
The elimination sought by Senator Paul would have diverted $900 million at the
most to that effort. In other words, those who voted for elimination thought
they could achieve fix a major problem with a little over 1% of what was
needed. That might have paid for painting a few railings somewhere, but not
much else. However, the occasional budgetary complaint from politicians isn’t
the biggest problem faced by Complete Streets proposals.
The more pervasive opposition stems from far more mundane
concerns. Some residents may complain that a sidewalk in their yard would be
too much of an imposition because some
of the tree canopy or landscaping would need to be removed. This raises a
rather crucial question: should the needs of the pedestrians, such as kids
walking to a school bus stop, be secondary to those of the residents’
shrubbery?
To answer this, the benefits of Complete Streets must be weighed
against the hassles. As it turns out, they are an incredibly effective
expenditure of transportation dollars, especially given their low cost---relative
to a freeway widening or other big-ticket item. The
Federal Highway Administration found that installing sidewalks can reduce accidents
involving pedestrians walking along roadways by 88%! Bike lanes installed in
New York City have been credited with a 28%
reduction in crashes.
Let’s not forget the convenience benefits, though. As I
said, transit is supposed to be incorporated into a Complete Streets Policy. If
a dedicated lane is possible, the speed benefits can be significant. At least,
that’s what a UC
Berkeley Study found in Seoul, South Korea, where bus speeds nearly doubled
once dedicated lanes in the median were opened. Faster service typically
translates into more users, which in turn means less pollution being inhaled by
local residents.
So, Complete Streets programs have benefits, but a lingering
fear remains among those unfamiliar with the concept. They fear that planners
will foist a one-size-fits-all approach upon them. Granted, planners haven’t
done themselves any favors by insisting on standards designed to accommodate
worst-case scenarios. In the case of lane widths, planners may express reluctance
to narrow them to less than 12 feet, even though current
federal standards allow widths all the way down to nine feet. Why? Because
they will want to allow enough space for
the
largest fire engine (10 feet) or the largest tour bus (8 2/3 feet). Instead
of procuring or allowing vehicles that fit the roads, some planners may want to
make the roads fit the vehicles.
It gets worse. The ADA mandates a clear width minimum of 3
feet for walkways. That’s not a sidewalk width recommendation; that’s how much
space must be kept clear of obstructions. ADA
guidelines call for the placement of wider sections of 5-6 feet every 200
feet to allow for two users to pass each other, but this is often
misinterpreted as a mandate to make an ENTIRE sidewalk 5-6 wide. That’s fine
for newly-developed areas, but terrible for areas that are already established.
Lots of shrubbery faces its doom, unless planners show some flexibility.
Happily, Complete Streets policies as adopted around the
country are demonstrating this flexibility. That’s probably because the
pressure for adoption is a bottom-up process emanating from citizens, rather
than a top-down approach from a bureaucracy.
Consider two of the Complete Streets resolutions that I’ve
been a part of. The City of Alexandria’s Complete
Streets Resolution doesn’t insist on rigid standards, but simply demands
consideration of all uses. This is also true of the Washington metro area’s regional Complete
Streets policy, which is essentially a recommendation of best
practices. This is hardly surprising.
Alexandria has centuries-old streets in the Old Town neighborhood with narrow
sidewalks and, in some cases, cobblestones. Washington has the Georgetown
neighborhood, which is very similar. Both cities also have sections built in
the car-dependent mid-20th century, with minimal pedestrian
accommodation. How is a one-size-fits-all policy even conceivable?
| A crosswalk in Old Town Alexandria. Notice the signage and bulb-out to shorten the crossing distance. Photo by author. |
Complete Streets policies are nothing radical. Their cost is
a pittance compared to what urban expressways such as Washington’s Intercounty
Connector cost (a cool $2.5 billion). And it’s highly unlikely that they will
turn into overpriced parking lots, as urban expressways always do.
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