The Chainlink

Hopefully you've heard by now that CDOT will begin construction this week on the city's first protected bike lane: Kinzie Street from Milwaukee Avenue/Desplaines Street to Wells Street. 

 

Full story on Steven Can Plan. 

 

I want to know what you think about this.

  • What do you feel will need special attention?
  • Is this the right or wrong location for such a facility? Why?
  • Are you going to thank/congratulate Rahm, Gabe, and the CDOT Bicycle Program?
  • Will you use it?

 

Cycle track and protected bike lane naysayers, this isn't the post for you. But if you've ridden in protected bike lanes before, then I welcome your constructive comments and criticism based on your actual experiences. 

Big intersection

The new beginning. Looking southeast at the intersection of Kinzie/Milwaukee/Desplaines. 

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On a more positive note, I was motor-paced in the eastbound direction of the cycle track today from just east of Des Plaines all the way to Franklin by a 200 cc Vespa scooter.

Erik Swedlund said:
and you dont even have to pedal down it.
First, the city will plow snow onto the parked cars.  Over the next week the owners of the cars will shovel the snow into the bike lane.  Finally the process is complete in April when the snow melts and reveals a layer of broken glass and garbage.

Matt Grosspietsch said:

Hi Steven, do you have any intel on how snow will be cleared from the new Kinzie protected bike lane? It is obviously too narrow for a standard Streets and Sanitation snowplow to fit through.

 

As I pedalled through the lane last Friday for the first time, this was the first thought that came to me.

 

thanks,

 

Matt 

I'd imagine that there would be an investment of 'bobcats' to the streets & san dept. 

 



Matt Grosspietsch said:

Hi Steven, do you have any intel on how snow will be cleared from the new Kinzie protected bike lane? It is obviously too narrow for a standard Streets and Sanitation snowplow to fit through.

 

As I pedalled through the lane last Friday for the first time, this was the first thought that came to me.

 

thanks,

 

Matt 

I talked to the people from the bike lane project at the BTW ralley on Friday and asked this very question about snow removal and what will become of the bollards once the snow falls.  The answer is they are going to try and keep them in year round and are planning to play it by ear as far as snow removal is concerned.   They didn't have a plan so far that was integrated into the overall project at this point. 

 

They've got a few months to think about that solution but I would have hoped that at least a little planning would have been put into the shapes and orientation of the lanes and safety protection zones with respect to snow removal apparatus and where they intend to pile snow -even temporarily.  Snow piles are visibility hazards as well as physical barriors and a sources of meltwater that becomes freezewater once the sun goes down.  

 

I think the answer lies in the fact that these lanes are modeled after those in other cities such as DC where they get a bunch of snow from time to time as well although the lanes there are so new they don't have more than a year or so of winters to have gathered data.  As a bicyclist I can only hope they will do something smart and not just ignore the problem like the previous administration did to just about everything.  

 

Snow removal is and has been an issue in regular unprotected bike lanes and sharrows here in Chicago.  I'm sure it will be even more of an issue in these protected lanes.  When the protected lanes become snow dumps for the plows I guess we'll just have to ride in the narrow singular traffic lane...

I think this is a legitimate concern, and I hope they come up with more of a plan before winter.

James Baum said:

I talked to the people from the bike lane project at the BTW ralley on Friday and asked this very question about snow removal and what will become of the bollards once the snow falls.  The answer is they are going to try and keep them in year round and are planning to play it by ear as far as snow removal is concerned.   They didn't have a plan so far that was integrated into the overall project at this point. 

 

They've got a few months to think about that solution but I would have hoped that at least a little planning would have been put into the shapes and orientation of the lanes and safety protection zones with respect to snow removal apparatus and where they intend to pile snow -even temporarily.  Snow piles are visibility hazards as well as physical barriors and a sources of meltwater that becomes freezewater once the sun goes down.  

 

I think the answer lies in the fact that these lanes are modeled after those in other cities such as DC where they get a bunch of snow from time to time as well although the lanes there are so new they don't have more than a year or so of winters to have gathered data.  As a bicyclist I can only hope they will do something smart and not just ignore the problem like the previous administration did to just about everything.  

 

Snow removal is and has been an issue in regular unprotected bike lanes and sharrows here in Chicago.  I'm sure it will be even more of an issue in these protected lanes.  When the protected lanes become snow dumps for the plows I guess we'll just have to ride in the narrow singular traffic lane...

I have a feeling that the first snowfall will be a clusterfrak and hopefully they will improve from there with each subsequent storm layer.   But that isn't too far off from what happens anyway with the regular snow removal as it always seems everyone forgets how to drive in the snow and the city forgets how to plow.  The city has a short memory.   The new bike lanes will be no different and since they will be new they will present more of a challenge.  I only hope they will try and prioritize it when the time comes -and not just blow it off as a bottom-tier issue for days/weeks.   

 

 

I've always been pretty impressed by how quickly the LBF is plowed after a snowfall, as well as the walking paths through Lincoln Park. I'm assuming they could use similar machinery to plow the protected bike lanes, and hopefully make the protected bike lanes as much a priority.

In Madison the UW campus has these brush-like contraptions that they attach to the front of the Bobcattm skid-steers instead of a plow or bucket that counter-rotates and spits the snow away and off the sidewalks and paths. It seems to work really well although you don't want to be anywhere NEAR one of them in operations as it is a mobile white-out storm within a 50-feet radius and i don't see how the operator can see what they are doing much less keep from running people/things over while moving snow with it. With MILES of new bike paths along with the existing crumbling bike path infrastructure it's going to take specialized and dedicated equipment to do snow removal on them if the city is serious about it and us using them year-round.

The BikeWinter folk are going to need to keep on the city and keep them informed that we DO RIDE in the winter and don't want to be relegated to the bottom tier of snow-removal. We don't want the new bike lanes to be 3-season or get 3-season maintenance.
I was gonna head straight South on Halsted today to try it out but I guess the bridge just South of Clybourn is out?
Circled back and diaged on Clybourn.
Oh well, another day.

There's a Sun-Times article today on initial reactions to the Kinzie lanes. I like the reference to Milwaukee Ave being a "hipster highway". But this may be my favorite quote:

 

“I’ve talked with some friends with cars and they’re not too happy about it. One said it just doesn’t seem like Kinzie is a street for cars anymore.”

 

Um, yeah, now it’s a street for EVERYONE.

 

http://www.suntimes.com/6142837-417/bikers-drivers-at-odds-over-ben...

 

I've been riding it the last few days (with all the bollards installed) and so far I'm impressed. Fewer car interactions, and even the left turns onto Clinton and Franklin aren't too hard to navigate.

One of the things I didn't expect is that the roadway for cars is not only single lane, but also narrow. It forces cars to slow down, and pay more attention to their driving

 

Now if bicyclists only could stop for stop signs when cars are present: This morning I saw 6 bicyclists in a row blow the eastbound stop sign at Clinton, while a westbound truck is trying to make a left turn onto Clinton and gets stuck halfway into his turn.

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