Tags:
Replies are closed for this discussion.
Just a quick update on safety issues from Chicago's Finest and a Chicago murder rate map (by Police District) from 2009 I found in connection with the aforementioned Chicago Tribune article. Note, that if you bike through Austin and Garfield Park you're biking through the 11th and 15th Police Districts, two of the city's 5 most murderous districts.
Just a quick update on safety issues from Chicago's Finest and a Chicago murder rate map (by Police District) from 2009 I found in connection with the aforementioned Chicago Tribune article. Note, that if you bike through Austin and Garfield Park you're biking through the 11th and 15th Police Districts, two of the city's 5 most murderous districts.
Note, that if you bike through Austin and Garfield Park you're biking through the 11th and 15th Police Districts, two of the city's 5 most murderous districts.
I was unaware that districts could commit murder. Please be careful when choosing your words; the neighborhood has a bad enough reputation already.
I'd be curious to see the results of their analysis and how many murders involved bicyclists who didn't know their assailants. Also, I'd be curious to see it broken down to a level smaller than districts. Neighborhoods can change over just a few blocks.
I live in Garfield Park. I bike to and from work downtown and sometimes I'm riding home at 9pm. I've jogged alone in the park in the evening. I've never had any trouble on bike or foot. There's a lot of crap that goes on in the neighborhood, but last I heard, drugs and prostitution don't just happen to people minding their own business. Reading the news stories about violent crimes in the neighborhood, I would say anecdotally that the murder victims are usually connected in some way to their assailant or else they were mistaken for someone connected to the assailant.
I don't believe that a person with no connection to anyone in the neighborhood riding though at an average rate of speed is particularly at risk for murder. I would say there's a decent risk for robbery but robberies happen in Lincoln Park too. You can reduce your risk as long as you're moving. It's probably safer ignore traffic signals after checking that it's safe to proceed and checking your surroundings before you might have to stop. Another thing that map indicates is that cops on the west side have better things to do than ticket bikers. :-)
Relevant: "A Mugging on Lake Street":
http://www.chicagomag.com/core/pagetools.php?url=%2FChicago-Magazin...
I originally thought this might be off topic, but it's not. It has been the heart of about 50% of the replies. It bothers me a lot when we have to alter our bike rides to avoid dangerous neighborhoods. Last Saturday I had to bike across town from Jefferson Park to Uptown via Wilson after dark. I told a friend where I was going and when I should be home just in case something went wrong. Wilson can be a little sketchy through Albany Park. I've only been in Chicago 2 1/2 years but I've heard people say Daley will leave the gangs alone as long as they don't cross certain boundaries, primarily in to the Loop area. Do you think Chicago is aggressive enough against gangs? I'd love to take Austin or Central south to the West or South side but I don't feel safe once I get South of Addison.
Ah, sorry to make a post that is irrelevant. Didn't realize I was responding to an old post.
The blatant racism throughout this post is unbelievable.
I've been riding (by myself) most of the routes through the West Side since I got my job in Lakeview, and I can tell you they're all pretty much the same (same amount of time to get to work, same street conditions, etc.).
I haven't encountered any problems from 'the locals'.
But then, I look like a normal (white) person riding a common-looking upright bike, and not a weird 'other' in shiny clothes riding an expensive racing cycle. I don't 'invade' their neighborhood with all my buddies wearing their lycra 'colors' and helmet 'armor' like some ridiculous white gang.
If people see you as one of them, they're more likely to empathize with you. Something to think about.
Back to the topic, there is one route that is the worst, though. Wrightwood.
Not only is there a hill to climb, not only are there rail crossings at street level, not only are there dozens of speed humps, not only does the damn street end at Elston (stops going east, instead goes north to Diversey), beyond all of that, what's worse is the 'intersection' at Kedzie. Because it's not a real intersection at all. If you're going east, you have to go around. Except, when you want to continue going east, the car behind you expects you to turn on Kedzie, and gets mad when you don't. And if you're going west and you get the green light at Milwaukee, you think you can go through. But when you get to Kedzie, you find out they just got a green light also. Ridiculous. The worst 'intersection' in the city, and that's saying something. I know there are expensive plans floating around to fix this, but they sound complicated (and will cost zillions). Just build a ped/bike ramp over the damn thing.
Good job bringing up a like 3 year ild thread to complain about it.
I will add that if you are going west as far north as Diversey you are not really going through the bad part of the West Side of Chicago; take Agusta, Chicago or Lake everyday for a few months in the summer and get back to me on how nice and peaceful it is.
Shawn Evans said:
The blatant racism throughout this post is unbelievable.
I've been riding (by myself) most of the routes through the West Side since I got my job in Lakeview, and I can tell you they're all pretty much the same (same amount of time to get to work, same street conditions, etc.).
I haven't encountered any problems from 'the locals'.
But then, I look like a normal (white) person riding a common-looking upright bike, and not a weird 'other' in shiny clothes riding an expensive racing cycle. I don't 'invade' their neighborhood with all my buddies wearing their lycra 'colors' and helmet 'armor' like some ridiculous white gang.
If people see you as one of them, they're more likely to empathize with you. Something to think about.
Back to the topic, there is one route that is the worst, though. Wrightwood.
Not only is there a hill to climb, not only are there rail crossings at street level, not only are there dozens of speed humps, not only does the damn street end at Elston (stops going east, instead goes north to Diversey), beyond all of that, what's worse is the 'intersection' at Kedzie. Because it's not a real intersection at all. If you're going east, you have to go around. Except, when you want to continue going east, the car behind you expects you to turn on Kedzie, and gets mad when you don't. And if you're going west and you get the green light at Milwaukee, you think you can go through. But when you get to Kedzie, you find out they just got a green light also. Ridiculous. The worst 'intersection' in the city, and that's saying something. I know there are expensive plans floating around to fix this, but they sound complicated (and will cost zillions). Just build a ped/bike ramp over the damn thing.
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members