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So where YOU put a bike blvd?
Where would you put a bike boulevard?City looking for suggestions in your community |
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Dear Joseph, The City of Chicago is interested in piloting a bike boulevard and the Chicago Department of Transportation is asking for your input and suggestions on locations. Bike boulevards are roads that are made comfortable for all bicyclists by slowing car traffic and reducing the amount of car traffic on the street. That might be through speed bumps, traffic diverters or signs. Local traffic can still maneuver, but high-speed cut-through traffic is discouraged. Bike boulevards are usually parallel to arterial roads and oftentimes become major thoroughfares for bicyclists and havens for families to walk and play. Here is an example of one in Portland. We’ve been asked to reach out to our members and collect feedback. So we want to hear your suggestions for specific street locations that would be a good fit for a bike boulevard in Chicago. Keep these criteria in mind:
Send us your ideas to adolfo@activetrans.org by Friday, April 9. Your voice strengthens the movement around active transportation. Thank you! |
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Active Transportation Alliance |
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Gee Anne...thanks for all the ideas on the Northside...and I thought you were a dyed-in-the-wool Southsider. :-)
But I don't get the concept...who needs "bike boulevards?" I watched the Portland video in the link provided by ATA, and all I can say is keep them away from my neighborhood! That street didn't look safe for cyclists at all!
Too many weird curbs and unexpected mid-street obstructions, too many wobbling kids on bikes, too many cross streets. I prefer cranking at 20+ mph down Clark, Halsted, Fullerton, etc. The average speed in the video looked to be about 10mph. Cars may be big and ugly, but at least they usually follow traffic laws. So I guess I'd rather bike alongside cars than packs of unpredictable cyclists on a "bike boulevard."
Oakley from Fullerton to Roosevelt would make an awesome bike boulevard, but parts of it are currently one-way. West Town people - do you like this idea?
Leavitt (2200 W) from Barry Ave (3100 N) to Balmoral (5400 N). Almost 3 miles of low traffic, some of it one way, and existing traffic lights at all the major intersections.
Its by favorite North-South route a-little-further-away-from-the-lake
Barring that, I'd follow Anne Alt's suggestion: N Glenwood from Argyle to Ridge, about a mile.
I like to use Leavitt, too, both south and north of the river. Something about one-ways: in many cities, streets that are one-way for cars are made into two-way bike boulevards. In Vancouver, they have a pretty ingenious solution: keep the street two-way, but just block off entering car traffic with a curb and bike "sleeve."
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