This is Virginia Beach. It's how the LFP should be, only with wider bike lanes. The LFP is a victim of it's own success and We, The People, of Chicago, need to get our heads around the idea of a radical remodel. Such a remodel would be necessarily expensive, but hey the LFP is that popular the remodel would surely be worth it, huh? Yes, it surely would!
I originally posted this as a reply to the 'Death of a Cyclist' discussion, but on reflection, I think the Virginia Beach model deserves a discussion of it's own.
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If they can do it in NYC, we can do it here. From NACTO.org:
I'd like to see something like a limited-access highway for bicycles-only with multiple lanes, on-ramps and off-ramps. A pedal-expressway that runs down the lakeshore as part of a human-powered-vehicle super-highway grid for the city. Add in a few bike-boulevards here and there going North/South & East/West -and maybe even a couple of diagonal streets would be cool as well. There are quite a few unused rail corridors that could be made into bike-expressways which could link neighborhoods together with each other and to downtown.
It'll probably never happen, but it is fun to dream about.
A good portion of the lake has the multi use bike trail that's paved as well as the crushed gravel and a concrete sidewalk for walkers and runners which is directly next to the lake until Fullerton?
If you live in Chicagoland then you know what the North Ave. beach all the way to Museum campus looks like in the summer. No amount of widening or signs will keep it an express lane for bikes only.
Good point Dan. Indeed: Depave Lake Shore Drive! There's even a tee shirt
you can buy to support that campaign.
But let's face it: Hundreds of thousands of drivers LOVE Lake Shore Drive...and they're not going to let us, or the City, take it away from them. IMO us cyclists invented the "Share the Road" campaign. We now need to learn to "Share the Path."
Remember when the LFP through Lincoln Park used to be nothing but a Bridle Trail for horses? You used to be able to rent a horse and carriage and go out for a pleasant ride in the park. This was back when most folks knew how to ride and control horses, and the carriage traffic on Sundays was significant. There was quite an uproar when horses were banned, in the early days of the running craze I believe.
Sorry Dan but I just don't see them depaving LSD. It would help to widen the path but I just don't forsee the city going that far to the right. The US is just too known for its love affair with cars. Before something so extreme happens....
Sorry, but I just don't see "them" doing anything at all like the picture at the start of this thread from Virginia Beach here in Chicago without removing, or at least seriously reducing, Lake Shore Drive. There's simply no more room for much of its length. The lake isn't the problem, the high-rises aren't the problem, the superhighway is the problem.
The question shouldn't be about why we can't get rid of Lake Shore Drive because it's an idea that's too extreme. The question we should be asking is, why do we have an eight-lane superhighway on our lake front in the first place?
I agree with the sentiment in the original post: "We, The People, of Chicago, need to get our heads around the idea of a radical remodel." Make no small plans!
By the way, thanks, clp, for promoting the Campaign for a Free and Clear Lakefront:
http://foreverfreeandclear.org/
And yes, I do have several versions of the Depave LSD T-shirt.
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