Hey Ghost Bike folks here on the Chainlink!

As the temporary Bike Parking manager for CDOT, I've been contacted about the Ghost Bike at 933 N. Lasalle. The owners of the building have asked the alderman (Reilly) to remove the bike and the alderman's office contacted me.

I would really prefer to not be the remover of the bike, but I am happy to help. If we remove it using city crews, it will go to Working Bikes.

My email address is charlie.short@activetrans.org or cdotbikes@cityofchicago.org or you can call my office at 312.744.8147.

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That's Clint Miceli's bike. His mother is going to be devastated.

Yeah, I know. I'm not going to treat that bike as abandoned, and the Alderman's office contacted me personally so I had the opportunity to come up with an alternative.

Charlie, I know nothing about this and truly have these questions:

I do not usually go down LaSalle there, so have not seen the bike.  Is it on public property?  Is it illegally placed?  If it is on public property and is not illegally placed, what is the criteria for a property owner to ask to have it removed and actually get it removed?  Has this happened before? 

Thanks for your consideration.

Charlie, send you an email. I send Clint's mother a message through CL, but I do not have her contact info. Does anyone know Kimberley Nishimoto, Clint's mom?

Look up 933 N. LaSalle St, Chicago IL 60610 on google streetview.  His bike is there, locked to a sign in front of a residential building.

 

And not bothering anyone.

 

Clint was killed when he was doored on LaSalle Street.

Good questions Lisa. 

 

While I have no involvement in the Ghost Bike movement/project, I might suggest that - if the Ghost Bike needs to be removed - in the alternative another type of memorial could be substituted for the bicycle.  (BTW, I am not suggesting that it should be removed, it was just a thought)

 

 

I don't see how that bike is causing a problem for anyone, but could it be moved across the street? Just a thought.

Ellis Chesbrough's Former Home

After designing a sewer system that literally raised Chicago out of the mud, Ellis Chesbrough engineered a two-mile tunnel under Lake Michigan that brought the city clean water. Chesbrough lived at 933 (formerly 317) North LaSalle Street in 1874. Selected as a Chicago Tribute Marker of Distinction.

All good suggestions, I will reply to the appropriate emails.

Just to be clear: I DON'T WANT TO REMOVE THE BIKE, I want to figure out a solution that relocates the bike. If we can't figure out a solution, I'm required to remove it.

Does the building owner understand what it is and why it is there?

Maybe if they were aware of why it was there and the importance of it to many people it may no longer be an issue.

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