October is fire prevention month all across the country. October was chosen because of the psychological impact of the Great Chicago Fire. In memory to the lives lost in that horrific disaster, and to promote fire safety awareness, I propose we use the burn perimeter of the Great Chicago Fire as our route for the September, 2014 Critical Mass Ride.
Please make suggestions. I don't think I made any wrong-way mistakes.
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WHERE: Daly Plaza at the Chicago Picasso
WHEN: 6pm, September 26, 2014
WHAT: CRITICAL MASS Great Chicago Fire burn perimeter ride
Route:
West on Washington
R on Wabash
L on Jackson
R on Columbus
E on Balbo
L on Michigan
R on Roosevelt
R on Jefferson
R on Taylor
R on Clinton
R on DeKoven (origin of the fire)
R on Jefferson
R on Taylor
L on Canal
R on Jackson
L on Wacker
L on Franklin
R on Orleans
L on Hubbard
R on Kingsbury (becomes Cambridge)
R on hobbie
L on Cleveland
R on Division
L on Wells
L on Goethe
R on Sedgewick
R on Schiller
L on N Park Ave
L on Concord
R on Sedgewick
L on Eugenie
R on Willow
L on Fern Ct.
R on Menomonee
L on Orleans
R on Wisconsin
L on Clark
bear R onto N. Lincoln Park West
R on Fullerton
End at Nature Museum (Fullerton and N Cannon Drive)
(May continue ride farther, but this is the end of the perimeter).
Jeff
Tags:
Very sorry, but I don't have a printable version because many were combined. But I do have an accurate list of turns here for you, if that is helpful.
ROUTE: East on Washington; R on Wabash; L on Jackson; R on Columbus; R on Balbo; L on Michigan; R on Roosevelt; R on Jefferson; R on Taylor (origin of the fire at Jefferson and DeKoven); L on Canal; R on Jackson; L on Upper Wacker; L on Franklin Street Bridge (which is Orleans Street); bear R on Orleans; L on Grand; R on Milwaukee; R on Elston; R on North; R on Clybourn; L on Mohawk; R on Blackhawk; L on Sedgewick; R on Wisconsin; L on Clark; bear R onto N. Lincoln Park West; R on Fullerton; Mass up and 10 min break at Nature Museum (Fullerton and N Cannon Drive) parking lot.
THEN: North on Cannon; R on Sheridan; L on Oakdale; L on Racine; R on Cortland; L on Ashland; R on Wabansia; L on Damen; R on North Ave; L on Kedzie; END Kedzie and Carrol.
Lots of reasons, all of them speculative. Look at Portland, San Francisco.... I'll throw out a few:
-As the "core" of the bike community (e.g. all you people bitching about shoaling because your daily ride includes one of a handful of streets that has more than the occasional cyclist) starts to think things are pretty OK, advocacy starts to seem 'silly'
-CM is no longer new, and the face of it is a handful of 40/50-ish people who seem to be 'running' it, so for a long long time it's been cool to pronounce how 'over it' you are.
-the folks who used to put energy into trying to grow it have mostly dropped out due to babies, burnout, moving away; inertia keeps the numbers strong but there's going to be some entropy without an active infusion of energy
That's all I have time for....
Alex Z said:
Why is that?
h' 1.0 said:we're in a long gradual waning phase that I don't see turning around....
Here's a quick and dirty .pdf:
Jeff Hazzard said:
Very sorry, but I don't have a printable version because many were combined. But I do have an accurate list of turns here for you, if that is helpful.
ROUTE: East on Washington; R on Wabash; L on Jackson; R on Columbus; R on Balbo; L on Michigan; R on Roosevelt; R on Jefferson; R on Taylor (origin of the fire at Jefferson and DeKoven); L on Canal; R on Jackson; L on Upper Wacker; L on Franklin Street Bridge (which is Orleans Street); bear R on Orleans; L on Grand; R on Milwaukee; R on Elston; R on North; R on Clybourn; L on Mohawk; R on Blackhawk; L on Sedgewick; R on Wisconsin; L on Clark; bear R onto N. Lincoln Park West; R on Fullerton; Mass up and 10 min break at Nature Museum (Fullerton and N Cannon Drive) parking lot.
THEN: North on Cannon; R on Sheridan; L on Oakdale; L on Racine; R on Cortland; L on Ashland; R on Wabansia; L on Damen; R on North Ave; L on Kedzie; END Kedzie and Carrol.
Growing larger would be great Tom. Our fight for the streets is not over by a long shot because the south and westside could use more bike culture. Just hoping massholes and crazy drivers would stay away from such large rides.
Tom A.K. said:
Jeff H., your route proposal is great for tonight. Let's all have a great ride!
Juan 2-8, I am also seeing a growing amount of cyclists every day in this city. Hopefully, Critical Mass has the
possibility of growing larger, not smaller.
Thanks to all who made the ride such a good one last night. We had a series of crashes mid-pack while turning from Clybourn onto Mohawk, which left the two halves of the ride divided. But the mass up at the Nature Museum fixed that problem.
The feedback I have been given is that most liked the variety in the route last night (commercial, industrial, residential, parks, etc), and liked the longer distance (about 17 miles). And that they liked having a route to follow as it let them tell friends where to meet the mass (I noticed dozens of late-comers joining). Also the start of second half at the Nature Museum parking lot was the smoothest I've seen. And the comments on a 10 minute intermission were generally positive, although there was criticism of not having washrooms available.
Several people expressed amazement that the 1871 fire burned from Roosevelt and Jefferson to Fullerton and Stockton. It is a long way! They also thought we should find other historical events about the city and incorporate them into rides in the future (like a gangster ride to all the famous robbery/shoot-out/last stand places), or a modified architectural tour of the city, etc.
In my perception, cycle activism doesn't have to be in-your-face extremism. I don't hold that much animosity for car traffic, just wish they would look out for us and stay in their lanes. I don't need to be a masshole to make my points. And, also, it is not "caving to the man" when we plan and publish a route. It makes for a safer time for all of us and it piques interest in "following along" as we go the route. If you notice, the lead officers ended up sort of leading us last night and corralled some of the cowboys, especially when a whole segment of radical rough riders blew right by the Wabansia turn off Ashland. In other words, I had a good time and felt like we did it right. We achieved having traffic notice us and accept us as traffic. Mission accomplished.
Thank you for the palpable support you gave me in forming this route and pulling the ride off.
Jeff
A few pictures: (I had to bale early - broken support on my saddle!)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/kastigar/sets/72157647661731040/
Agreed, and many thanks, Jeff, for a great ride.
Jeff Hazzard said:
. . .
The feedback I have been given is that most liked the variety in the route last night (commercial, industrial, residential, parks, etc), and liked the longer distance (about 17 miles). And that they liked having a route to follow as it let them tell friends where to meet the mass (I noticed dozens of late-comers joining). . .
In my perception, cycle activism doesn't have to be in-your-face extremism. I don't hold that much animosity for car traffic, just wish they would look out for us and stay in their lanes. I don't need to be a masshole to make my points. And, also, it is not "caving to the man" when we plan and publish a route. It makes for a safer time for all of us and it piques interest in "following along" as we go the route. If you notice, the lead officers ended up sort of leading us last night and corralled some of the cowboys, especially when a whole segment of radical rough riders blew right by the Wabansia turn off Ashland. In other words, I had a good time and felt like we did it right. We achieved having traffic notice us and accept us as traffic. Mission accomplished. . .
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