— Advertisement —

  • Best Side Cycling filmed the rainy Montlake bike/walk bridge opening + Temporary Arboretum connection needed

    I was out of town when WSDOT cut the ribbon on the walk/bike bridge over SR 520 in Montlake earlier this month. Luckily, Best Side Cycling was there to capture it all.

    It’s always cool to see how many people show up even when it is pouring rain. But it stopped long enough to get some cool drone shots.

    The new trail bridge connects to a new bike route nexus where the 520 Bridge Trail and the Bill Dawson Trail to Montlake Playfield meet up with the Shelby/Hamlin connection to the Montlake Bridge. The parts that are connected work great, and the new bridge makes navigating the area much easier for many trips after years of ever-changing construction detours.

    Enjoy the Bill Dawson Trail connection while you can, however, because it is due to close in the spring as crews begin work on the next major phase of the 520 project across Portage Bay.

    However, there are two major complaints I have been seeing consistently:

    No more Bill Dawson Trail on the west side of Montlake Boulevard

    For NOAA workers and anyone else with easy access to the west sidewalk of Montlake Boulevard, the removal of the old connection to the Bill Dawson Trail forces them to now cross the widened boulevard only to then pass under the Boulevard again using the new trail tunnel. The east-side access point is a huge upgrade for most users, but it is a clear downgrade for some. I was a bit surprised myself that there was no connection from the west side of the street. The boulevard is not only very wide, but there are also several missing crosswalks that leave a gap from Hamlin Street to Lake Washington Boulevard where people cannot cross.

    The south terminus is not good enough

    The new bridge is glorious for crossing the freeway, but it doesn’t actually connect to the Arboretum. Instead, it ends at a flashing beacon crosswalk across Lake Washington Boulevard at E Roanoke Street. From there, people on bikes can catch the popular Lake Washington Loop bike route at 25th Ave E and then lake the old stone bridge at E Lynn Street to get to the Arboretum Trail (the west sidewalk on Lake Washington Boulevard also connects to paths leading to the stone bridge). This is fine though out-of-the-way route for those who know it, but there are going to be a lot of people who assume they will be able to take the new trail directly to the Arboretum since it gets so close. It is disappointing that with as long as this freeway project has taken, there is still very little movement on the project to develop the old construction staging site into a park as is the plan. The 22-acre North Entrance Project remains unfunded, so it’s going to be a long time before it is constructed. A trail was shown in the environmental review documents for the Montlake part of the SR 520 Bridge project, so this is a known issue.

    Perhaps the city/state can at least build out a temporary trail in the meantime since planning for the full site has not even begun, and that process will likely take some time since there will be a lot of public interest in what will feel like an expansion (or reclaiming) of the beloved Arboretum. The park is not something that should be rushed because quality is more important than speed, but the trail connection is needed now.

    — Advertisement —
  • Feedback calls for walk/bike separation in Leary/Market plan, but people still prefer Shilshole for Missing Link

    People still prefer the city’s fully-designed Burke-Gilman Trail plan on Shilshole, though that project remains held up in a web of legal challenges. So if the city decides they must move forward with a route along Leary Way and Market Street instead, they want to see much more separation between people walking and biking than what has been shown in early designs.

    SDOT released the outreach summary report (PDF) for Councilmember Dan Strauss’s Burke-Gilman Trail Missing Link alternative on Leary Way and Market Street this week, and the responses are fairly straightforward and uncomplicated.

    Bar chart showing overwhelming support for more pedestrian and bike separation, the top point of feedback on the Market Street segment.

    It seems tough to misread this chart. Folks do not like the idea of simply widening the sidewalk on Market Street and calling it a trail. No other point in the entire feedback report got more support than this. People riding bikes don’t want to try to bike through a crowded sidewalk in a business district, and people walking, rolling or hanging out on sidewalks don’t want people biking there either. I can’t imagine business owners love the idea of their front doors letting out directly into the path of a designated bike trail, either. This is just not how it’s supposed to be done.

    The feedback report specifically points to Seattle Bike Blog at the reason for this result, noting, “Seattle Bike Blog published an article encouraging readers to share their feedback with SDOT about the project. This included a note to share specifically that SDOT should separate the path for people walking and people biking in front of businesses. This may have led to a higher number of comments for this particular theme.” First off, good work, everyone. But second, we were not the only ones making this point. A group of folks at the Ballard Landmark retirement and assisted living building as well as Carter Subaru and real estate developers Teutsch Partners have been fighting the Leary concept, and they also list a lack of separation between pedestrian and bicycling spaces as a problem. “There is no divider between the Missing Link and the sidewalk,” notes the NoLinkOnLeary website. “This makes the path more dangerous as pedestrians won’t know where to expect to meet bicyclists and scooters.” So it’s not just the Seattle Bike Blog readers who see the problem here, which is why that bar is so much longer than the rest of the chart. It’s a point of cross-community agreement.

    (more…)
    — Advertisement —
  • Ride Bicycles will close Seattle location as the retail bike shop business model faces uncertainty

    The Ride Bicycles storefront and sign. Cars are parked along the curb in the space where a bike lane exists today.
    Ride Bicycles in 2014, shortly after moving to the 64th and Roosevelt location.

    Seattle has lost another bike shop. Ride Bicycles is closing its Seattle location after 14 years, consolidating into its Issaquah location while also shifting to an online retail focus.

    “The lease was up, so I had to make a decision,” said owner Christiaan Bourdrez. “I was going back and forth and back and forth all summer long, and I finally decided if I’m going back and forth this much, then I probably shouldn’t do it.” With insurance costs rising 40% year-over-year, increasing inflation and falling retail margins due to bike industry oversupply, Bourdrez decided against committing to a new lease. “I’m not comfortable being that stressed out anymore,” he said, and he didn’t want to take the risk amid uncertainty for the bike industry. “The economic wind is not really blowing in our direction.”

    The Roosevelt shop will be open regular hours through Sunday (December 22), and most remaining items are 50% off. There are only a few bikes left, but they do have a good number of parts and accessories. “Any home mechanics should probably come out and grab some parts,” said Bourdrez.

    Ride Bicycles is just the latest in a series of major bike shop closures in recent years. Long-running general purpose shops like Velo Bike Shop and Counterbalance Bicycles closed in 2023, and then Back Alley Bike Repair and the electric cargo bike specialty shop G&O Family Cyclery closed in early 2024. Many of the economic challenges Bourdrez described sound similar to what Peter Clark of Counterbalance told us a little over a year ago: Insurance rates are skyrocketing, other business costs are increasing, and all the retail margins are shrinking. Put this all together, and the business model of a retail bike shop looks very shaky.

    “I’m no Nostradamus,” said Bourdrez, but “maybe we’re a canary in the coal mine. I certainly hope I’m wrong […] There could be a bigger business cycle coming to an end.” Ride Bicycles opened 14 years ago in a small space at Ravenna Boulevard and Roosevelt, then moved to its current space at 64th and Roosevelt in 2014. They were a Seattle Bike Blog advertiser for several years back when I made the jump to doing this work full-time, so the shop holds a special place in this site’s history. At the time, Bourdrez was focused heavily on practical city bikes. “We don’t carry anything that doesn’t allow fenders or racks,” he told Seattle Bike Blog in 2014.

    (more…)
    — Advertisement —
  • Washington adds another ring to its bike-friendly state rankings dynasty

    Table showing Washington’s scored in 7 categories putting the state 4th in funding, 1st in infrastructure, 1st in laws, 1st in policies, 8th in capacity and support, 7th in safety, and 3rd in Every Ride Counts.
    From Washington State’s Report Card (PDF) from the League of American Bicyclists.

    We don’t use the term “dynasty,” lightly, but the 1960s Boston Celtics have nothing on Washington State’s utter dominance of the bike-friendly state rankings by the League of American Bicyclists. The League announced the 2024 rankings today, and the trophy is coming home to the Evergreen State once again.

    Since the League started publishing their rankings in 2008, Washington has only failed to hold the top spot once: A devastating fall to 3rd place in 2022. But that 3rd place finish behind the Celtics Massachusetts and Oregon did not account for Washington’s ace up it’s sleeve: The Move Ahead Washington transportation investment package the legislature has just passed. Move Ahead Washington included $1.29 billion of safety focused programs and other active transportation investments such as an e-bike subsidy that has yet to roll out to the public. Those investments were enough to take back the top spot. Eat your heart out, Massachusetts.

    In all seriousness, it’s great that Washington finally has competition on this list and that it now requires safety investments like those included in Move Ahead Washington to stay on the top. Even as recently as 2019, we ran the headline: Other 49 states still seemingly uninterested in being more bike friendly than WA. Well, now Washington will need to keep pushing hard if it wants to keep its spot, especially considering it’s middling score in the safety category. Depressingly, even though Washington’s bicycle fatality rate increased since 2022 (reported as 4.9 per 10,000 bike commuters according to Federal data, up from 4 in the 2022 report), it’s ranking compared to other states improved (8th safest down from 11th). We have so much work to do to get ahead of our nation’s growing traffic safety crisis. The increase in deaths across the nation are unacceptable.

    Below are some suggestions for improvement from the League’s Washington State report card (PDF):

    (more…)
    — Advertisement —
  • SDOT Director Greg Spotts announces February resignation

    Screenshot of bluesky posts by Greg Spotts. This morning I notified the Mayor of my intent to resign my position effective 2/12/25.
On a personal level, moving to Seattle alone has been hard, particularly living so far away from my mother in CA and father in NY. In 2025 I will pursue professional opportunities closer to my loved ones. I depart the Puget Sound with great enthusiasm for Seattle’s future and profound gratitude to Mayor Harrell for the opportunity to serve a dynamic, innovative and fast growing city with unlimited potential. 

I’m also very thankful for the community members who welcomed me so warmly.
    Spotts posted the announcement on Bluesky.

    SDOT Director Greg Spotts will resign February 12, he announced Tuesday morning.

    “I depart the Puget Sound with great enthusiasm for Seattle’s future and profound gratitude to Mayor Harrell for the opportunity to serve a dynamic, innovative and fast growing city with unlimited potential,” he wrote in a Bluesky post. “I’m also very thankful for the community members who welcomed me so warmly.”

    Spotts took over the job in September 2022 following the December 2021 departure of Sam Zimbabwe in the wake of Mayor Bruce Harrell’s election. It is common in for new mayors to bring in their own SDOT Director, though Spotts would be the first SDOT Director in a while to leave before their mayor’s term has ended. Mayor Harrell announced this week that he will seek reelection in 2025.

    “On a personal level, moving to Seattle alone has been hard, particularly living so far away from my mother in CA and father in NY,” Spotts wrote. “In 2025 I will pursue professional opportunities closer to my loved ones.”

    Though his time in the office was relatively short, Spotts oversaw a pivotal moment in SDOT’s history. Voters approved the largest ever transportation levy in November by a landslide (the final result was 67% in favor), giving SDOT a nod of approval that did not feel certain just a few years ago.

    (more…)
    — Advertisement —
  • Alert: It is once again time to voice overwhelming support for a safer Lake Washington Blvd

    Map showing the locations of planned speed hump and crosswalk improvements.
    Speed cushions don’t stop anyone from driving, but they do make it a little harder to drive too fast.

    Even the dramatically watered-down and insufficient traffic calming improvements planned for Lake Washington Boulevard are now apparently at risk after pushback from “people who enjoy driving as fast as they want along the boulevard,” as Seattle Neighborhood Greenways put it. Neighbors have campaigned for years about the need for safer walking and biking space on the storied lakeside boulevard, one of the only reasonably flat north-south routes in southeast Seattle. Extensive public outreach showed very strong support for ambitious changes, but SDOT and Seattle Parks decided to ignore their own outreach and instead give a baffling amount of authority to a failed and resentment-consumed community task force effort in 2022–23 that was unable to agree on much of anything beyond a short list of low-cost, unoffensive and insufficient traffic calming improvements that finally made it to construction in 2024 and 2025. We’re talking about a handful of crosswalk improvements, some speed humps, and some boulders in places where people keep driving off the road and into the park and lake. The final list falls far short of than the permanent on-street walking and biking path and expanded Bicycle Weekend hours advocates were initially hoping for. Safety opponents won, and now at least some of them are fighting even the scraps that made it through by pressuring the city to cancel the second half of the planned improvements.

    You can help by using their handy online form to send letters to city leaders supporting completion of the traffic calming work. You can also join supporters at a community meeting 6:30 p.m. December 12 at the Mount Baker Rowing and Sailing Center (3800 Lake Washington Blvd S) in person or online.

    I honestly have no idea why the winners of this joke of a public process would want to reopen debate on this matter, but fine. Let’s do it. Let’s reopen this project debate. If they don’t know how to take a W, then let’s turn it into an L.

    Every time the city surveys people about the idea of a permanent safe space for walking and biking on Lake Washington Blvd., the result is resounding and enthusiastic support. A 2022 public outreach effort got survey responses from 3,048 people, 73% of whom lived in a Seattle zip code that includes Lake Washington Boulevard. The survey asked respondents to pick up to three of their preferred improvements they you like to see on the boulevard. Respondents overwhelmingly supported adding dedicated space for biking (2,319 or 76%), increasing the number of Bicycle Weekends days (1,754 or 58%), and adding traffic calming like speed humps (1,664 or 55%), the top three of eight options. Even though 31% of respondents said they drive on the boulevard as their main commute route, only 14% chose “do nothing” as one of their three preferred changes to the street, a dismal 5% of total responses to the question. Even when they did in-person intercept surveys at nearby grocery stores and community events, they got similar support for better walking and biking conditions on the boulevard even from people who said they usually drive there. Yet we find ourselves once again having to fill out action alerts and pressure city leaders not to listen to this demonstrably unpopular opinion even after these decisions were already made and work is already underway.

    From Jan 2015 to April 2022, there were 101 collisions on this park boulevard, including 36 that injured at least one person and 6 that resulted in serious potentially life-long injuries. This is unacceptable and must change. Speed humps, stop signs and raised crosswalks should help, which is why Rainier Valley Greenways has been supporting the watered-down plans despite their frustrations with the process and result. But even once the traffic calming elements are completed, the work will not be finished. Hopefully the rate of serious crashes will be reduced, but there will still be no dedicated space for people of all ages and abilities to bike on the street.

    (more…)
    — Advertisement —
— Advertisement —

Join the Seattle Bike Blog Supporters

As a supporter, you help power independent bike news in the Seattle area. Please consider supporting the site financially starting at $5 per month:

Latest stories

— Advertisements —

Latest on Mastodon

Loading Mastodon feed…