Sound Transit work on Mercer Island will close a section of the I-90 Trail starting Thursday and lasting through Saturday.
And unfortunately, this stretch of N Mercer Way does not have bike lanes, so people biking will be directed to mix with car traffic. People walking will be directed to use a path on the street. It’s not a terribly busy road, so people comfortable with a little mixed traffic biking will be fine. But it’s not a great option for people of all ages and abilities.
Mayor Jenny Durkan has completely changed her tune about bike lanes since her first year in office. Well, that’s not entirely accurate because in her first year in office, she said very little about bike lanes at all. Projects were quietly delayed, scaled back or, in the case of 35th Ave NE, cut completely. She wasn’t saying she was against bike lanes back then, but her actions made it clear they weren’t a priority for her.
But it’s not that way anymore. For the second time since August, Mayor Durkan has spoken at a bike lane celebration about the importance of building bike connections and reducing the number of people driving alone in the city.
“A city of the future has to be a city that is safe and more connected for people that bike and walk and roll,” she said to a gathering of bike advocates and reporters Monday in South Lake Union. “We’ve got to make sure that in our climate fight we’re really doing what we need to do in the city of Seattle, and that means getting people out of cars as much as we can, particularly single occupancy vehicles.”
And at least for biking, she has lately been backing her words up with action, building major bike network connections that had been delayed during her first year and a half. That includes finishing 9th Ave in South Lake Union, 8th Ave downtown, parts of Pike Street between downtown and Capitol Hill, and a south downtown connection to the ID via S Main St and 5th Ave S. And as I write this, a connection between the 9th Ave and 2nd Ave bike lanes is under construction on Bell St. Once complete, it will be possible to bike between the ID and the Fremont Bridge/Burke-Gilman Trail without ever mixing with car traffic except through the traffic-calmed Bell St Park.
A single connected downtown bike route is not a complete network, sure, but it’s a remarkable feat that was little more than a dream just a few years ago. So while the work is far from complete, this is definitely worth celebrating.
Vicky Clarke, Policy Director at Cascade Bicycle Club, spoke after the mayor noting that the work isn’t finished.
“Cascade Bicycle Club and Seattle Neighborhood Greenways together launched the Basic Bike Network campaign in early 2017 to reinvigorate efforts to make biking to and through downtown safe and accessible,” said Clarke. “We set an aggressive but realistic goal of completing a connected minimum grid of all ages bikeways in downtown by the end of 2019. But there’s work to do. Realistically, gaps remain on 4th Avenue, 12th Avenue, Bell Street and around the new arena downtown. We know that the network was only as
strong as its weakest link, and we’ll be working with the city to fulfill their commitment to complete closing the gaps in the basic bike network including funding and building the two-way bike way on 4th Avenue next year.”
Of course, many people rightly remain cautious about trusting her dedication to biking. There are still no plans to restore the deleted 35th Ave NE bike lanes, and it’s going to be pretty hard for people who rely on biking in that neighborhood to forgive and forget. But it seems that all the organizing people did to protest the deletion of those lanes has paid off elsewhere.
There’s also a very practical and political reason to support biking and rebuild trust with bike supporters in Seattle: The Mayor needs to pass a voter-approved Transportation Benefit District measure in November. Mayor Durkan several times thanked voters for approving the Move Seattle Levy that funds much of the bike lane work, and she claimed the bike lane construction as evidence that the levy work is back on track. It’s important that people trust SDOT to fulfill its promises before giving the department more money. Cutting bike promises was a very dangerous narrative to have have in voters’ minds. SDOT’s budget would be decimated without the Transportation Benefit District, and bike supporters happen to be strong transportation ballot measure supporters. They don’t just vote, they also pack the phone banks and knock on doors. People who fight bike lanes don’t tend to do that.
As we reported yesterday, Mayor Durkan also announced her strong support for building the planned Eastlake Ave bike lanes as part of the 2024 RapidRide J project. This was a big win for biking that pretty much stole the headlines from the press event. The project is far from complete, but it’s hard to see a political path for people trying to block the bike lanes that doesn’t include the mayor.
Of course, all these improvements to north end bike connections make the city’s most glaring bike route gap stand out even more: Rainier Valley. The 2020-21 budget does include funding for a southend connection on either Beacon Ave or MLK. It’s going to be vital that the designs for these projects are high quality and complete. But no matter what the city builds, there are still going to be big missing gaps. It’s going to take a lot more funding than what is budgeted to put south end bike routes on par with north end bike routes. The 2020-21 budget is little more than a down payment.
Mayor Jenny Durkan removed all doubt about what she thinks about Eastlake Ave bike lanes during a mid-day press event today.
“Without prejudging what would come out of an EIS or what the lawyers would say, we need that bike lane,” she said in response to a question from Heidi Groover at the Seattle Times. “From the north end to downtown Seattle there are only a few routes you can go on, and so Eastlake is moving forward.”
Mayor Durkan was speaking at a press event celebrating the completion of several downtown bike lanes recently (more on that coming soon), but her Eastlake statement definitely got the biggest applause.
As we reported last week (and then rambled on about for more than an hour in a video), Eastlake Ave is the most controversial segment of the major RapidRide J project, a rapid bus and multimodal street remake of the corridor between Roosevelt Station and downtown. Because the project is receiving significant Federal funding, the Federal Transit Administration and SDOT have released a required joint environmental assessment outlining the options they considered for each part of the project and selecting a preferred option, which includes bike lanes.
SDOT anticipated pushback on Eastlake because adding protected bike lanes would remove a lot of parking on the street, so they conducted an exhaustive 100-page report (longer than the environmental assessment for the entire project) looking at nine different options for building a bike route along the project corridor. And the bike lanes are just the only option that is complete, makes regional bike connections and serves neighborhood destinations. (more…)
Thanks to everyone who voiced their concerns about SDOT’s incomplete plans for E Union Street bike lanes in the Central District, the project team has changed their designs to now extend the new bike lanes through the intersection with 23rd Ave.
You can support the complete bike lanes by completing the project survey by February 7.
Union is already a very popular street for biking even though its paint-only bike lanes disappear and reappear constantly between Madison St and 34th Ave in Madrona. It’s just the only east-west street in the area that goes all the way through without dead-ending into a major institution (like Seattle University) or turning into a staircase (Pike St). So protected bike lanes on Union are one of the highest-priority bike improvements for the neighborhood.
The design released last spring showed protected bike lanes from 14th Ave to 22nd Ave, then people biking would have been directed to either mix with car traffic (defeating many of the benefits of a protected bike lane) or use the busy sidewalks in the 23rd and Union business district.
Needless to say, people were not pleased with those options. The Urbanist was able to obtain project survey results that showed more than 600 of the 877 responses the project team received were from people calling for completing the bike lanes. The Central District has among the highest bike commute rates in Seattle, and Union is a key link to and through the neighborhood. So it’s no surprise that response was strongly in favor of complete bike lanes. (more…)
I’m trying something new here, so definitely let me know what you think. I created a stream-style video that’s me talking through the RapidRide J project and the Eastlake bike lanes. It’s quite long and definitely rambling. But it also has a ton of information and background on the project that would be hard to squeeze into a single blog post.
Maybe you’re looking for something to watch in the background? Or maybe you want to just listen to it in the background and check in if you want to see what I’m talking about. I don’t really know. I’d love your thoughts. Would you want to see more videos like this? Is it too long? (the answer is yes) Would you want to watch Seattle Bike Blog interviews that are taped like this? Do you have good ideas for future such videos? Let me know!
In our post about the planned Eastlake Ave bike lanes, we mentioned that the bike route there would be part of a regional network once the 520 Trail reaches across I-5. It might be hard to imagine what that connection will be like because it is so different from the way things are today, so here’s a closer look at the latest design plans from a November report to the Seattle Design Commission (PDF).
A trail was not always part of the so-called “Rest of the West” phase of the state’s $4.6 billion 520 Bridge Replacement Project between Montlake and I-5, but a lot of organizing a few years back by advocates, including Seattle Neighborhood Greenways and Cascade Bicycle Club, made sure a biking and walking connection continued all the way to Capitol Hill and Eastlake. The project includes a new bridge across Portage Bay, a new freeway lid park near Roanoke Park and an improved I-5 crossing. Put it all together, and you get a complete biking and walking path from Eastlake all the way to Kirkland and Bellevue.
Though the project is not scheduled to be complete until 2029, the major design decisions (like whether to include a trail and lid park) have already been made, and the details will be finalized over the next couple years. So let’s take a look. (more…)