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  • Bike Happy: Vote for your favorite Happy Bike Lane Person

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Thanks again to Brock Howell of Bike Happy for putting together this comprehensive weekly newsletter.


    TOP THINGS TO KNOW & DO

    1. Vote for the winners of the #HappyBikeLanePeople Contest >>
    2. SDOT is making progress on designing RapidRide Corridors from the Delridge and Roosevelt neighborhoods into downtown, which could mean new protected bike lanes along those routes.
    3. The wickedly fun “Shortest Day / Longest Night Get Dowwn” Race is this Saturday.
    4. Cyclocross season comes to a close this weekend at Fort Nugent Park on Whidbey Island.
    5. Queen Anne Greenways is hosting a discussion with Robin Mazumder on Monday.
    6. The bike path on the SR520 floating bridge opens Wednesday 3pm, forever transforming our region’s commute and recreation rides.

    VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE BIKE LANE PEOPLE!

    More than 50 ideas were submitted for the #HappyBikeLanePeople contest. Now, help choose the winners by voting in an online poll.  Winners will be announced in next week’s email.  Vote >>

    (more…)

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  • Bike News Roundup: Ghost Bikes

    It’s time for the Bike News Roundup! Actually, it’s well past time. I’ve apparently totally forgotten to do this since early October, so I’ve got what might be the biggest Roundup in Seattle Bike Blog history. Oops! I hope you weren’t planning to get much more work done today.

    First up, Ethan Brooks emailed me this short film he made that broke my heart:

    Pacific Northwest News: (more…)

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  • As NE 65th Street safety changes develop, tell SDOT to keep sidewalks wide and bike lanes protected

    Councilmember Rob Johnson addresses a neighborhood march demanding a safer NE 65th Street in June 2016.

    NE 65th Street needs a safer design. People keep getting seriously injured and killed on this street, and that won’t stop until something changes. This point has been well established, with neighbors even leading a community memorial and march to protest the dangerous conditions and demand action from the city.

    Councilmember Rob Johnson, whose District includes this street, joined the march and made funding a safety project there a priority. And he backed his words up with budget action.

    NE 65th is set to get a lot safer and more comfortable in summer 2018, and that’s very exciting.

    So now, the question isn’t whether the street needs safety changes, including protected bike lanes. If you want to know more about that, read our previous posts on the subject. Now the question is what those changes should look like, and judging by in-development design documents, the project needs some reworking to make sure sidewalks remain wide enough and the bike lanes get enough protection at intersections.

    You can get an updated look at the design and provide feedback in person at two public drop-in sessions 5–7 p.m. today (Tuesday) and 7–9 a.m. Thursday at Broadcast Coffee. You can also send comments to [email protected]. (more…)

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  • Support bike lanes along the Roosevelt RapidRide line (including Eastlake Ave)

    An effort to build a faster and more reliable bus route along the Roosevelt Way/Eastlake Ave corridor is also an incredible opportunity to improve biking and walking conditions along the way.

    The project — now called Roosevelt RapidRide — is going through a Federal Environmental Assessment, and public comment is open now until January 12 on the scope of that assessment. You know what that means. Let them know that biking and walking connectivity and safety should be top priorities, and that the protected bike lanes included in the plan will be huge improvements. There is a drop-in style open house TODAY (Monday) from 5 – 7:30 p.m. at the Silver Cloud on Fairview Ave N (apologies for the very late notice).

    You can also submit your comments in writing to [email protected].

    The project’s preferred alternative includes many of the most important bike connections for this project, such as upgraded bike lanes on 11th/12th Ave from Roosevelt to the U Bridge and protected bike lanes on Eastlake Ave E and Fairview Ave N. Unfortunately, very exciting bike lane concepts on Fairview Ave N in the heart of South Lake Union and on Stewart St have been cut. The bus improvements north of Roosevelt Station, including improvements going as far as Northgate, have also been scaled back since earlier versions.

    For biking, Stewart St is a particularly important and promising route for protected bike lanes, so it’s sad to see that left off the preferred alternative.

    Eastlake Ave E is one of the most important bike route improvements in the whole city, since it connects our state’s largest employment center to one of the only bikeable bridges across the Ship Canal. It’s hard to overstate how exciting it is to see those bike lanes in the preferred alternative.

    Here’s the planned project route and improvements under the preferred alternative: (more…)

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  • Goldberg: Find a peaceful, relaxing ride on South King County and Pierce County trails

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Thanks to Eli Goldberg and Bob Edmiston for this ride report. Their guide was written before the opening of the South Prairie to Buckley connection that wrapped up construction last week. So if you want to be one of the first people to ride that new trail section, here’s a guide for how to get there without a car.

    Photo by Bob Edmiston

    By Eli Goldberg and Bob Edmiston

    It’s the Seattle conundrum: you want to enjoy some natural beauty and exercise on your bike. But you dread the chaotic congestion of the Burke-Gilman trail, with spandex-clad bike racers, dogwalkers and rollerbladers all jockeying for a sliver of space.

    You feel a twinge of envy for Vancouver and Portland, with their extensive networks of traffic-calmed, tree-lined streets ideal for casual leisure biking.

    But you don’t have to go far for a peaceful, relaxing seasonal ride.

    Did you know that in just 15 minutes by public transit from downtown Seattle you can find a connected network of roughly 55 miles of well-maintained, scenic, and fully paved trails? No car or hill climbing required.

    You’ll ride through a half-dozen cute and historic downtowns in King and Pierce counties, and enjoy diverse and scenic terrain, with stunning views of Mt. Rainier. In the summer, you can even fill your panniers with fresh blueberries and strawberries with farmstand and U-Pick stops right on the trail. And you’ll be far from the craziness of the Burke.

    We’ve put together the below map and route guide, offering up to 55 miles of relaxed trail riding, with about 1.5 miles of less-comfortable on-street riding.

    (more…)

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  • Imagine a ‘postcarbon Seattle’ at symposium and ‘Futurama’ exhibit

    Does Seattle even need cars?

    That’s the question at the heart of a new exhibit at the Center for Architecture & Design now through February 17. The Center is open 10–6 Tuesday through Thursday, 10–5 Friday, 1–5 Saturday. Closed Sunday and Monday.

    Futurama Redux comes from the international group Smarter Than Car and “follows a best-case thought experiment that moves the present-day to 2050, when Vienna has become a leading city in post-carbon transition.”

    Many of those ideas about cities also apply to Seattle.

    “We are interested in how to think about an alternative use of space in cities,” said Florian Lorenz of Smarter Than Car, an exhibit curator. “The whole exhibition questions the car.”

    What other mobility options do we have?” he asked. “Why do we need cars in the city?”

    I’m all ears.

    The exhibit runs through February 17, but there will also be a symposium tomorrow (Saturday) called Imagineering a Postcarbon Seattle:

    The future might not be motorized: Over the coming decades the challenges of Postcarbon Transition and Climate Change Adaptation will demand a paradigm shift for the organisation of human settlements. This symposium questions the position of the city of Seattle in the global challenge of complete decarbonization until 2050. It will explore the opportunities and challenges that decision makers, creatives and civil society is faced with when taking up this responsibility and will explore first stepping stones to further such a transition.

     

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