NYTimes Op-Ed Today: Cars Are Ruining Our Cities

OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS

Cars Are Ruining Our Cities

“Both the public and a few of our bolder political leaders are waking up to the reality that we simply cannot keep jamming more cars into our cities.

A century of experience has taught us the folly of it. Three pathologies emerge. First, every car becomes the enemy of every other. The car you hate most is the one that’s right in front of you not moving. As cars pile in, journey times and pollution rise.”

Read more…

https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/04/25/opinion/cars-ruining-cities.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region&region=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-region

Meet the Oonee Pod, Secure Bike Parking

Wow! Flexible and secure bike parking!

“Each module consists of 270 standardized parts. It can be assembled or taken apart in a day.

The key to the structure, said Mansylla, is the footing. Each module is anchored by two plastic Jersey barriers filled with water or sand. “That gives us the ballast we need,” he said. “It can’t be tipped over.” But the Jersey barriers can be emptied and the components stored easily when disassembled. Mansylla likened it to a Lego kit.”

Oonee Pod CEO Shabazz Stuart speaking at Tuesday’s launch event for his secure bike parking prototype. Photo: Ben Fried
Read more…

https://nyc.streetsblog.org/2018/04/20/meet-the-oonee-pod-secure-bike-parking-designed-to-be-flexible-enough-for-nyc/

Bikelash. It Can Happen Anywhere.

This article describes “bikelash”, which is the response from drivers in some US cities to the creation of infrastructure for the safety of bicyclists. They complain of interference to the flow of traffic, hindering delivery trucks, and diminished parking. Think about it. All of the complaints are about the perceived “rights” of drivers of motorized vehicles to drive unimpeded, and to park, basically taking  up actual real estate on city streets to store cars.  In the US we live in a car culture dominated by an industry that barrages us with advertising to support the mentality that a drivers’ individuality and freedom is defined by the car they drive, and they own the road in a sound-proofed, luxurious, motorized living room with built-in creature comforts and amenities.  American drivers vastly outnumber bicyclists and they’re conditioned to believe that they own the road. No wonder drivers wail about giving up road space to bike lanes.  Infrastructure for bike rider safety provides equitable access to city streets, and is is critically important to the health of every city as a whole, and for residents as individuals.  But developing bike infrastructure is a process, and deconditioning people from the effects of indoctrination from the automobile industry isn’t easy, even in “Bike Town, USA”.

 

Creating Bike Lanes Isn’t Easy. Just Ask Baltimore. Or Boulder. Or Seattle.

Supporters say protected lanes prevent car-bike collisions; critics complain about less parking and more congestion

A cyclist rides in a bike lane separated from moving vehicles with a lane of parked cars on Roland Avenue in Baltimore. Some residents are fighting to get the city to remove the bike lane. PHOTO: SCOTT CALVERT/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
 Read more…

https://www.wsj.com/articles/creating-bike-lanes-isnt-easy-just-ask-baltimore-or-boulder-or-seattle-1524043800?emailToken=20b33f57237cdcde828c2a2a7a50da95eHLBPurWykovdAju9ACKQshH7a3AnsKhc5A9uKG74HhxphrYjLXPbyNazpkejWMpkLyXrT94xELcJBYVoKhFEfwMbafqNac27%2Bn2pDpoS4g6tL5C7Z2wmoGeq58bXC4X36dTXlR6eeHJBztfjxqLyw%3D%3D

Who Deserves a Place To Walk? A Social Justice Issue.

The case against sidewalks

By Alissa Walker on February 7, 2018
Illustrations by Paige Vickers

This article is rich with links.  Peruse all of the reasons and ways that Anytown, USA needs to, and CAN step up to make walking safe everywhere.

“With the advent of the car, these public spaces were pushed to the margins, squeezed to the fringe of roadways widened and reinvented for speed. The invention of jaywalking shamed and blamed those who dared to leave the sliver of space demarcated for pedestrians.”

“Underserved neighborhoods, where there are higher rates of pedestrian deaths and injuries, face even greater equity challenges around sidewalks.

“Street safety is an environmental justice and racial justice issue,” says Emilia Crotty, executive director of the pedestrian advocacy group Los Angeles Walks. Across the country, she notes, African Americans and Latino Americans are 60 percent and 43 percent more likely to be killedwhile walking than white Americans. “The traffic deaths and injuries that are so common in these neighborhoods are a result of historical neglect and disinvestment in the streets, crosswalks, sidewalks, traffic signals, medians, and curb extensions that other communities have enjoyed for years.”

Yet clean, safe, unbroken sidewalks have become such a rarity in this country that designing an area where people can get around primarily by walking—the one mode of transportation that is available and accessible to everyone—is now seen as a harbinger of displacement. In 2016, an Urban Land Institute report noted that walkability had become so desirable that it was something “many households will not be able to afford.”

American society has so normalized our inferior sidewalk system that we don’t believe we deserve a place to walk.”

Read more…

https://www.curbed.com/platform/amp/2018/2/7/16980682/city-sidewalk-repair-future-walking-neighborhood?__twitter_impression=true

A Goal of Asbury Park: Aging in a City Designed For People

Yesterday I was in almost exactly the same situation as the writer of this article. I was sitting in my car checking messages in a vast grocery store parking lot in Red Bank, when a very elderly woman tapped on my window.  The woman’s car wouldn’t start and she didn’t have a phone. She asked me if I could try to start her car.  Luckily she had AAA, which I called for her, waited with her for a while, then left her hoping that the repair truck would indeed get to her within the hour as promised. The woman probably shouldn’t have been driving at all, and she wouldn’t have to if she could safely walk to the grocery store in Red Bank.

We have already come a long way in beginning to make Asbury Park a truly walkable city.  Some seniors are able to get out and navigate a relatively safe sidewalk to get to a market, or walk on the boardwalk and enjoy the pleasure of sitting by the beach or in a park in certain areas of the city…but not all.  We’re working on developing livable spaces and safe streets that provide and for the needs of the most vulnerable citizens.

THE ISOLATION OF AGING IN AN AUTO-ORIENTED PLACE

 
BY SARA JOY PROPPE

Read more…

https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2017/4/14/what-developments-mean-for-you-as-you-get-older

Register Your Bike + Bike Parking Tips

Posting this again for the beginning of the spring/summer season. Asbury Park Police launched a bike registration program last year.  If a bike is stolen it can be identified.  If you have a computer and Adobe you can do it online, or print and mail it in.  You’ll get a confirmation fast.

Just.Do. It.  This is so easy.

Register here…

http://www.cityofasburypark.com/egov/documents/1504267960_74095.pdf

Bike Parking Tips:

http://www.cityofasburypark.com/department/division.php?structureid=98

 

 

Best Bike Laws in the Country. NJ Can Learn From Delaware.

Do we want better laws for bicyclists in New Jersey?  Bicycling advocates in Delaware did, and they succeeded.  Learn how. (Spoiler: It starts with engaging the police.)

NETWORK OF BICYCLE CRASH ATTORNEYS.

WE ARE A NETWORK OF INDEPENDENT BICYCLE CRASH LAWYERS WHO SHARE A COMMON APPROACH TO THE LAW AND TO HELPING CYCLISTS. OUR BIKE CRASH ATTORNEYS HAVE HANDLED THOUSANDS OF CASES. WE KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A BICYCLE ACCIDENT AND BICYCLE CRASH, AND WHY IT MATTERS.

In October 2017, Delaware’S Governor Signed The Bicycle Friendly Delaware Act, Placing Into State Law Cutting-Edge, Pro-Bike Reforms.

You say you want to change your state’s Rules of the Road even if the police are opposed? Bless your heart.

When it comes to the Rules of the Road in any state, the most important stakeholders are the police. Your state police will have a full-time lobbyist (or “liaison”) who attends every public safety committee meeting in your state legislature (and probably has been doing so for a decade or more). One way of attempting to reform the Rules of the Road in your state is to draft a bill without consulting with the police, find a willing legislator to introduce it, and let the chips fall where they may. Our comment on that strategy is “Bless your heart.” (According to Wikipedia, “bless your heart” is a phrase that is commonly used in the southern United States and which means “you are dumb or otherwise impaired, but you can’t help it.”)

Bike Delaware spent more time negotiating with the police on the text of the Bicycle Friendly Delaware Act than we did on any other aspect of the campaign. If you want to introduce a bill in your state legislature on a certain date, you should start negotiating with the police six months before that.”

Read more…

Best Bike Laws in the Country? Check Out Delaware.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cool Visualization of Parking Spaces

See Just How Much Of A City’s Land Is Used For Parking Spaces

BY ADELE PETERS  

Get a look at how much space is allotted to parking in cities around the world.

“At the moment, cars spend around 95% of the time parked, and only 5% of the time in use. Huge swaths of cities, either in parking lots, garages, or street parking spaces, are used as storage for cars (while, at the same time, many cities struggle to find enough land to build housing to keep up with demand). “There’s this huge space that’s basically wasted,” says Szell.”

“The visualization is part of a project called What the Street? that inventories parking lots in 23 cities around the world, along with the space used for roads, rail lines and rail yards, and bike paths and bike parking. ”

Read more…

https://www.fastcompany.com/40441392/see-just-how-much-of-a-citys-land-is-used-for-parking-spaces

What’s a Pedestrian Scramble? Video:Japan’s Shibuya Crossing

Watch this amazing video and read about how pedestrians and bicyclists can cross the street safely while all vehicular traffic is stopped at streets in all directions in the intersection.  Prioritizing people over vehicles in a very big way!

Pedestrian scramble

 Shibuya Crosswalk, Japan

Watch:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Od6EeCWytZo

pedestrian scramble, also known as scramble intersection (Canada), ‘X’ Crossing (UK), diagonal crossing (US), exclusive pedestrian interval, or Barnes Dance, is a type of traffic signal movement that temporarily stops all vehicular traffic, thereby allowing pedestrians to cross an intersection in every direction, including diagonally, at the same time.

It was first used in Canada and the United States in the late 1940s, but it later fell out of favor with traffic engineers there, as it was seen as prioritizing flow of pedestrians over flow of car traffic. Its benefits for pedestrian amenity and safety have led to new examples being installed in many countries in recent years.

Read more…

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedestrian_scramble

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Od6EeCWytZo