WSBC Meeting Tues March 3

Tuesday, March 3
6:30 to 8:00 pm
HomeStreet Bank, 41st Ave SW & SW Alaska Street – east of the WS Junction

Open meeting – come join the discussion and planning to make riding on the peninsula easier, safer, better. Lots to discuss and plan this month, including

  • Rides for South Park route celebration, and Major Taylor
  • 35th Ave SW corridor.  Public meetings coming up..
  • Chelan 5-way intersection campaign.
  • Volunteers for DIY trail/street maintenance
  • Volunteers to count bikes and cars at the 15th & Holden intersection for a traffic study.
  • Bike to Work Day commute station hosting
  • Vision Zero campaign963387_1390542716.6735

Thank you, HomeStreet Bank, for providing meeting space for Sustainable West Seattle groups!

Channelization – Road Diet – Road Feast

Transportation jargon can be confusing.  What is rechannelization? is that when you finally figure out the remote?  What is a road diet?  Gas station mini-mart food and coffee?  Why call roadway re-striping to include a mix of lane types a road diet? That is a term using only a car driving perspective. From the perspective of people on foot, in wheelchairs and motorized scooters, on bikes, riding buses, driving trucks, a “road diet” is more like a “road feast“, or at least a balanced meal  Here’s a new infographic showing their advantages, from Troy Heerwagen, a Seattle Neighborhood Greenways advocate. Road Diets - Save Lives  Keep Moving

Spokane Street Bridge – open for ships, breathing and stretching

Bridge open tonight… time to stretch, chat, check for messages. What do you do when the bridge opens just before you make it to the gate?

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Have you seen Kelli Refer’s little book Pedal Stretch Breathe – the Yoga of Bicycling? Bridge opening can be a good time to be present, to find contentment, even if you will be late for dinner, or in my case tonight, late for a yoga class.

Bicycling has the capacity to shift the paradigm of the way you see and interact with where you live. Distance is transformed, community is redefined. Try to integrate the same mindfulness of a yoga practice into the act of riding a bike. See what happens. When you integrate a yoga perspective into your riding it amplifies the importance of the present moment and helps you listen to your body.” Kelli Refer

Connect Seattle – West Seattle Bike Connections

We are part of Connect Seattle – the West Seattle, South Park and White Center part.  It’s a new initiative from Cascade Bicycle Club with Seattle Neighborhood Greenways.  Connect Seattle is a long-term citywide campaign to create a complete network of bikeways connecting neighborhoods across the city so everyone can ride safely. The campaign is powered by a network of neighborhood groups led by teams of caring neighbors working together.  Want to get involved?  Join us at a meeting first Tuesday of the month or by email to westseattlebikeconnections (at) gmail (dot) com. DSC06539

READ ALL ABOUT IT

 

Connect Seattle Summit – 5-Way Intersection

“A dream you dream alone is only a dream. A dream you dream together is reality”. John Lennon

 

West Seattle Bike Connections represented West Seattle at Cascade Bicycle Club’s Connect Seattle Summit yesterday. Cascade is helping set up Connect Seattle groups around the city to develop campaigns for critical bicycle transportation improvements. We are already set up, so Brock Howell at Cascade invited us to be the group for the peninsula.

Cascade’s resources will help with a major push for one project in each area of the city. For West Seattle we selected the 5-way intersection near the West Seattle Bridge at Chelan, Delridge, Spokane and West Marginal Way SW.

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The 5-way intersection along the Alki Trail is unsafe, confusing and time-consuming for all users including people on bikes, on foot, in cars and in the many trucks using Port facilities. It is a huge barrier to many who would like to ride this route to commute to SODO and downtown, or to connect between the Alki Trail and West Duwamish Trail and soon-to-be built Delridge/Highland Park Greenway.

The Seattle Bicycle Master Plan, with our input, identifies this as a “catalyst project”: When accomplished, it will dramatically increase the number of people of all ages and abilities using bikes here.  Concepts were identified in an SDOT workshop last February, and vetted during the year, as announced in January.

If you have experienced the traffic jams on Spokane Street lately, you know how important this corridor is for freight movement and jobs in West Seattle and regionally. Getting more people out of cars and onto bikes helps truck traffic, too.

Come to our Feb 3 meeting to get involved! Tuesday, 6:30 pm, HomeStreet Bank, 41st SW & SW Alaska.   Ten of us started strategizing at the summit. We’ll continue the work on strategies for raising awareness and funding.

SDOT has short-term improvements planned and funded for 2015. We want to push for the long-term “flyover” concept that adds a bike lane attached to the flyover ramp that goes from the Spokane Street Bridge approach to Terminal 5. The bike lane would go from the rise under the WS Bridge where the trails connect, crossing Spokane at the existing light, follow beside the Terminal 5 truck entry ramp and peel off before the RR tracks to land on the Alki Trail near the Chelan Café. No additional climbing required, and it goes over the whole 5-way intersection.

Similar to our alliance with Seattle Neighborhood Greenways for the Delridge/Highland Park Greenway and the 35th Avenue SW Safety Corridor Project, this alliance with Cascade Bicycle Club will give us the ability to reach all the decision makers who will need to approve and fund this project. Yesterday, SDOT Chief Traffic Engineer Dongho Chang and City Council Members Tom Rasmussen, Sally Clark and Mike O’Brien joined us for the summit. We really appreciate their investment time and attention to champion these projects. It shows what this coalition can accomplish together, making dreams reality.

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Trucks + Bikes this morning

Cars were turning around to try another route, instead of waiting for the trucks backed up from the Terminal 46 entry gate at Atlantic Street on East Marginal Way S. Bike commuters were going through without any problem. 

A perfect example of how truck traffic in the port and industrial areas is in conflict with car traffic, NOT with bikes. 

Using less roadway width than a general purpose travel lane, people on bikes move beside other traffic on S Spokane and East Marginal Way S. Bikes are not slowing down trucks and cars, and are not slowed down by trucks or cars. Every person on a bike could otherwise be a person in a motor vehicle adding to this traffic jam.  Bike lanes on the major truck streets increase bandwidth and flow. A good barrier between lanes here would increase it a lot more.

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Saturday January 31 – Connect Seattle Summit

Going to Connect Seattle Summit at Cascade Bicycle Club on Saturday (tomorrow)?
If you want to ride there together to represent West Seattle, South Park, or White Center, meet on Alki Trail at 59th SW ready to roll at 10:30 am or under West Seattle Bridge where the trails meet, at 10:45.
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WSBC Meeting February 3

6:30 to 8:00 pm.

Come join us!  Open meeting to plan and report on advocacy, events, rides to make it easier and safer to get around by bike in West Seattle.

Usually at HomeStreet Bank, 41st Ave SW & SW Alaska St, near the Alaska Junction. Check location the day of meeting.

Councilmember Tom Rasmussen has decided not to run for re-election, as you may know by now if you read the West Seattle Blog or the Seattle Bike BlogThank you, Tom Rasmussen for serving us well. We will miss you especially in West Seattle, but you are leaving us a legacy of a better transportation network throughout the city. We really appreciate that you have always been willing to meet, look carefully, listen, and talk straight, not just telling people what they want to hear, but explaining the political and fiscal context of an issue and finding a way to create the best solutions for our community.
Looking forward to riding with you in the future, and hearing about your bike journeys around the world.
Photo: Councilmember Tom Rasmussen has decided not to run for re-election, as you may know by now if you read the West Seattle Blog or the Seattle Bike Blog</p><br />
<p>Thank you, Tom Rasmussen for serving us well. We will miss you especially in West Seattle, but you are leaving us a legacy of a better transportation network throughout the city. We really appreciate that you have always been willing to meet, look carefully, listen, and talk straight, not just telling people what they want to hear, but explaining the political and fiscal context of an issue and finding a way to create the best solutions for our community.<br /><br />
Looking forward to riding with you in the future, and hearing about your bike journeys around the world.