Duwamish Revealed – Ride #2

6:oo pm Friday, August 21

Ride to the Duwamish Revealed performance Signal/Senal at T-107 Park.
10 miles R/T at leisurely 10-12 mph pace using Alki Trail, West Seattle Bridge Trail, Duwamish Trail, with stops to see temporary artwork installations along the way.  Performance is 7 to 9 pm.

From Jack Block Park, 2130 Harbor Ave SW.Start point is first set of restrooms by the colorful anchor floats. Via Alki Trail, West Seattle Bridge Trail, Duwamish Trail, to T-107 Park. 

If driving to Jack Block Park, park OUTSIDE the park on Harbor Ave. The park closes at 9:00 pm. We will get back after 9:00 pm.

Lights and helmets required. Bring a lock, too.

Free, but you need a free ticket to the performance, in advance.
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2074171

Duwamish Revealed — Water Festival Ride 8/16

Sunday, August 16, 10:15 am

Ride from Jack Block Park to visit this summer’s Duwamish Revealed art installations along the west bank of Seattle’s only river, and arrive at the Water Festival/Festival de Agua in South Park for Mexican music, food and drink, dragon boat and work boat racing, and Lucha Libre (Mexican wrestling)!

Leisurely pace with stops to see artworks at Jack Block Park, T105 Park, T107 Park, Herring’s House Park along the way to Duwamish Waterway Park in South Park. We will stay together on the ride there, using the mostly flat Alki Trail, West Seattle Bridge Trail, and West Duwamish Trail, planning to arrive at the festival about noon. Ride with leader at 4 pm or ride back earlier or later on your own. The festival goes from noon to 8 pm.

This is the second West Seattle Bike Connections/ Cascade Bicycle Club “Parks and Art” ride.

14 miles round trip.

Families welcome. Parents please follow Cascade’s policies for riding with children, and call Don at 206 963-9312 in advance for permission for kids under 15 to ride their own bike on this ride.

35th Ave SW Safety Corridor – Except for People on Bikes

35th Ave SW Safety Corridor meeting tonight – good to be there with West Seattle Bike Connections members Theresa Beaulieu, Kathy Dunn, Bill Gobie, Keith Newham, Don Brubeck.

We support the safety improvements planned for 35th, but only if it satisfies Seattle’s “complete streets” policy and ordinance, requiring accomodation for all modes of transportation. We’ve been pushing for this project since 2012, working with Seattle Neighborhood Greenways, Highpoint neighbors, SDOT, and most recently lobbying with Cascade Bicycle Club to support the project.

35th Ave SW is identified in the Seattle Bicycle Master Plan as a city-wide network route for protected bike lanes on 35th, with parallel greenway routes on 34th SW and on 35th/36th SW.  The 35th Ave SW Safety Corridor Project now says there will be a “study” of parallel greenways in 2016, a year after actually doing the work on 35th from SW Roxbury to SW Willow. No comittment to actually implementing the greenway. No comittment to even “study” the 36th/37th greenway that could get you north of Graham to WS Junction and points north and west.  Not good enough!  The work on 35th should not proceed without the parallel greenways!

We expect real action, not studies, not lip service.

So far, how many miles of the citywide (“highest priority for investment”)  network included in the bicycle master plan have been designed or built in West Seattle?

a. 10 miles

b. 1 mile

c. 0.1 mile

d. 100 yards

e. none.

If you answered “e. none”, you are correct!

 

35th Ave SW Safety – Public Meetings 7/15 & 7/16

Please join your neighbors at SDOT public meetings this week to support safety improvements on one of Seattle’s most dangerous and crash-prone streets – “I-35”.

  • 294 collisions, 128 injuries and 2 fatalities in the last three years
  • 5 fatalities in the last ten years

 

Wednesday, July 15, 2015
7:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Neighborhood House – Room 207
6400 Sylvan Way SW

Thursday, July 16, 2015
6:00 PM to 7:45 PM
Southwest Branch Seattle Public Library
9010 35th Avenue SW

We want to see SDOT and SPD succeed in reducing speeds, making it safer for pedestrians and bike riders cross at intersections and for drivers to make left turns. We ask for parallel greenway routes on 34th, and 35th/36th to link homes to neighborhood destinations and commute routes, and a signal at 35th & Graham, to end deaths and injuries.

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Driving from Roxbury to Fauntleroy on 35th at 35 mph saves less than 60 seconds over driving it a 30 mph.  Driving at 30 saves lives.

SDOT will brief the community about plans developed after input from meetings earlier in the year. Your support is needed!  If you cannot attend a meeting, please consider sending a message of support to City Council, Mayor Murray, and Jim Curtin at 206-684-8874 or via e-mail at jim.curtin@seattle.gov

West Seattle Little STP – We Made It!

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~25 people and 1 dog finished the ride from SW Seattle St to SW Portland St, with an unexpected welcome from a mother and daughter who live at the corner and treated us to ice cold otter pops!

We had a one year old who promptly fell asleep on dad’s bike; a 4 year old who rode the flats and downhills on his own, and had mom strap his bike on hers while he rode in a seat on dad’s bike; a 6 year old who rode the whole thing; a family with three kids, all accomplished riders, who rode from Queen Anne to ride with us; and capable young, middle-aged and older adults, some on their first organized ride, and some veterans of many “big STP’s”.  Pretty much all ages and abilities on this one.DSC09496

Most of us rode back to SummerFest and Green Life at the Junction, where Stu and Eric from DIY Bikes and Morgan Scherer from FamilyBike Seattle welcomed us to the festival.

Bridge bike counts up!

June2015 bridge countBike count on Spokane St Bridge in June was up 13% over June 2014, and up 12.4% for the year to date over same period last year.
It is also obvious from daily data that a lot of people skipped work on Fridays! Or took 1st Ave Bridge home, or car or bus. Click link at top right of our home page to see.

SDOT data, our graph.

Yes SDOT – Make Admiral Way Safe

We support the Admiral Way Safety Project .

Several of our members live on the west slope of Admiral Way SW. We share the concerns of our neighbors for the safety of our parked cars. But we are more concerned about the lives and personal safety of the people who walk and ride bikes everyday in danger from speeding vehicles.

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We want to see the SDOT plan implemented.

The primary objective is to slow down speeding car traffic, for the safety of all users of the street, including people riding bikes, people walking across to or from their bus stop or car, and kids and parents walking to the beach and to schools and playgrounds at Alki Elementary and Madison Middle School.

Loss of free on-street car parking is a concern for people on a few blocks of Admiral. It is due to people parking across the street to protect their cars from being hit by drivers who lose control on the curves below Schmitz Park. The posted limit is 30 mph, with a warning sign to slow to 20 mph on that curve, but due to the very wide lanes, many drivers are going 40 mph.  On days like Saturday when the Pirates came ashore, visitors to Alki were parked all the way to Schmitz Park Bridge.  But on Sunday, just as nice a day, there was plenty of open parking on street from 60th SW up the hill.  The crowded days here are like normal days for parking a car on Capitol Hill or lower Queen Anne.

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Adding bike lanes is a way to narrow the general purpose lanes and center turn lanes to minimum 11 and 10 foot widths. To get the bike lanes wide enough to be safe from door zone danger, a parking lane has to be subtracted to fit the available roadway width.  With houses fronting on only one side of the street most of the way along the hill, this should not be too much of a problem.  If the speeds are actually reduced, then people will not be so hesitant to park in front of their houses on the north side.  It should be a win for everyone.  However, if it does not work out that way, this is just paint.  It can be adjusted easily.

2015-05-28 19.35.11Some commenters have embraced greenways parallel to Admiral as the solution to go from Alki to California Ave SW. They are not looking at the map or trying it. Admiral is at an angle most of its length. There are no streets parallel to Admiral. There are no east-west streets that actually go through from Alki to Admiral Junction because of the steep slopes. It’s a beach bluff and a glacial moraine ridge beyond.

2015-05-28 19.47.45Admiral is at an angle because it provided an easier slope for a truck hauling route, and that’s why it works for bike riders, too, and that’s why it is included in the Seattle Bicycle Master Plan 2014 update map as a bike route with  “In Street Minor Separation” – bike lanes.  The west slope of Admiral Way has steady bike traffic, but lot’s more would use it if there were bike lanes and slower traffic speeds.

 

Pedalheads Kid Bike Camp in West Seattle until July 24th

Pedalheads is here in West Seattle until July 24th.  What is Pedalheads?  From their website:

Pedalheads is a safe, fun and challenging learn to ride bike camp for kids 2-12. Since 1995 we have taught over 175,000 kids how to ride. Using our own Pedalheads® teaching methods, we use small classes and exceptional instructors to get your kids off of training wheels and riding! Our comprehensive program opens up a world of opportunities for a lifetime of cycling.

They are offering 1-week sessions during the weekdays (M-F), with their last week in West Seattle starting on July 20th.  Registration is open for each week up until the Sunday before the week long session begins.  The West Seattle camp is being held at Fairmount Park in the open field next to Fairmount Park Elementary School.  There is a bright orange canopy setup that you can’t miss!

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Pedal Heads at Fairmount Park 06-23-2015

Pedalheads is also in other parts of Seattle for the summer, so check the website for schedule and to register:

https://www.pedalheads.com/PedalheadsWA/register-washington