Party4OurStreets – Thursday Dec 11

We are part of Seattle Neighborhood Greenways, and it has been a great year for the Greenways movement. Let’s celebrate!

Join our friends from around the City at for a party this Thursday.  5:00-8:00, 7:00 award ceremony

at Washington Hall,  153 14th Avenue just north of Yesler.  If you ride your bike, we can do a group ride back to West Seattle.

More details here

In West Seattle, Seattle Neighborhood Greenways has supported our efforts to create the North Delridge Greenway on 26th (completed); the Delridge/Highland Park Greenway (construction in 2015); vigil walks for traffic collision victims; the 35th Avenue SW Corridor Safety Project; and alliances with other groups.

This event is free. That’s because volunteers are doing the work. If you can help with set up (starting at 3:30), running the event (from 5-8), or teardown (after 8:00), contact Gordon Padelford at SNG: info (at) sng (dot) org.

Party4OurStreets

 

slow down – save lives

Driving 3.3 miles on 35th Ave SW from Fauntleroy to SW Roxbury takes 5 minutes at 40 mph, or 6.6 minutes at 30 mph, if you could make all the lights and no traffic slows you down. Assuming that was possible, how important is it to get there 100 seconds faster? It is worth risking lives?

10676235_10152987780520676_4470665608934634978_ngraphic from SvR Design

WSBC Meeting Tues Dec 2

Monthly meeting, Tuesday December 2

6:30 to 8:00 pm

Homestreet Bank,  SW Alaska St at 41st Ave SW

Open meeting – you are invited and welcome to plan activities and meet others who are working to make it easy and safe to use a bike to get around West Seattle and beyond.

We need volunteers for:

  • advocacy to city agencies
  • participation and presentations for neighborhood associations;
  • writing stories;
  • taking pictures;
  • making maps;
  • graphic design;
  • grant applications for street and trail improvements;
  • representing us with our partners at Seattle Neighborhood Greenways and Sustainable West Seattle;
  • setting organizational tools and accounts,
  • leading or volunteering at events like Alki Summer Streets and Fiestas Patrias;
  • baking cookies for Bike to Work day;
  • working with businesses and schools on bike parking and safe routes to school and Bike Month;
  • helping organize new Greenways groups;
  • welcoming and following up with people who “join us” or “like” us online;
  • organizing or leading social rides around West Seattle;
  • organizing or working at DIY trail maintenance projects;

All these are potential meeting topics, but even if you can’t make an evening meeting, you can offer to volunteer in something that interests you, by email to us directly at westseattlebikeconnections@gmail.com

Bikes + Trucks + Trains – West Seattle to Downtown

IMG_2253Alon Bassok teaches in UW Civil Engineering’s Masters of Sustainable Transportation program. His class chose to look at commuting by bike from West Seattle to downtown through the Port area.  Coincidentally,  Alon lives in West Seattle and rides a bike, in addition to being extremely knowledgeable about freight mobility, so he could give them some guidance and lead them to resources.  One project stands out for its analysis, graphics, and ideas.  Brian Wood and Bon Provenzano joined us at a recent WSBC meeting to share and discuss their work. Brian came in from Whidbey Island, mostly by bike, and Bon joined via Skype from the north of England.  Take a look!

CEE 563 A – Brian Wood and Bon Provenzano – Modal Conflicts – Partial – Final

Thurs Nov 13 Tweed Ride – WS Bridge to Proletariat

Dress in your warmest, tweediest, and join us for a social ride, food and drink!

Meet at precisely 5:30 p.m. under the West Seattle Bridge where the trails meet, and ride to White Center.

WSBC Tweed Ride 11-13-2014

WSBC Meeting – Tues Nov 4

We will be meeting to share news and plan activities.
Tuesday, Nov 4
6:30 to 8:00 pm
HomeStreet Bank, 41st Ave SW at SW Alaska St, Seattle

Open meeting — if you are interested in travel by bike in West Seattle, you are invited and welcome!

West Seattle Harvest Festival – by bike

2014-10-26 14.23.23-1Jeff and Kim parked at the WS Junction bike corral for Harvest Fair. Jeff can’t walk very well or very far right now, but he can ride with Kim in the rain.

 

 

 

Good to see the bike corral serving festival goers and market shoppers.  After the new building is completed, we are hoping for ground floor commercial tenants who will enjoy the bike parking right out front. 2014-10-26 13.43.27

Chelan 5-Way Intersection – Waiting for Green

It’s not a wonderful place to be walking or riding a bike, even when the east bound push button is working. It’s hazardous going westbound with a narrow, twisty turn around a pillar to the crosswalk on a blind curve at the Delridge ramp.  Lately, the ped crossing push button on the island has not been working right.  Bike riders give up after a full sequence of lights misses them once or twice, and just go for it, playing Russian Roulette if traffic is heavy, and annoying drivers.  Eric Shalit filmed Don Brubeck illustrating the point.

If it’s been a problem for you, please join us in reporting it to SDOT.  Long range, this intersection should have a completely new solution for bike and walking traffic, to connect the Alki Trail to the West Duwamish and West Seattle Bridge trials in a smooth, safe way for riders of any ability, including families with kids. This is a critical West Seattle bike connection.

35th Ave SW Safety Corridor – time for input

One car crash every 3.4 days for the past 10 years. 40% of the crashes include injuries, many to people trying to cross on foot or on bikes, and five fatalities.

Initial public input meeting on 35th Avenue SW Safety Corridor Project last night: Well attended, well moderated by Jim Curtin, SDOT project manager, who lives on the corridor.
See the WS Blog today for a full illustrated report including the city’s slides.

Send your ideas, comments, questions to jim.curtin@seattle.gov.

Repeat of this input meeting:  Tuesday, October 28th, 3:30-5 pm at Southwest Branch Library on 35th at SW Henderson

It was good to see Kathy Dunn, Sakaru Tsuchiya, Aaron Goss, Joe Szilagyi, Amanda Helmick, Chas Redmond and Cathy Tuttle of Seattle Neighborhood Greenways at the meeting.

Here are some comments from Joe, who lives just off 35th in High Point and rides with his young daughter on board:

“35th ave SW is very dangerous road to bike on.  In fact, it is the only street in West Seattle that I will not bike even one block.  Cars drive very fast and there is no bike lane.  No sharrows.  No safe place to ride.  I am constantly seeing smashed parked cars by the side of the road.

“That being said – 35th Ave SW is bordered by very low volume streets that are a joy to bike on.  For example, if you want to bike from Highpoint to Westwood, you can take 30th or 31st and have a pleasant and safe ride.  We do it all the time.  As much as I’d love for every street to be bike friendly, I wonder if that’s a reasonable goal for 35th.  My thought is let the cars stay on 35th and that way the bikes are able to safely use the side roads.

“Now… pedestrians and bikes will need to cross 35th.  So there are improvements that need to be made.  And 35th needs to be made safer for motorists as well.  So I applaud and support the efforts to make 35th safer.  I just don’t see making 35th ave SW biker friendly as a reasonable goal given the excessive volume of cars.  But I trust the WSBC leadership.  So I’ll be behind whatever approach the group thinks is the best for the community.”

from Don:
We can follow the lead of the Central Area group that is getting greenways built parallel to 23rd Ave before the re-do of 23rd. It helps prevent those quiet residential streets from becoming a short cut for car traffic, and provides a safe place to walk and ride while the road construction happens, and forever after for those who don’t want to ride on busy arterials.

I rode from downtown Tuesday night to my granddaughter’s birthday party in Arbor Heights west of 35th. From Avalon, I rode 36th/37th going there. It’s got some big uphills going south, but it works. Going home I took 34th all the way to Graham, used the sidewalk from Graham to the library, crossed there to 36th, and went back to Alaska on 36th/37th, then over to Alki.  Very pleasant and direct at night. 34th is not as hilly as 36th/37th. 34th is a great connector for three schools, HP Library, HP Community Center, churches,  parks, etc.

Wednesday, i rode from downtown and WS Bridge trail onto the Delridge sidewalk, then down to 26th Ave Greenway, then west to 30th, up the hill (walking my heavy bike up the really steep block of Snake Hill) and up through High Point to Neighborhood House.  Went back on Morgan to 34th and the same way as previous night.  That’s three good routes parallel to 35th that already work really well, and would be better if they had greenway treatment and signals at busy street crossings for rush hour crossing.

Aaron Goss (Aaron’s Bike Repair) was at the meeting. He commutes daily along 35th by bike and is obviously experienced. He likes it because 35th is less hilly, and wants bike lanes and center turn lanes and one regular traffic lane each way.

There’s a repeat of this input meeting next week.3:30-5 pm at Southwest Branch Library on 35th at SW Henderson

Tues 10/7 WSBC Mtg & Presentation

6:30 pm at Winship residence, 3438 36th Ave SW

Come participate in an online presentation and discussion on solutions to modal conflicts:
Port Activity and Bicycle Commuting Between West Seattle and Downtown
by Brian Wood and Bon Provenzano,
students in Alon Bassok’s Transportation Choices and Technology class
UW Dept of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Master of Sustainable Transportation Program

Excellent graphics and analysis – IMG_2253 lots to discuss!

Quick run through of regular agenda at 6:30.
Presentation/discussion 7:00 to 8:00