2020 – What could go right?

Pandemic. Bridge out. It was bad. We are all trying to cope and are grieving our losses, including lives, contacts with loved ones and friends, income, access to education, and more.

But it wasn’t all bad.  Some good things we’ve been working are happening. All of them due to years of work with other people and groups, building relationships, trust and mutual support. Here are five highlights to give us good cheer. Let’s celebrate the end of a miserable year.

Avalon Way SW Protected bike lanes

and intersection safety improvements are completed! We’ve been fully involved with SDOT, local businesses and other stakeholders to make this  key West Seattle bike and transit route safer for people of all ages and abilities to walk, bike and take the bus. Thank you!

Child riding bike uphill on Avalon Way SW in new protected bike lane.
Doug’s young son riding uphill in the new protected bike lane.

East Marginal Way Corridor Improvement Project

Protected bike lanes, intersections with bike signals, and off-street path from S Spokane Street to the Portside Trail are funded and designed for construction in 2021 .  This is a big win. We and our allies at Port of Seattle have been working for this since 2012.  It is a catalyst for increasing the number of people riding bikes to downtown and points east and north.

bike riders mixing with car and semi-truck traffic on East Marginal Way South, Seattle

 

Duwamish Longhouse Pedestrian Safety and Accessibility Project

The Duwamish Tribe’s project was fully funded by City Council, and is in design. Coming soon: sidewalks, crosswalk with traffic signal, and an ADA accessible route to the Duwamish Trail, parking, Ha-ah-Poos Park, and the Duwamish River.
We have been working to support the Tribe’s efforts, successfully building a broad coalition of other community groups. We would like to acknowledge that we are on the unceded traditional land of the first people of Seattle, the Duwamish People past and present. We honor with gratitude the land itself and the Duwamish Tribe. Supporting the Tribe’s Ridge to River vision is one way we can go from words into action.
person crossing 5 lanes of traffic with a flagger at Duwamish Longhouse

Reconnect West Seattle

Many of our “Biking to Bridge the Gap ” measures to get more people on bikes for mobility while the West Seattle bridge are in the plan, thanks to a concerted effort with our allies at Duwamish Valley Safe Streets, Seattle Neighborhood Greenways and Cascade Bicycle Club. Some are completed. We even did one ourselves with friends from Highland Park. We’ll need to advocate for more in 2021

We also helped a lot of Essential Bikers find ways to commute to work.
And,  e-bikes sales explode, defusing the clamor for new regrade projects to level West Seattle’s hills. Paul Dieter wrote this helpful guide.
Seattle fire fighter and medic in parkas on e-bikes at Duwamish east waterway.

Delridge Way SW Multi-Modal Corridor Project

Another top priority project is under construction. Fast, frequent bus service on the RapidRide H to downtown Burien and downtown Seattle is a big win for West Seattle transportation where it’s needed most. The project does not include everything we’d like to see, and actually removes some bike lane, but is adding a protected bike lane south bound for the south half; greenway improvements on 26th SW, SW Andover and SW Croft, a bike-triggered signal at SW Juneau, and safety improvements at SW Andover to the bridge trail under a Neighborhood Street Fund grant that Kathy Dunn proposed.

girl on bike with bike blender to make smoothies at Delridge Day
WSBC bike blender smoothies at Delridge Day