Tues 8/26 White Center Bike Corral Public Meeting – Again

10645269_10152715191509078_1761274735638513553_nTuesday, August 26 at 6:30 PM

at the Sherrif’s storefront, 9609 16th Ave SW, White Center across from Caffe Delia and Proletariat Pizza

Second public meeting about the proposed bike corral in front of Proletariat Pizza and Caffe Delia Coffee on 16th Ave SW

Caffe Delia and Proletariat Pizza want to swap 2 car parking places for 12 bike parking places in front of their businesses. Good for them and all of the WC business district.  Support is needed at this meeting! Please come if you can!  Some businesses are opposed, not realizing that people arriving on bikes are customers just like people arriving by car, bus or on foot. This does NOT take away customer parking!  It ADDS customer parking.  Additionally, some of the car parking is not really customer parking, because there is no parking fee or enforcement of any time limit. Caffe Delia, Proletariat Pizza and Theresa Beaulieu have obtained a grant to pay most of the cost of the bike racks. Just need to convince King Co and the CDA that this is needed and has community support.

We have been through all this before!  Help us bring this ill-defined process to resolution!

 

Heavy Haul Corridor – Ready or NOT

IMG_0194 IMG_0192 IMG_0190 IMG_0188 IMG_0187 IMG_0185 IMG_0181 IMG_0176 IMG_0174 IMG_0172 IMG_0171 IMG_0169 IMG_0167Freight Advisory Board 8/19 meeting highlight:

The proposed Heavy Haul Corridor on West Marginal, East Marginal, Hanford, and Spokane will allow >25% heavier axle loads on these streets that are substandard construction on crappy fill soils and are way past due for complete roadbed rebuild.

Pavement disintegrates already. We ride the unswept gravel paths that result. The oil dripping onto the roads drains directly into Puget Sound.

What will the new plans do for safety? Nothing.

What will they do to rebuild the road?  Nothing.

What WILL they do? Charge a couple hundred bucks for a permit to be over legal, with the revenue to pay for a cop to check that they’ve paid their fee.

It is important for our port to be competitive with Vancouver, Tacoma and Oakland. But not with a short term “solution” that destroys the roadway and compromises safety. Why should this be allowed before the road is rebuilt for  truck loads and bike safety, including bike lanes with concrete barriers, from Spokane to Atlantic on East Marginal and south of Spokane to the Federal Center? We need investment upfront in roads for freight and bike traffic, equal to the quality of the Atlantic St crossover and Portside Trail, all the way south.

WSBC ride with Councilmember Rasmussen

Councilmember Tom Rasmussen went for a bike ride this morning with seven of us from West Seattle Bike Connections, to get a first-hand look at some of the routes and intersections in the Seattle Bicycle Master Plan that we think are high priority for funding and implementation.

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Just a small group, so we could keep it conversational.  We started at Highland Park Improvement Center.  First stop:  The crosswalk at 11th Ave SW (a planned Greenway route) at SW Holden St, a busy arterial.  We are supporting the Highland Park Action Committee’s application to SDOT for flashing beacons DSC04141to help make this a safe crossing for kids going to schools and playgrounds in Highland Park and Riverview.

Then south on 10th Ave to SW Thistle at Highland Park Playfield. These are mapped as future Greenway routes, and seem ideal low traffic streets for walking and riding bikes. A set of public steps at 14th allows pedestrians to continue though on Thistle, but stops cars and bikes. We’d like to see a “runnel” gutter for bike wheels added to the steps, which are under construction now.

Then north on 17th Ave SW, which is a neighborhood Greenway route currently in the planning and design stage.  The proposed route jogs over to 15th Ave on Kenyon, then back over to 17th at Webster.  These jogs did not seem realistic to our group. Who would want to go 2 blocks east out of their way, and then 2 blocks west back to their route? And the intersections of Kenyon & 16th, 15th & Holden, and Webster & 16th would all need marked crosswalks and signals to be safe Greenway crossings. It looks much easier to just improve Holden for the short block from 17th to 16th, and then 16th to Webster, to get around the block that does not go through on 17th.

We started at Highland Park Improvement Center.  First stop:  The crosswalk at 11th Ave SW (a planned Greenway route) at SW Holden St, a busy arterial.  We are supporting the Highland Park Action Committee’s application to SDOT for flashing beacons to help make this a safe crossing for kids going to schools and playgrounds in Highland Park and Riverview.

Then south on 10th Ave to SW Thistle at Highland Park Playfield. These are mapped as future Greenway routes, and seem ideal low traffic streets for walking and riding bikes. A set of public steps at 14th allows pedestrians to continue though on Thistle, but stops cars and bikes. We’d like to see a “runnel” gutter for bike wheels added to the steps, which are under construction now.

Then north on 17th Ave SW, which is a neighborhood Greenway route currently in the planning and design stage.  The proposed route jogs over to 15th Ave on Kenyon, then back over to 17th at Webster.  These jogs did not seem realistic to our group. Who would want to go 2 blocks east out of their way, and then 2 blocks west back to their route? And the intersections of Kenyon & 16th, 15th & Holden, and Webster & 16th would all need marked crosswalks and signals to be safe Greenway crossings. It looks much easier to just improve Holden for the short block from 17th to 16th, and then 16th to Webster, to get around the block that does not go through on 17th.

Continuing north on 17th from Webster to Myrtle, there’s a spot that does not go through that is planned to have a bike/ped switchback ramp. This will be a ideal safe route to Stanislo Elementary.  If more kids can safely walk and ride to Stanislo, there will be less car congestion and hazards around the school and the beginning and end of the school day.

From there, we continued north on the partially completed 21st Avenue Delridge Greenway. It’s a great route along the ridge for bike riding, very attractive for commuting to SODO downtown, or connecting to the Alki or West Duwamish trails. Several on this ride use it regularly.  However, for pedestrians, and especially for wheelchair users, there is quite a bit of work left to do.

Then we dropped down to the 5-way intersection and Chelan/Spokane/Delridge/West Marginal, and talked about the planning in progress for that major connection point. From here to the Alki Trail. A look at the “Kitty Harbor” corner of Spokane and Harbor Ave, where we have an SDOT funding application in with Alki and Admiral neighborhood associations. Then a potty stop for our 2 year old rider at Luna Park Cafe, and a break before climbing up Avalon. Tom Rasmussen updated the group on the Fauntleroy Boulevard Project, which is now midway in design and public outreach, and promises to be a much friendlier welcome to West Seattle, with wide sidewalks, safer crosswalks, and bike routes to serve the rapidly developing area.

At mile 6.6, we reached the West Seattle Junction, and parked in the new bike corral, installed after a push from Councilmember Rasmussen, and much appreciated.  On to a bakery for food, coffee, conversation.

Thank you, Councilmember Rasmussen, for taking the time to ride with us, listen, and update us on projects. Thanks, too to Gordon Padelford at Seattle Neighborhood Greenways for suggesting the ride, and to Anthony Auriemma and Rose Smith at Councilmember Rasmussen’s office.

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Don Brubeck, with Theresa and Jason Bealieu, Jodi Connolly, David Geoffrion, Joe, Marlowe and Isabel Laubach.

Night Out with JuNO

Night Out at the Junction – basically, baby Nayla stole the show, but we did get to talk bike routes with some people new to West Seattle, and some not so new but wanting to ride, and Councilmember Tom Rasmussen stopped by to chat, AND we had a four-way water balloon toss!  Nice ride home past a bunch of other Night Out celebrations. Let’s go play in the street! DSC03844 DSC03837 DSC03850

Bike Assembly Day at Denny MS

Today we had about 30 kids working to assemble the bikes purchased with the money Theresa Beaulieu raised for the up coming after school program at Denny International Middle School.  It was a fun day filled with eager kids willing to help out.

Thank you to Will King who organized the student rotations.  Also a special Thank you to Jeff Hallman of West Seattle Bike Connections and DIY Bikes, and Theresa’s husband Jason Beaulieu. Thanks to all who donated money for the bikes, too!

And last but not least, a big THANK YOU to Stu Hennesey from Alki Bike & Board who helped Denny International Middle School purchase the bikes . We could not have done this without Stu’s generous discount on the bikes for the program.
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Mon 7/21 Meeting with SDOT – Fauntleroy Boulevard Project

Monday, July 21, 6:30 to 7:45 pm

at West Seattle Branch Library, 2306 42nd Ave. S.W.  (north of Admiral Way and Metropolitan Market)

West Seattle Bike Connections and West Seattle Transportation Coalition are meeting with SDOT representatives to review and provide input to redesign of Fauntleroy Way SW from 35th Ave SW to SW Alaska Street.

Open meeting.
http://www.seattle.gov/transportation/FauntleroyWySWBlvd.htmFauntleroy-Way-Green-Blvd_Color_Cross-Sections_062714

2014 West Seattle STP Ride!

DSC03412 DSC03420 DSC03435 DSC03455 DSC03461 DSC03463 DSC03521About 30 of us rode the 2014 (second annual) West Seattle STP  today! Beautiful day for it.  We made it from SW Seattle St to SW Portland St in an hour at a very social pace, with a few of us walking and pushing up a couple of the climbs, and were at Summer Fest at the West Seattle Junction by lunch time. A highlight was a three-generation family including two grandparents, two parents and child riding together.

Thank you Stu Hennessey / West Seattle Spokespeople for leading!  And to Cascade Bicycle Club for sponsoring a little ride that makes fun of your big one. And Al, Eric, Michael and Don for intersection marshalling and sweeping. Someday, when the Greenway routes and intersection improvements envisioned in the Bike Master Plan are built, people like all those on this ride will feel comfortable going this route on their own without ride leaders. Please join us in working for that and for fun rides!

More pix on our West Seattle Bike Connections Flickr group.

Tuesday, July 1 – WSBC Monthly Meeting

6:30 to 8:00 pm
HomeStreet Bank, 41st Ave SW & SW Alaska St, Seattle WA 98116

Open meeting. You are invited to join us for planning activities and events, including the West Seattle mini-STP, meetings with SDOT on Fauntleroy Way SW, bike corral projects, funding to implement the Bicycle Master Plan in West Seattle, SODO and South Park, and more.

Thank you, HomeStreet Bank, West Seattle Junction!

One bike corral for West Seattle – now!

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BIKE CORRAL COUNT
2012      SEA     8    WS  0
2013      SEA    16   WS  0
2014      SEA    30   WS  0?   (projected.  25 now)

Bikes are good for local business districts.  When we travel by bike, we shop and dine locally, instead of at malls and big boxes.  Bike corrals are good for business. That’s why Seattle is installing bike corrals in local business districts.
Except in West Seattle.

Our West Seattle businesses deserve better treatment!

With the support of the West Seattle Junction Association merchants, we have been working for 18 months to get SDOT to install one bike corral at the busiest block in the Junction. The Junction Neighborhood Association and the West Seattle Transit Coalition have joined us in this effort.  All we are asking for is one bike corral in West Seattle. The only timeline we have from SDOT is sometime in 2015. We are asking our elected representatives for help!

The city’s bike corrals are funded by Bridging the Gap levy, so all of us who rent or own property in Seattle are paying for them. The California Junction has over 600 “free” car parking spaces, paid for by the businesses, built into their overhead cost, and indirectly paid for by all their customers, including all who arrive by foot, bike and bus. We are asking for some benefit for the costs we pay.

Bike corrals park 8 to 12 customers in the same space that parks one or two customers arriving by car. Instead of congesting the sidewalks with bikes, they efficiently use the curb lane. The location we are requesting is not a car parking space. Bike corrals will help increase parking in a neighborhood that is rapidly getting more dense with apartments that have limited car parking.

Delivering More Bike Parking for Seattle