Delridge Parks & Art Ride May 28

Let’s explore parks and public art in Delridge!

Join us for a social ride from Delridge Community Center, May 28 at 9:30 am.  8.6 mile route with hills at leisurely (10-12 mph) pace. We welcome people of all ages, languages, ethnicity, genders, and abilities.

Pre-registration required and limited to 20 riders.  Registration and more detailed ride info here.

This is a Cascade Bicycle Club Free Group Ride co-sponsored by West Seattle Bike Connections and Delridge Community Center.

Delridge Bike Fun May 21!

Come join us for three hours of bike fun May 21 10 am to 1 pm at Delridge Community Center.

We are putting on a bike rodeo with Delridge Community Center staff with skills course and bike decoration for young riders. Bike Works will bring their mobile repair van. Outdoors for All will have adaptive cycles for children and adult riders with disabilities to try. Children’s hospital will have some helmets to give away and helmet fitting. Seattle mounted police may visit on their horses. Free snacks!

Free event. Registration is not required.

We need a couple more rodeo wranglers.  Can you help? Email westseattlebikeconnections@gmail.com

Delridge Greenway connections progress

SDOT is proceeding now with suggestions we made during the Delridge Transit + Multimodal Corridor planning.  There’s a good Neighborhood Greenway on 26th Ave SW from Andover to SW Juneau, parallel to Delridge and just two blocks west. It’s at basically the same grade as Delridge Way, with less traffic, and connects to the Spokane Street Bridge and Alki Trail.  There is also the Delridge-Highland Park Greenway up on Pigeon Point, along Puget Ridge to Highland Park and White Center via 21st Ave SW – SW Myrtle – 1 7th Ave. That one needs some improvements, and was not connected to the 26th Ave Greenway.

Now it is connected!  SDOT has installed speed humps on Juneau between 26th Ave and SW Croft Place, and along Croft, which angles up the hill for a less steep way to go from 21st Ave down to Delridge Way.

A crew was out yesterday installing bike detectors on Juneau to trigger the stop light at Delridge.  One of them asked me as I stopped at the light if I ride this way often. And he gave a nice unsolicited explanation of the bike detectors, here for you, too.     short video

SDOT agreed to a bunch of our suggestions to improve the Delridge-Highland Park Greenway to make it a viable compromise route in lieu of northbound protected bike lanes on the south half of Delridge Way.  It’s good to see work proceeding even before the final plans for the RapidRide H line are set.  Good bike and walking c0nnections are vital for people to safely get to and from the farther-apart RapidRide bus stops. It is time for safe routes to ride, walk and roll in Delridge.

New speed humps on SW Juneau St from Croft Place to Delridge Way SW.
New speed humps on SW Croft Place.
New speed humps on SW Juneau St from 26th Ave SW to SW Croft Place.
SDOT crew working on greenway improvements on SW Juneau St at Delridge Way SW
Bike detector to trigger the stop light on SW Juneau St at Delridge Way SW.

Delridge Needs Safe Bike Routes

West Seattle Bike Connections is putting the “Multi-Modal” back into the Delridge Multi-modal + Transit Corridor Project

Doug is a scientist and lover of beer. He lives in Delridge, and he wants a safe and comfortable way to ride with his wife and child to White Center. Doug was a pro bike racer, but he is not comfortable riding with his family on Delridge Way.

Charmaine is a musician and square dance caller. She lives in White Center and wants to be able to bike with her husband and child to Delridge’s library, parks and community center.

Right now, neither of them has good options, so they organized a ride with other West Seattle Bike Connections members, Gordon Padelford from Seattle Neighborhood Greenways, Cascade Bicycle Club’s Kelsey Mesher, and three SDOT outreach and project management people to look into improvements.

.

West Seattle Bike Connections’ top priority for 2018 is the Delridge RapidRide H multi-modal corridor project. This is the opportunity to make the street safe for people walking and biking, including getting to and from the new RapidRide stops. This is one of the Move Seattle Levy projects that WSBC members worked hard to pass, because of the positive impact it can have for the traditionally underserved neighborhoods of the Delridge Corridor. Delridge is the flattest, most direct route through the valley (the “dell” between the ridges), from the south end at White Center to the north end at the West Seattle Bridge and the Alki and Duwamish Trails.

With help from Seattle Neighborhood Greenways, we reached  agreements from SDOT staff on some key requests we made for Delridge, and for spot improvements to the alternate northbound greenway bike route that SDOT has proposed. These are reflected in SDOT’s revised “Option 3″ for the corridor.

Any program cuts due to the Move Seattle Levy “reset” must not be at the cost of safety for the most vulnerable users of the road: people walking and biking to bus stops or other destinations on Delridge.

This year, we are building relationships with community groups. In April, four of our members did a helmet giveaway and fitting at Boren STEM K-8 school, using a Small Sparks grant that Joe and Marlowe Laubach got through the PTSA. WSBC members who are school parents led Bike to School activities.  We have worked on Safe Routes to Schools projects that residents, teachers and Delridge Neighborhood Development Association initiated . We moved our monthly meetings to Neighborhood House in High Point, more convenient to the Delridge corridor. We’ve got a Parking Day activity scheduled for 9/21/18 at Boren STEM K-8. We led a Cycle History bike ride focusing on Delridge with Southwest Seattle Historical Society. Several of us have given support to a resident who was seriously injured in a crash with a car driver while riding at Orchard and Delridge. We are looking for more opportunities to work with and hear from community groups and individual residents.

There is lots more work to do. It will take concentrated effort to build community support in time to have an impact on the RapidRide project. But we have members who are willing. Would you like to join in?  Send an email to westseattlebikeconnections@gmail.com.