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October 3,2008

Bicycle Boulevards in NE Portland

by pearlgirl

From Central Northeast Neighbors...

Do you ride your bicycle in NE Portland? Have you noticed that the only bicycle boulevard in the area is NE Tillamook? Well, the Bicycle Transportation Alliance has noticed. The BTA has researched the streets in NE Portland and found those streets that would work as a bicycle boulevard. NE Going Street is one of those streets. This street was chosen because it runs continuously for 3.5 miles with minimal auto traffic and low car speeds. It will also create a safe bike route to nine parks, eleven schools, nine neighborhoods, and four business districts, all in your community. Read more about this project at the BTA website, and get active! Contact Emily Gardner at Emily@bta4bikes.org for more information, and check out www.bikeblvd.com.

Related Information

Why bike boulevards?

BTA Launches Bike Blvd Campaign

BTA: NE Going Street will be focus of bike boulevard effort

N/NE Portland Bike Blvd Map

SW Neighborhoods proposed bike boulevards

Clinton Street Bicycle Boulevard Enhancement Safety Project 

posted at 11:11 AM 2 comments
categories: transportation
tags: bikes
Comments:
Mike Warwick - October 07, 2008 10:48 AM
Bike boulevards are great, but the process to designate them needs to be sensitive to local neighbor impacts and other traffic/transit/bike projects that may push local neigborhood streets to the tipping point is terms of serving the needs of local residents versus those of out-of-neighborhood bike (and other) commuters. This is especially true the closer you get to downtown and in old neighborhoods designed around streetcar service instead of autos. I point to the Eliot neighborhood and a proposal to designate NE Rodney as a bike boulevard as an example. Eliot has a total of 4 north/south streets to serve its population. Two of these (Williams/Vancouver) have already been modified for bikes (by eliminated the resident's on-street parking). MLK isn't appropriate for bikes as currently configured (it might be if it has Streetcar on it!). That means, Rodney is the only remaining north/south street to serve local residents with both access and on-street parking. It is a narrow street and adjacent homes are streetcar-era homes mostly without any off-street parking or very narrow driveways. Designating it as a bike boulevard would create all kinds of hardships for residents and hazards for bike riders whowould have to navigate around residents trying to park and enter/exit from blind driveways. The need for such a designation when there are dedicated bike lanes a block away escapes me, but the City is pushing for it anyway.
Joe - October 07, 2008 11:25 AM
I think the city is doing a great job with selecting bike boulevards. Regard the prior comment, I ride up Vancouver/Williams frequently and see street parking along almost the entire length of the road. Not sure where the parking was removed. Either way, there appears to be plenty of unused parking. Also, according to the last census (which is somewhat outdated), over half of the households in that neighborhood don't own vehicles. Providing safe and comfortable bike boulevards for those people who don't feel comfortable in narrow bike lanes is appropriate. Additionally, bike lanes are more appropriate for commercial streets as the last leg of a trip where bikes need access to storefronts whereas bike boulevards provide trunk-line access for major travel patterns and local access to non-commercial trips (ie. visiting family and friends, recreation, etc.) I'd welcome bike boulevards AND bike lanes in my neighborhood (Center).. Over here PDOT!
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