Cycle City, USA: Portland's Secrets for Becoming a World-Class Biking City
I had the pleasure of meeting with Jay when he was in Portland for the Bikes Belong Cycling Tour of Portland's facilities. We had a good time with him and the participants from Chicago, Houston, Seattle, elsewhere.
Sharing information about Traffic Signals, Bicycles, Technology, and the Urban Form. I work for the City of Portland. The views expressed on this blog are my own.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Thursday, November 25, 2010
FHWA IntelliDrive Mobility & Environment Working Group
Next week will take me back to the spiral of national transportation research. I am headingout on Sunday to attend the FHWA's IntelliDrive Mobility & Environment Workshop as a member of the Federal Transit Administration's IntelliDrive Steering Group. There are some great Day One applications coming out of the IntelliDrive program that can improve safety and efficienty for transit. When the Vehicle Infrastructure Integration program was initiated back in 2006, I was working a lot with transit agencies on signal priority and thought why not public agency vehicles for Day One installation as opposed to the challenges of working with the auto manufacturers. It seemed like a reach to get installation and privacy concerns addressed in the near-term five year roll out of that program. It may be less of an issue as technology evolves, but working with a transit agency investing in technology that might reduce government costs speaks to me as something with a payback.
I am combining the trip with a day visit to New York City to discuss their experience with bike signals, pedestrian innovation, and how they're using their traffic signals for sustainability. It's a huge spectrum of questions, but with what we're trying to achieve in Portland, it will be nice to find if there are peers that I can work with in the future.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Janette Sadik-Khan NYC Article
"She's preparing us for a future that will have fewer cars," says Schwartz. This is something that is tough to swallow for many. But Sadik-Khan is using her method to make biking look cooler. If it's such a pain in the ass to drive in the city, then owning a car won't be a luxury. It will be a Members Only jacket. So roads that had four lanes now have three, and three lanes are thinning to two.Read more: http://www.esquire.com/features/brightest-2010/janette-sadik-khan-1210#ixzz16AikqQ33
What she's doing in New York is trickling across the nation. Parklets are popping up in San Francisco. Portland, Oregon, the outdoor hipster capital of the country, was inspired by New York City, of all places, to have protected bike lanes — an idea Sadik-Khan lifted from Copenhagen, where the bike lanes are protected from traffic by a single-file line of parked cars.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Understanding a Bike Box, Training Cyclists
I was on a ride this morning and went through SE 39th & Clinton, where there is a bike box in the eastbound direction. The trouble we had was a female cyclist with a brand new bike was hanging out right behind a vehicle that was waiting at the signal. The driver was sitting in the lane after the green and they were very concerned about moving with the cyclist there, they were trying to avoid a right hook crash.
When I rolled up, I said "I think they are waiting for you" and she seemed to nod in agreement.... but wasn't quite ready to go ahead and pass the vehicle, so in this case I passed by and kept going with her side by side since it was a 6' bike lane.
The encounter made me think about how we educate the cyclists and it made me think we should have a document that could be handed out with new bike purchases.
When I rolled up, I said "I think they are waiting for you" and she seemed to nod in agreement.... but wasn't quite ready to go ahead and pass the vehicle, so in this case I passed by and kept going with her side by side since it was a 6' bike lane.
The encounter made me think about how we educate the cyclists and it made me think we should have a document that could be handed out with new bike purchases.
Streetcar Intersection
Saturday, November 13, 2010
City of Portland meets with USDOT RITA Adminstrator Peter Appel
The City has been working closely with members of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) on the IntelliDrive Steering Committee. IntelliDriveSM is a vision of real-time, wireless communication among vehicles and infrastructure to promote safer and more efficient travel. There are several elements of the IntelliDrive program that will shape the way cities use transportation data in the future. As part of the City’s efforts, engineers are working in the AERIS program, a new multimodal USDOT initiative that seeks to promote more environmentally friendly travel choices through the use of real-time transportation system data.
The City of Portland plans to work with the Oregon Department of Transportation, Metro, Portland State University and its regional partners to further the efforts of IntelliDrive, applying for a future FHWA grant to implement the vision of a safer City.
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