Another Bike Lane Post Because There Aren’t Enough

There has been a lot of back and forth on the internet lately with regard to bike lanes mostly due to the high percentage of idiocy of the New York Times article on Sadik-Kahn and the controversy over the dedicated bike lanes on Prospect Park West.

The article talks about Ms. Sadik-Kahn’s style or approach but devotes far fewer lines to the most basic public policy issues. How effective is it at accomplishing your goals and how much does it cost? If your goal is to save lives then she should be praised by the very same people who are currently complaining about her.

Now from Felix Salmon comes a link to a good article on the subject in Outside Magazine. The nut of the article and the part that should get the attention of everyone is this.

“Regardless of fault, there’s another twist here. As various studies have found, the more cyclists and cycling infrastructure a town has, the safer it becomes statistically, not just for cyclists but for drivers and pedestrians alike. When New York City put a protected bike lane on Ninth Avenue, some protested it as unsafe for people on foot. But since the lane’s opening, pedestrian injuries on Ninth have dropped by 29 percent. Last year, as miles of bike lanes were added, New York had its best pedestrian-safety record ever.”

9th Avenue is great, the plazas in Times Square make the place navigable on foot when it was nearly impassable before and the new mix of bike lanes, car parking and bus traffic on 2nd Avenue in the East Village has been convenient for me regardless of the transportation I have used. I ride the M15 bus on a regular basis and have driven by car as well. The decision not to go forward with the 34th Street plaza is regrettable because most of the people who use 34th Street already walk or ride the bus.

Once, way back in 2002, during my bicycle commute from Astoria to Soho I hit a pedestrian. Why? Because a taxi turned right without signaling, cut me off and the only course of action that did not result in me slamming into the rear of his car or jerking into traffic took me onto the sidewalk at speed. I hit a lady knocking her to the ground and myself over my handle bars onto the pavement next to her. I apologized, tried to explain how I got cut off and she apologized to me. The very nice lady on the sidewalk and I would have been safer if there had been a bike lane and signage that made drivers more aware of my presence on the road.

So, I say “Viva JSK!”

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In the process of testing

In the process of testing some new software. I am not sure this will post the way I would like it but we shall see. It is raining today in NYC and I am here in the computer lab trying to keep track of all the architecture lectures available to me in the next couple of weeks. The amount of activities is a little overwhelming. I will definitely be going to the panel discussion about Jane Jacobs at the Museum of the City of New York but I am undecided about all of the rest.

Time to get on the Silver Snail, go home, get some reading done and if I am very lucky go to bed early.

Edit: It does not post the way I would like it. Starting over again later.

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Today on the Internet

‘Detroit Was Like Cheers: Everyone Knew Your Name’ – The Atlantic.

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Currently Reading

A Sand County Almanac – Aldo Leopold

The observations are rich and frequently moving but his distaste for the city and city dwellers can be tough for me to take. He understands the complex system that surrounds him on his farm but every city is its own complex system. Admittedly, it is a system dominated by people, their structures (and their vermin) that is only occasionally the home to some truly wild animals. Of course, the New York City I work in today is probably very different than any town or city in the late 1940s when Leopold wrote his book. (In no small part because of the Clean Air and Water Acts and the export of manufacturing to cheaper, more amenable locales in other countries.) I can look to restored marshes in Jamaica Bay, birding tours of the East River, coyotes sneaking into the city through rail tunnels, a wild turkey slowly strutting around Battery Park and owls hooting away in tenement air shafts to see that the division between the natural world and our world is non-existent. It is easy to see how his work would raise people’s awareness of the environment.

Other than that minor complaint it has been a wonderful read. I have to wonder how much of my perspective is part of a cultural shift that was inspired by this book.

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A Brief Introduction

It is the middle of my second semester studying Historic Preservation and many responsibilities have started to fall on me. Work, applications, conferences, student organizations, writing and studying when added to an active social life and a cantankerous family at my parents’ home will make for some light blogging in the next month or two.

The perspective of this blog is simply one of stewardship. The care and maintenance of the built and the unbuilt environment are essentially complementary and necessary for basic human health, happiness and long-term survival.  Also buildings and flowers are pretty.

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