Author Archives: howrad

Times Square Goes Car Free

photo courtesy of nytimes.com

NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg has officially designated Times Square as car-free, for a period to last at least till the end of 2009.

Newsday asked onlookers what they thought:

“It’s great,” Hance said. “Usually we are trying to just jump out of the way of cabs.”

Said Villaran, “I have seen shops and signs I have never noticed before. You can see people are more relaxed. They are not pushing and shoving. It’s great.”

For street vendors, store owners and shoppers, the freedom meant happier customers and easier window gazing.

Dawn Fowler, 24, of Crown Heights, who wears a bulky sandwich board to urge people to see the Holocaust-era play “Irena’s Vow,” called her newfound freedom “incredible.”

“Normally you feel like a sardine on the sidewalk,” Fowler said. “I usually take people out with my sandwich board. Not today.”

NYC Transportation Commissioner of the last two years, Janette Sadik-Khan, has created 200 miles of bicycle paths (many protected/separated from traffic lanes), public esplanades, and effectively pursued a vision of civic amenities instead of utilitarian corridors.

Too much of the time I think pedestrians have been seen as guests in this space. Putting a prime role for designing for people — designing for pedestrians, designing for cyclists, designing for buses, designing for better mobility, designing for a more sustainable city — is all part of the package. 

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Ride of Silence, Today, 7PM

ride of silence

Join cyclists worldwide in a silent slow-paced ride (max. 12 mph/20 kph) in honor of those who have been injured or killed while cycling on public roadways.

Read about the ROS history here.

The Ride of Silence started in 2003 at White Rock Lake in Dallas as 1,000 gathered to remember bicyclist Larry Schwartz, who was killed by a school bus mirror. Since then, the annual, slow-paced, sunset ride has grown to include events in all 50 states and 18 countries worldwide

  • To HONOR bicyclists who have been injured or killed
  • To RAISE AWARENESS that bicyclists are here
  • To ask that we all SHARE THE ROAD

Thousands of riders are expected to gather this Wednesday in Dallas at a parking lot on W. Lawther Drive between Branchfield Drive and Fisher Road (view map). The White Rock Station on DART’s blue light rail line is about 2 miles away. For those who want to take the train or drive and then ride together, we’ll depart the DART parking lot at 6:30 p.m. sharp.

Wear a red arm band if you have survived a bike/motor vehicle accident; other riders are invited to wear black arm bands.

If anyone knows of a Ride of Silence in Denton, email me at info@bikedenton.org and I’ll add the info to this post.

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Wisdom from The Hampster

Andy Hampster, the last American (and first and only non-European) to win the Giro D’Italia, is a fount of conventional wisdom from his life as a pro racer.  In 1988 he won the Giro after attacking through a blizzard on the Gavia mountain pass. He’s modest, articulate, and has the most appealing post-pro retirement setup: making top shelf olive oil and hosting cyclo tours of Tuscany.  I’ll eventually get around to ordering his olive oil, which is sold by the 5-liter tin jug.

For an ex-pro road racer, Andy has a marvelous appreciation for practical and fun cycling, and he’s been known to ride slow and stop for coffee.  

NYvelocity recently interviewed Andy, and he describes his experience watching the epochal shift towards mainstream doping in pro cycling.  Fascinating stuff, the interview.

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Friday: BIKE TO WORK DAY

bike2workday

It’s that time.  And national press for this is bigger than I’ve ever seen before.  Ideally, you should think of every day as Bike-To-Work Day, but why not start off small.  I wish I had more time to put together an event, like maybe some breakfast stations or free treats from local coffee shops.  Austin has some awesome coordination efforts for this day.

The above flyer says it all.  Denton might not have real bike lanes (yet), but it does have a size advantage (in smallness) over Dallas, Houston, Austin, and any affiliated suburbs.  You can ride to pretty much everything you need in Denton, and with relatively low friction (with drivers).  Why not try the Friday commute on two wheels instead of four?

Coming up on Sunday there’s an apropos celebration of Bike Week festivities, and I’ll post more on that later.  

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What Rustles In The Grass

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On my commute home from work, I ride TX Hwy 77 next to some farm fields. I often hear rustling in the grass as I pass by, but by the time I turn my head and look, I never see what moves in the grass.

If I never hear grass rustling again, maybe it was always this neighbor. Or maybe the neighbor’s dinner.

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Denton Bike Racing circa 1894

Thanks to a thread on the Corinth Cycling Club forum, we can see some amazing documentation found at the Denton library.  I never would’ve guessed that Denton has had cycling races for at least 113 years.  I’d like to go to the library soon to see if there are other microfilmed Denton County News articles like this. 

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2009 May Bike Denton voter guide

I could spend all day berating myself for bumbling the voter guide response compilation, but that wouldn’t be productive.  Instead, I compiled the responses which we got and have them ready for your perusal.  Being the first year we’ve done this, we’ve learned a ton.  Next year, we’ll be sending out the guide much, much, much sooner, and I promise I’ll try harder to NOT screw up some thing as vitally simple as email forwarding.

If you didn’t already notice, Charlye Heggins won District 1, Dalton Gregory won District 2, Jim Engelbrecht won District 3, and Chris Watts won District 4.

Bike Denton 2009 May Council Election Voter Guide

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RETRACTION: City Council candidates unresponsive to BikeDenton questionnaire

RETRACTION: Embarrassingly, I didn’t correctly forward my bikedenton.org email account, and as a result I missed the responses to the questionnaire from Charlye Heggins, Andrew Teeter, Dalton Gregory, and Eli Beltran.

I am compiling the responses right now, and I’ll have them posted up shortly.

On Monday, we sent (via email) a BikeDenton.org voter guide questionnaire to every single council candidate for the May 9 election.  We asked for responses by Friday at noon, which is admittedly short notice, but I thought it better late than never to have even tried this approach.

We didn’t get a single reply.  Not even a request for more time.

From the candidates who spoke at the recent Neighborhood Alliance forum, I noticed an overwhelming under-recognition of bicyclists in Denton except from a few candidates (Andrew Teeter, Bob Clifton, Eli Beltran).  There were about 6 of us who rode to the meeting, out of maybe 30 people in total attendance.  To me, that is not an insignificant slice of the voting population, not by any stretch of the means, especially in a town as “undervoted in” as Denton.  The one bike-lane question asked of the candidates was reframed by the moderator as a TCEQ air quality question, which completely dominated the answers.  I will say I was quite disappointed that Amy Manuel is opposed to any on-road bike lanes and only in favor of physically separated paths.

I think my point to this post is this:  Denton has a long way to go before cycling is recognized as the amazing opportunity that it is.  Portland/Copenhagen/Austin this ain’t.  I also ain’t going to quit advocating for cycling in Denton.  I choose not to shut up.

Without further ado, here’s the ignored BikeDenton.org voter questionnaire which was sent to the council candidates.

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Jim Christal

I don’t know who Jim Christal was, but I do like riding on Jim Christal road out west of Denton.  Querencia recently led a community ride out that way, and I’ve enjoyed riding out there for years.  It’s an easy place to ride to, and it feels like you’re instantly transported far from any city.  It’s paved for quite a long way, and you can ride it on any type of bike.

Here are some residents of Jim Christal road:

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Fort Worth Bike Plan = 700+ miles of paths

Our regional neighbors at Rat Trap Press attended a meeting with the Ft Worth city Bike Coord/Czar yesterday.  Snipped from their post summarizing the meeting:

The city’s plan calls for over 700 miles of bike trail, on street bike lanes and signed routes. There are also plans for bike racks and commuter stations with showers, lockers, and mechanics downtown. After looking at the map of proposed bike routes  I must say that I was pretty impressed.

Should Denton have a bike coordinator/czar?

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