Tag Archives: bike lanes

City and UNT postpone Ave C cycletrack demolition

City traffic engineer Frank Payne just stated that the demolition of the Avenue C cycletrack is officially put on hold.  He says that they’ve discussed the project with UNT, and UNT has agreed to hold off on demolition pending additional research by city staff regarding right-of-way and permitting issues.

Stay tuned for more updates, because Avenue C isn’t going to become any less critical of a bicycle connection.  We’re optimistic that UNT will do the right thing, because, well, they’ve committed to it on page 12 of the official UNT Master Bicycle Plan:

“Major projects inclue:

– Improving the bike path along Avenue C to create better north south mobility and to start the transition to a pedestrian/bicycle mall as recommended in the Campus Master Plan”

Here’s the visual that clearly shows “Bike Path – New Pavement” for Ave C:

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UNT & city to remove Ave C bike lane/cycletrack

Ave C bike lane

You know that raised lane on Avenue C on the UNT campus?  First, it was a bidirectional bike lane, a very advanced design for Texas, and the only known cycletrack in the region.  Then, it suddenly became a loading zone.  Now, the formerly expensive cycletrack will become even more of a loading zone.  This raised facility is now considered to expensive to build, even if you wanted it, and now it’s going away.  We urge you to contact the representatives below and voice your opinion.

In an administrative announcement this morning, UNT explained that the city will remove the elevated bike lane on Ave C to replace it with a loading zone for cars.  If you spend time on the UNT campus, you perhaps already noticed the existing loading zone for the Music building, just around the corner from this one.  Now there will be two loading zones, and no bicycle facility, unless the engineers announce otherwise.

We hope that the city traffic engineers include bicycle facilities in the replacement design, or this invaluable cross-campus route will be lost.  At the recent bicycle facility meetings, the engineers hinted at bike-lane installations on Eagle and Welch.  We think a similar trans-campus route like Avenue C would compliment those routes quite well.

The City of Denton streets department will begin work on a new passenger drop-off lane on Ave. C, adjacent to the Music Building, beginning Monday, May 17.

As a result, Ave. C northbound between Highland and Chestnut, will be closed for approximately two weeks.  This section of street will re-open when construction is completed.

Crews will remove the existing elevated paved lane on the east side of Ave. C between the west bridge entrance and the northern most entrance to the Music Building.  They will install a new passenger drop-off lane.  The new installation is designed to ease the flow of traffic on Ave. C during peak hours.

We know that the UNT Chancellor, Lee Jackson, wants the UNT Denton campus to become more bike-friendly and walkable.  But does he know that unless replacement bike facilities are planned, we’ll lose an asset that would be extremely expensive to reproduce?

If you’d like to send polite comments to the relevant representatives, we suggest these folks:

Lee Jackson, UNT Chancellor, Lee.Jackson@unt.edu

Lane Rawlins, UNT President, V.Rawlins@unt.edu

Joe Richmond, UNT Transportation Director, joerichmond@unt.edu

Jim Engelbrecht, District 3 City Council rep, Jim.Engelbrecht@cityofdenton.com

Frank Payne, City of Denton Engineer, Frank.Payne@cityofdenton.com

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Hinkle pothole filled

I got a response from city engineer Frank Payne by 8:30, and by the time I rode Hinkle to work at 1:00 PM, the pothole was totally filled and looks like this:

Hinkle pothole filled

We’d like to thank city engineer Frank Payne for the quick response.  We know that traffic engineering, like traffic enforcement, is a pretty thankless job that the public typically only voices complaints to.  So, thanks, Denton traffic engineers.

Moral of the story: If you see something, say something.  Report road hazards when you see them, Dentonites.

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Hinkle bike lane pothole alert

large Hinkle bike lane pothole

large Hinkle lane pothole

Alert: if you ride on Southbound Hinkle Lane, beware of this large, deep pothole that appeared overnight.  I didn’t see it on my work commute yesterday, so I’d guess it appeared since then.  I would expect serious injury and mechanical destruction if you were to cycle through this bizarre sinkhole.  Hell, it would hurt if you walked through it.  I got down and studied it, and I could see a slight hollow space under the asphalt, like an expanding pocket of erosion.

I reported it to the city traffic engineers (Frank Payne, Bud Vokoun, Clay Riggs) and the councilman for that district (Jim Engelbrecht).  We’ll report back if we see repair action, so until then, steer clear.

Today I encountered a large new pothole in the Southbound Hinkle bike lane, and the pothole depth is quite alarming.  I’ve attached pictures that show the location in front of ERA Cornerstone and the depth relative to a 26″ bicycle wheel.  We’ve all seen some good potholes in Denton, but this one is quite freakish.  I got down and looked at it, and the hollow part extends several inches beyond the edge of the hole and towards the center of the road, like an expanding sinkhole.  There was no hole there yesterday when I was commuting home from work.

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Bike Lanes Vs Wider Outside Lanes

Which do cyclists prefer?  Does one encourage more use than the other?

For starters, TXDOT seems to prefer painted bike lanes:

“In particular, one general conclusion that leaps out from the results is that for both cyclists and motorists, bike lanes provide greater comfort and a better operating environment than wide outside lanes.”

In Denton’s case, traffic engineering staff clearly favor Wider Outside Lanes (WOL), which staff publicly stated are good for “experienced cyclists”.  As BFOC previously mentioned, Lance Armstrong, an experienced cyclist says:

“There are times I ride in Austin, and I’m afraid of cars, imagine what the beginner cyclist must feel like?

Lance Armstrong’s statement echoes our sentiment that the overall goal of implementing on street facilities like bike lanes, sharrows, cycle-tracks, etc is to safely encourage riders of all skill levels to feel comfortable.  We aim to encourage children, college students, parents, and grandparents to all feel comfortable and welcome, as the spirit of the Denton Plan insists that we should reduce the number of vehicle trips. Increasing bicycle, pedestrian, and bus transit mode share is the only way to offset motor vehicle use, and accommodating experienced cyclists clearly doesn’t get us any closer to the stated goal of the Denton Plan.

The following photo, which we recently took in Austin, shows parents riding with their child, clearly feeling comfortable and safe in a new bike lane added to 12th st (and existing car lanes shrunk to 10.5′).  This family is a great example of a cycling demographic we never see in Denton: parents and children riding together on the roadway.

austin family cycling

Some people might say that lanes offer no protection, as Denton’s traffic engineer Frank Payne openly stated:

“Bicycle lanes will not shelter or provide protection to pedestrians, or bicycles for that matter beyond hopefully a greater visual recognition.”
While we agree that the statement is true, it is also true that traffic lights, cross walks, lane markers, and warning signs also offer no physical protection for drivers, cyclists, or pedestrians.
As witnessed last May at the Oak/Hickory bike lane hearing, staff seemed immovable on their preferred wide (11-12′) lane width for Oak and Hickory.  As several in attendance pointed out, slightly less lane width (10′) would actually calm traffic and allow for bike lanes and parking stalls, thus leaving all parties satisfied.  The Oak/Hickory neighborhood has long desired traffic calming measures, and getting more cyclists on the roadway would significantly calm traffic, thereby making the area safer for all transit modes.
Countless examples from other cities show lane widths much smaller.  This example from the Chicago Bike Lane Design Guide shows that Chicago has no problem with 10′ lane widths, even with the far greater density and traffic load of the metro Chicago area.  If you subtract 12′ for one side of parking and bike lane, then you’d be at 32′ total, or 2′ less than the narrowest point of Oak/Hickory (34′, we think).  Now there’s a nice surplus to increase the bike lane size and/or include a buffer between the bike lane and traffic lane.
Roger Geller, bicycle coordinator for platinum-level bike friendly Portland, OR, speaks directly to this wide-outside-lane topic in his response to former Dallas traffic staff:
Your bicycle coordinator is representing an older system that works for perhaps only 1% of the population: what we call the “strong and fearless” cyclist. Basically, we credit the development of our bicycle infrastructure with encouraging more people to ride bikes. There will always be a small fraction of people willing to ride on the roadway in a shared travel lane. But more people will ride if they can get out of the traffic stream and ride in their own dedicated space. Those people are still a small minority–perhaps 7-10% of the population, but they create a presence. In Portland, that’s the group that’s largely responsible for Portland being such a bike-friendly city. They wouldn’t be there without bicycle lanes on the street and other dedicated bicycle facilities. It’s the same story in Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Muenster and Beijing: build great facilities where people feel safe and comfortable and people will ride.
There is a difference between “safety” and “comfort”. A person riding in the middle of a busy travel lane is likely quite safe. They are not likely to be rear-ended. However, it is also more than likely that the average person is anything but comfortable in such a situation. Likely, they are intimidated by the cars streaming around them, or following them closely while waiting for an opportunity to pass. The cyclist feels like they are holding everybody up. The Dutch emphasize both comfort and safety in the development of their facilities (as well as attractiveness). Comfort is different from safety.
One story I like to tell is that I’ve ridden the same street to work for years. Before it had bike lanes I wore lycra, rode my road bike, carried my work clothes in a back pack and rode like hell. Once we striped bike lanes on the street I took out my clunker, wore my work clothes, slowed way down (so I don’t work up a sweat) and feel very comfortable doing so because I then had my own dedicated space. It felt great. Our story is build it and they will come. We’ve built it and we now are approaching 6-8% mode split.

We recently rode the new striped bike lanes in Austin, TX, especially on Dean Keaton, MLK, 12th street, and Chestnutt, and our feeling of comfort was dramatically different than when we last rode these streets on wide outside lanes.  The painted lanes seem to inform the drivers as much as the cyclist that “this space is designated for cyclists, and they have a right to be here”.  Austin traffic engineer, Nathan Wilkes, explained that the traffic counts for autos stayed the same before and after auto lanes were slightly narrowed and bike lanes were added.

The perfect comparison exists here in Denton, and we challenge all city staff and politicians to ride the city streets on a bicycle, as we do.  Ride Oak St from the square to UNT.  Then ride Hickory St from UNT to the square.  There is a dramatic increase in comfort when using the bike lane on Hickory, and traffic flows smoothly past the bicycles.  However, on Oak the traffic often changes lanes to pass the cyclists (thus disrupting smooth traffic flow), and the cyclist feels crowded and out of place.  A simple observation of the exponentially greater cycling traffic on Hickory concludes that an overwhelming majority of cyclists seek out a painted facility rather than a wide outside lane.  Comfort, safety, and increased ridership are clear goals of the Denton Plan and citizens.  A policy of wide-outside-lanes will never meet all three goals, and it certainly won’t encourage cycling in Denton.

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Fort Worth Bike Plan looks incredible, faces vote tomorrow

Kevin Buchanan at the Fortworthology New Urbanism blog provides a great overview of the ambitious Fort Worth Bike Plan.  His article is so comprehensive and good, that I won’t do it disservice by summarizing.  The entire text is available as a huge pdf from the city.

Read it and imagine a similar plan for Denton:

Fortworthology Bike Plan Article

If you don’t have time to read that article, here are some tasty snippets:

  • Increasing bicycling in Fort Worth.  Double the rate of cycling for all trip purposes and triple the bicycle commuter rate from 0.2% (approx. 645 daily commuters) at present to 0.6% (approx. 2,000 daily commuters) by the year 2020.
  • Improve bicyclist safety.  Establish a system to track bike crashes, and reduce the rate of crashes by ten percent by 2020.
  • National recognition.  Earn a “Bicycle Friendly Community” designation from the League of American Bicyclists by 2015 (Austin is currently the only city in Texas with such a designation).

Network expansion:

Currently, Fort Worth’s bicycle transportation system (such as it is) totals 102.6 miles.  57.3 miles are off-street trails (think the Trinity Trails, etc.), a scant 6.4 miles are on-street bike lanes, and 38.9 miles are on-street signed routes (the existing green “bike route” signs and on-street sharrow icons).

Under Bike Fort Worth, it is proposed that the bicycle transportation network be radically enlarged, and a much greater focus be given to on-street infrastructure.  Under the proposal, Fort Worth’s bicycle transportation network would increase from the existing 102.6 miles to 924.7 miles.  224.7 miles of that would be off-street paths & trails, with the other 700 miles being dedicated to on-street infrastructure:  480.3 miles of on-street dedicated bike lanes, 218.3 miles of on-street signed routes (sharrow routes), and 1.4 miles of bus & bike-only lanes in Downtown Fort Worth.

Bike rack design and placement:

Recommended bike rack designs have common factors that include supporting the bicycle frame in at least two contact points and accommodating the most widely used locking devices such as U-locks. Ribbon-style racks and racks that only secure the bike by the front wheel are discouraged. Racks should have a protective coating that will preserve the rack material and limit replacement needs. Cyclists and the public should easily recognize preferred bike racks.

On innovative street marking designs:

The plan also states that the city should look into a variety of on-street infrastructure designs for different situations (shown in one of the images above), including Portland-style Bicycle Boulevards, Bike Boxes, colored bike lanes, bicycle-only traffic signals, contra-flow bike lanes, and cycle tracks.

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Dallas to get dedicated cycle track on Bishop Ave

What’s a cycle-track, you ask?  It’s a bike lane physically separated from the automotive roadway, like this one in NYC:

As written about in the Dallas Morning News and BFOC, planners are seeking to utilize $3.7 million in bond money for Bishop Avenue to add a dedicated cycle track.  The project also covers landscaping improvements, utility replacement, and rebuilding Bishop as a concrete roadway from Colorado Boulevard to north of Davis Street.

Many issues and concerns still need to be addressed, said Max Kalhammer, the city’s bicycle coordinator, citing safety, traffic flow and whether bike lanes should be built on one side of the street or separated as shown in the proposal.

Bishop’s existing 100-foot right-of-way makes the corridor especially suitable for building what would be the city’s first barrier-protected bicycle lanes, he said.

Kalhammer also mentions that Dallas will soon be hiring a consultant and drafting a new city bicycle plan.

Kalhammer and others have begun developing a new city bicycle plan. A consultant should be hired by mid-March, he said. A plan will be crafted in committees and after public meetings.

City Council member Delia Jasso has said she likes the idea of segregating bicycle lanes along this stretch of Bishop.

So how about it, Denton?  Where would you like to put a cycle track here?  Carroll?  University?  Avenue C?  Teasley?

I’d advise you Denton readers to keep an eye out for bond-funded road improvement projects, and direct your cycling infrastructure suggestions toward those already-funded projects.

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Denton to hire bicycle consultant, your input needed

Denton is hiring a bicycle consultant.  But it’s a secret, mostly.

Even if you don’t read this post, please consider taking the 30 seconds to send an email to city council and manager to express your opinions and urge that they hire a reputable bicycle consultant. Scroll down for the council and manager email addresses.

Buried Deep in last month’s Traffic Safety Commission agenda, we can see that Denton staff engineer, Frank Payne, mentions that staff is attempting to hire a consultant to advise on bicycle connectivity:

We are currently looking at overall bicycle connectivity issues with a consultant that we are attempting to put under contract for this very purpose.

Frank made this statement in his response to Sarah Richey’s recent request for bike lanes on Pennsylvania Drive in Southridge.  You can read more about that in the agenda PDF, and in short, the city traffic engineers pledge to provide options to the neighborhood.

Hiring a quality bicycle consultant would be a major step in the right direction for the stagnant, dying bike infrastructure in Denton.  Remember, the city staff have been removing bike lanes lately, not adding them.

We hope that city staff isn’t hiring a consultant to provide only the answers that staff wants to hear.  If the consultant reaches out to cyclists and city neighborhoods, then you’ll know that it was an open, fair process.  If you don’t hear a peep, and silent recommendations are provided directly to city staff, then that could indicate a closed, unfair process.  This announcement was very under the radar, so our curiosity is so high it’s off the charts.

We haven’t seen the bid proposal come up on a city council agenda (perhaps in the consent items), so it’s unlikely that the bids have been formally made.  In BikeDenton’s opinion, there are hundreds of consulting choices out there, but very few shining stars of bicycle planning (in America).  Since this consulting announcement was buried 37 pages deep in the Traffic Safety Commission agenda, it’s unlikely that the city politicians know about this hiring intent.

We, the taxpayers, are footing the bill for this bicycle consultant.  We urge you to contact city council and manager ASAP and tell them you know about the bicycle consultant bid, and that you want them to hire a well-respected, highly experienced bicycle infrastructure planner.  If we don’t say anything about this, then city staff can hire whoever they want, and staff can get the answers they want to hear.  Obviously, BikeDenton is partial to certain esteemed planners, like Mia Birk, the Dallas native who transformed Portland into a Platinum-rated bicycling utopia. It is your honest opinion that city council needs to hear.

mark.burroughs@cityofdenton.com

pete.kamp@cityofdenton.com

Jim.Engelbrecht@cityofdenton.com

chris.watts@cityofdenton.com

Dalton.Gregory@cityofdenton.com

joe.mulroy@cityofdenton.com

George.Campbell@cityofdenton.com (city manager)

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City Council to Request $2 million in Bike/Ped Funds Tonight

As we previously mentioned on Oct 21, TXDOT has about $70 million dollars to give out as part of their State Transportation Enhancement Program, or STEP.  Denton city planning staff doesn’t have any shovel-ready bike/pedestrian proposals, and so they won’t be applying for the STEP money this year.

However, tonight’s city council meeting includes consent agenda items D and E which would allow Denton to apply for STEP money for two bike/pedestrian projects totaling about $2.25 million in cost, for which the city must pay 20%.

D.  Consider approval of a resolution of the City Council of the City of Denton, Texas, certifying funding and support for the 2009 Statewide Transportation Enhancement Program Nomination Form with the Texas Department of Transportation, authorizing the City Manager to submit an application to receive funding to construct the Hickory Street corridor and entertainment district project under the program and, if the grant is approved, to execute the grant agreement and take other actions necessary to implement the grant; and providing an effective date. The Mobility Committee recommends approval (3-0).

E.  Consider approval of a resolution of the City of Denton, Texas, certifying funding and support for the 2009 State Wide Transportation Enhancement Program nomination form with the Texas Department of Transportation, authorizing the City Manager to submit an application to receive funding to construct the Cooper Creek Bike and Pedestrian Trail Project under the program and, if the grant is approved, to execute the grant agreement and take other actions necessary to implement the grant; and providing the effective date. The Mobility Committee recommends approval (3-0).

The first item is a call for significant sidewalk improvements on Hickory St, which the city has sought to revitalize for several years now.  They applied previously in 2006 when the state funding was cut, and as such, they surely had the plans ready to resubmit.

Linda Ratliff, director of Economic Development writes:

The proposed project will connect the historic Courthouse on the Square, the planned passenger rail platform and Downtown Transit Center and the University of North Texas. The Hickory Street Corridor and Entertainment District will begin at Carroll Boulevard and extend east to Elm Street, will exclude the block from Elm to Locust, and will then continue from Locust Street to the proposed multimodal transit station at Railroad Road. All of the existing sidewalks within both sections of the project will be removed and replaced with 11’ concrete sidewalks edged by a brick detail 1-2 feet in from the curb. Pedestrian lighting is proposed throughout the project, as are trashcans, benches, bike racks, street trees, landscaped corner beds and flowerpots at various intersections. An irrigation system will also be installed along the length of the project.

The current three driving lanes will be reduced to two lanes approximately 12’ wide. Angle-in parking and a possible bike lane may be incorporated following the recommendations of the Downtown Implementation Plan study.

The text of the actual application to NCTCOG reads less ambiguously when mentioning the bike lane:

The South side of the street will be devoted to an 8′ bike lane.

Answering the “Project Use and Benefits” section, Denton makes the case for connecting UNT/TWU/downtown via pedestrian and bicycle access:

The University of North Texas, Texas Woman’s University, downtown and the future transit center are not fully connected.  People in one center cannot easily move to the other.  Establishing effective linkages depends on creating a pedestrian and bicyclist friendly environment.

It’s a shame that the tabled Oak/Hickory bike lane proposal isn’t applicable for the STEP program, because it would nicely compliment this Hickory STEP fund request.

Item E on the consent agenda asks for about $300K in STEP funds for a 1.4 mile paved non-road trail that spans north Denton

This project is viewed as an urgent need proposal to connect the existing Cooper Creek Trail at Evers Park extending northwestward into North Pointe Park along Cooper Creek at Fallmeadow Drive and continuing to the University of North Texas School of Engineering campus. This will accommodate neighborhood needs for a safe route to school and park facilities. The project includes an eight foot wide by 7,100 linear foot concrete paved trail and a 75′ linear foot prefabricated steel span pedestrian bridge across the creek.

The primary beneficiaries of this project will be two new growing neighborhoods with many families who need a pedestrian friendly way and safe route to school and parks. The proposed extension will provide new opportunities for the North Pointe and McKamy-Evers neighborhoods to access the elementary school and Evers Park.

Unfortunately, the Western end of the proposed trail is not near the actual entrance to the UNT Discovery Park campus.  The campus is surrounded by a barbed wire fence, and the only entrance is at the south end facing Elm/Hwy 77.  Hopefully this will not be a “Trail to Nowhere”.  I hope the city comes up with a similar plan to provide safer passage from downtown to Discovery Park, as cyclists and pedestrians still have to move along the 55mph shoulder-less highway to get to work/school.

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