Archive for the ‘Transit’ Category

Attention south-Seattleites! Your multi-modal commute just got easier

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011 by

Photo credit: Rainier Valley Post

You may know this feeling. You leave a restaurant (or a bar, or a coffee shop, or your office). You scan the surrounding intersections. You locate the closest bike rack. And your bike’s not on it.

Panic sets in for a few seconds. It’s been stolen! Your U-lock failed you, or a clever thief unbolted the rack. Either way, the bike is gone.

And then you realize that you parked it down the block.

Anyone?

Even if you don’t relate, leaving your bike parked on a rack probably causes you some anxiety. And leaving it parked all day in the rain at the light rail station while you’re toiling away at work? I might be speaking only for myself here, but it’d be more than I could handle. Plus, no one likes a wet saddle.

Luckily, Sound Transit has you covered. They’ve opened new secure lockers for up to 46 bikes at the new bike plaza at Columbia City Station. Lockers are available at the Othello and Rainier Beach stations, too.

The plaza was built in partnership with the federal government, which, according to Sound Transit, paid more than 85 percent of the cost. Since Link opened in 2009, they’ve added space for 125 additional bicycles at Link stations, and they’re looking to add even more in transit facilities throughout the region.

Want to sign up? Here’s the fine print: The bike lockers are rented on an annual basis for $50 plus a refundable one-time $50 key deposit. For more information on bike locker availability and to sign up visit www.soundtransit.org/bicycles or call 1-888-889-6368.

To sweeten the deal, they’re even offering a special Bicycle Commuter Welcome Kit to new locker renters in the Rainer Valley that includes an ORCA card loaded with $10 to help get you started. But hurry — it’s a limited-time offer.

The new lockers in Columbia City lockers complement recent City of Seattle projects which striped new bike lanes on South Columbian Way from Beacon Hill to the station.

Which means that all you reluctant bike-rail commuters are out of excuses. We’ll see you at the station!

Northgate… if you don’t live here now, you might in the future.

Friday, November 4th, 2011 by

The Northgate neighborhood is undergoing a significant transformation – both at the planning level and on the ground.  As one of six Urban Centers identified in the City of Seattle Comprehensive Plan, and an identified regional growth center, the Northgate neighborhood will be one of the most intensely developed neighborhoods in the city.

Before I scare you away with the mention of “intensive development”, you should know that you still have an opportunity to inform how this area develops.  With Sound Transit’s light rail moving full speed ahead to Northgate, Sound Transit, King County and the City of Seattle are very interested in your input. One upcoming opportunity to provide input is at Sound Transit’s Nov. 9 Northgate Station meeting.

The discussion at this meeting will focus on the 30% design plans for the Northgate Station, and there’s always an opportunity to discuss the importance of access to the station — particularly for bikes.  We urge you to bring this up; without community advocacy — your voice — we’re concerned that the Northgate area may continue to prioritize access for automobiles. There’s talk of a new parking garage — but little mention of bicycle improvements needed in the area.  We need your advocacy to ensure that bicycle access is a priority for all the agencies involved in the redevelopment of Northgate.

Now, if you fall in the category of readers who don’t currently live or work in the Northgate neighborhood and thus feel unaffected by what happens there, I would urge you to reconsider.  Here are a few reasons why you should care about the future of Northgate:

Reason 1:

Northgate is a regional growth center.  What does that mean?  It means you can expect to see significant growth in population and employment in the Northgate area in the coming years. As stated in the Northgate Urban Center Rezone FEIS:

“In 2003 the City adopted Resolution 30642 to “accomplish future steps for Northgate [including] economic development efforts, multi-family housing incentives, multi-modal transportation, pedestrian and open space improvements, integrated natural drainage strategies, sustainable design and green building, public art, planning for major commercial and multi-family residential development, and meaningful community involvement in these actions.” These steps have led to numerous new public and private development projects that are revitalizing the Northgate Urban Center. The City wants to ensure that recent momentum is sustained, that growth can be accommodated, and to achieve the overarching goal of the Northgate Area Comprehensive Plan (NACP), which is to “transform an auto-oriented landscape to a pedestrian friendly destination with densities to support transit.”

The takeaway: With significant employment and population growth slated for Northgate, it’s possible you might end up working or even living here someday.

Reason 2:

Sound Transit’s Northgate light rail station is opening in 2020. Now you might be thinking that’s wonderful for people who live there, but it won’t benefit me, when in fact, it just might.  For starters, more people will be taking transit, lots more.  The Northgate light rail station is projected to serve approximately 15,200 boardings a day in 2030!  Even if you don’t end up living or working in the Northgate area, there are regional implications of more people using transit — for instance improved air quality, improved health and quality of life, reduced congestion and improved commutes, and a better economy (as people shift from single occupancy driving to transit, they can save money – which means more money can filter back into the local economy).

The takeaway: If you’re invested in the future of Seattle, you should be invested in the future of Northgate.

Reason 3:

With light rail comes the opportunity to provide transit oriented development (TOD) and we’ll take that a step further to say trail oriented development (TrOD) as well.  TOD and TrOD has incredible potential to establish more sustainable communities where people can and do walk and bike, and of course take transit, to destinations.  Focused growth around transit stations, like the future Northgate light rail station, with connected bicycle and pedestrian networks, can effectively foster mode shift while creating more livable communities. And if you’re still not convinced about potential attractiveness of Northgate, did you know that it will only take 14 minutes by light rail to downtown Seattle? Not a bad commute if you ask me!

The takeaway: You may want to live here someday.

The major takeaway from all of this is that if you aren’t already, someday you may be affected by what happens at Northgate, and now’s your opportunity to have a voice in the matter.

Now that I’ve belabored the “why you should care” point, let’s consider how the bicycle can play into the future of Northgate.

The thought of bicycling to Northgate with the current infrastructure may not be the most attractive concept to many people.  For starters, it is divided by I-5 – a major impediment to east-west bicycle and pedestrian travel.  In addition to I-5, the Northgate center has historically been dominated by automobiles and auto-centric land use patterns.

While the bicycle has incredible potential to serve as a viable mode – not to mention healthy — to the Northgate urban center and light rail station, a connected network of safe bicycle facilities will be a necessary ingredient to realizing this potential.  By providing safe bicycle access to the Northgate station, the opportunity exists to reduce the demand for auto-centric land uses around the station, while generating additional ridership for both transit and bicycling.

If bicycling to Northgate is something that might appeal to you or someone you know, be sure to advocate for improved bicycle access to the station. For instance, you might encourage Sound Transit and King County to work with the city of Seattle to further implement the Bicycle Master Plan around the Northgate station. The maps below show the existing bicycle infrastructure and what a built-out bicycle master plan would mean for Northgate.

One option that’s on the table is a pedestrian/bicycle bridge over I-5. This is proposed in the Seattle Bicycle Master Plan and is currently being reviewed by King County.  The bridge would provide additional connectivity in an area that lacks bicycle and pedestrian connections – the following maps show how a 1-mile catchment area (walking or biking distance) from the Northgate light rail station would grow, given the development of this bridge. And keep in mind this is only 1 mile.

While there are several different plans that have been developed for the Northgate area, there are still opportunities to influence the future of Northgate, particularly as it pertains to the light rail.

We encourage you to participate in the upcoming Nov. 9 Northgate Station public meeting and voice your thoughts about the importance of bicycle access to and through the station area.  Feel free to provide specific information about how you would like to see the bicycle network developed in the Northgate area– for instance, would you like to see a pedestrian/bicycle overpass over I-5?

Meanwhile, you can always provide input through other ongoing public processes – for example, Seattle is in the process of updating their Comprehensive Plan – so is King County.  You can use these opportunities to stress the importance of bicycle access – be it to light rail, your place of work, or the store.

Thanks for reading and stay tuned for more opportunities to get involved!

Streetfilms and straight talk

Thursday, October 20th, 2011 by

Other cities around the world are making drastic changes to their streets to make them more livable, more comfortable and safer for pedestrians, bicyclists and other non-motorized users. How does Seattle stack up? Are we moving beyond our automobile dependence at the rate of these other cities, or are we dragging our feet?

Come out to Wallingford at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 28 and watch a series of short “Streetfilms” about what transportation officials and communities around the world are doing to make their streets safer and their communities more livable. The evening is part of the Friday Night at the Meaningful Movies series; the viewing will be followed by discussion of the films and of Seattle’s Proposition 1, which, if passed, will fund a lot of the exciting changes in Seattle, including faster and more reliable transit, more sidewalks, street repairs and some bicycle infrastructure.

Heading up the discussion will be panelists Timothy Harris (Executive Director of Real Change), Mike O’Brien (Seattle City Councilmember), Cathy Tuttle (Spokespeople Coordinator), Lisa Quinn (Director of Feet First) and Craig Benjamin (Cascade Bicycle Club’s Policy and Government Affairs Manager).

See you there!

Event details:
Friday, Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m.
Keystone Congregational United Church of Christ
5019 Keystone Place N., Seattle
0.4 miles west of the I-5 NE 50th St. Exit – Metro Bus Routes 16, 26 & 44

Admission to Friday Night at the Meaningful Movies is FREE of charge and open to the public. Donations are kindly accepted.

Seattle’s transit future

Monday, October 17th, 2011 by

What’s the future of transit in Seattle?

While it certainly gets sunnier with a YES vote on Prop 1, the future is coming regardless.  

We need the future of transit to work connecting all neighborhoods to jobs and schools, making business districts vibrant and accessible, and creating healthier communities.  And the future of transit should seamlessly blend and augment our bicycle network.

(Did you know that over 10,000 bikes are loaded onto Metro buses each week?  That a bike commute is possible from Everett or Tacoma to Seattle with a transit assist?  That the bus or rail make a great backup to the bike when a flat tire or a bad storm strikes?)

The Seattle Department of Transportation is hosting five open houses where you can learn and comment on the newly unveiled draft Transit Master Plan—the 20-year vision of our transit future.  And they want your feedback!  The plan will be finalized later this year and go to City Council in early 2012.

The open houses are:

  • Tuesday, Oct. 18:  Central District – Seattle Vocational Institute, 2120 S Jackson St Room 401
  • Tuesday, Oct. 25:  Northgate – Aljoya Thornton Place, 450 NE 100th St
  • Wednesday, Oct. 26:  West Seattle – Eagles Hall, West Seattle Eagles Hall, 4426 California Ave SW
  • Tuesday, Nov. 15:  Ballard – Ballard High School, Ballard High School Library, 1418 NW 65th St
  • Thursday, Nov. 17:  Holly Park – New Holly Gathering Hall, New Holly Gathering Hall, 7054 32nd Ave S

Each open house will cover the same information, will take place between 6 to 8 p.m. and include a presentation by city staff at the beginning of the meeting.  Light refreshments will also be provided.

Let’s support a transit plan that supports bikes!

Click here for more information on the open houses

Click here for more information on the Transit Master Plan.

Vote YES on Proposition 1 – Keep Seattle Moving

Monday, September 12th, 2011 by

Cascade Bicycle Club is proud to announce our endorsement of Proposition 1, the ballot measure that will create a better transportation future for Seattle.

Cascade played a significant role in the development of Prop. 1. In fact, you could say that Cascade has been working toward this moment for over three decades.

I grew up in Broadview, tucked away in the northwest corner of Seattle. We didn’t have sidewalks in Broadview growing up. Heck, our street wasn’t even paved until my parents got together with our neighbors to form our own one street local improvement district.

As a kid, my bicycle was my ticket to freedom. It allowed me to go visit my friends all over the neighborhood and I could always tell where my friends were hanging out by the pile of bikes in the front yard. But we never rode our bikes outside of the quiet streets of Broadview. It just wasn’t safe.

It was more than my bicycle, however, that gave my friends and me the opportunity to explore our city. We used to take the bus to Southeast Seattle to visit our friends from school and to Northgate to try to meet girls (we normally failed). Taking the bus from one corner of the city to the other took nearly half the day, which didn’t leave us with much time to hang out.

Five years ago my wife Stacy and I moved back to Seattle so that we could start a family, and I could attend the Evans School of Public Affairs and learn how to create a better future. Returning to my childhood home three decades later, Broadview still has no sidewalks, it’s still not safe for kids to ride their bikes around Seattle, and it still takes half the day to take the bus from one corner of our city to the other.

Yes, we’ve made a lot of progress as a city. We adopted a Bicycle Master Plan and have taken significant steps forward in building out our bicycle infrastructure. We built a light rail line and have plans to dramatically expand the network. We adopted one of the most progressive Pedestrian Master Plans in the country (and then forgot to fund it). But at the end of the day, Seattle still has a long way to go to become the type of city we know it should be.

Stacy and I learned this first hand. We lucked into a place three blocks up the hill from the Locks in Ballard. The 44 ran two blocks from our front door to half a block from the Evans School. But when I took the bus to and from class, it kept taking me an hour to go five miles. So I decided to try riding my bike. Despite one large missing link, I could take the Burke-Gilman directly across town to school in under half an hour. The second day I was riding to class I got hit by a car. I was fine. Both the driver and I made mistakes that resulted in the incident. It was a giant wake up call.

Stacy wasn’t so lucky. She landed a job just up the hill from Gasworks, almost directly on the Burke. She’s not really a cyclist, but given that there’s not a good way to take the bus from our home to her work and $4 a gallon gas makes driving incredibly expensive, she decided to give riding a try. On her first attempt she got run off the road. That’s the last time Stacy ever rode her bike in Seattle.

But for me, bicycling was the only way I could get around. We could only afford one car so riding my bike was simply the fastest (and often only) way for me to get to work or school. After both Stacy and my incidents, I sought out and received an appointment to Seattle’s Bicycle Advisory Board because I wanted to help make our streets safer for bicyclists. There I had an incredible opportunity to work with passionate volunteers learning the ins and outs of bicycling in Seattle. The most important thing I learned was that we need a lot more money for bicycling facilities (a whole lot more) if we want to get serious about making bicycling a realistic option for people like Stacy who want to ride, but just aren’t safe.

Even though it seems everyone in Seattle talks about how we should be a city where everyone has the freedom to safely walk, bike, drive, or take transit to get where they need to go, for whatever reason, we aren’t aligning our infrastructure investments with this vision. We’re not spending our money in a manner which will create the future we want to live in.

This is exactly why I was proud to join with the Cascade Bicycle Club in launching the Streets For All Seattle campaign last year. We believed that the time had arrived for our city to get serious about funding the pedestrian, bicycle and transit infrastructure that our citizens demand and build a transportation system that will make Seattle work for our future.

We built a coalition of over 60 community, labor, business, political, transportation and environmental organizations who shared our vision of Seattle being a city where everyone has the freedom to safely walk, bike, drive, or take transit to get where they need to go. We set out to engage the entire city in a conversation about how we can build a better transportation future and give our elected officials the support they need to do the right thing.

We made things happen. We pushed the Seattle City Council to create a Transportation Benefit District to fund pedestrian and bicycle improvements and support basic street maintenance, and to form the Citizens Transportation Advisory Committee III (CTAC III), asking them to undertake a full review of the city’s transportation funding system and evaluate the potential for a ballot measure asking Seattle voters to fund additional transportation projects.

CTAC III performed a comprehensive review of how Seattle can fund and build a transportation system that will work for the future. When they reached out to and listened to the people of Seattle they heard some common themes: We want more walkable streets, family-friendly bicycle infrastructure, faster, more reliable buses, and streets that aren’t littered with potholes. More importantly, we expressed a willingness to pay for these investments because they would help us become the city we know we should be. Cascade had a seat at the CTAC III table and learned a ton through this conversation.

After crunching the numbers, reviewing the plans, and listening to the people, CTAC III asked the City Council to give Seattle voters the opportunity to vote yes on a package that would raise considerable funds for walking, biking and transit infrastructure, along with significant money to fix and maintain Seattle streets.

The City Council did their jobs, tweaking and refining CTAC III’s recommendation into Proposition 1, and on Aug. 16, they unanimously voted to send it to the November ballot.

Proposition 1 will give Seattle faster, more reliable transit service; repaired and repaved roads that work better for everyone; and new sidewalks, better crosswalks, and more family-friendly bike infrastructure. Now, we’ve transformed Streets For All Seattle from a coalition working toward a shared vision into the campaign to pass Proposition 1, a package of investments that will help achieve our shared vision.

It was an easy decision for Cascade to endorse Proposition 1. It 1 will generate $14 million for bicycle infrastructure over the next ten years. That’s enough to build twenty miles of neighborhood greenways and forty miles of bike lanes and sharrows. It will dramatically accelerate the implementation of the Bicycle Master Plan (and the Transit and Pedestrian Master plans) and provide the funding necessary for Seattle to start building separated facilities for the thousands of people like Stacy who want to ride, but just aren’t safe. Hopefully, it will help prevent more tragic and unnecessary deaths.

Proposition 1 is too modest of a package to solve all of our transportation problems, but it’s an opportunity to create a better transportation future. An opportunity to start becoming a city where we can rely on the bus to get us to work on time, the roads are smooth, and our children can ride their bikes to school.

If you’re reading this blog you probably care about creating a better community through bicycling. That’s exactly what Proposition 1 will do. We’ve got let than two months to get this done, please join us and let’s make it happen.

We’re kicking off the campaign on Tuesday, Sept. 13, 6 p.m., at the Moe Bar on Capitol Hill (1425 10th Ave); I hope to see you there.

And if you would like to volunteer, please email Cascade Advocacy Campaigns Manager, Max Hepp-Buchanan or give him a call at (206) 226-1040.