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1 Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists and Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Northeastern University
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2 Bicycle Ridership Depends on Traffic Stress degree of traffic stress Riders Unimproved Low stress facility draws high ridership Many improvements serve only traffic- tolerant riders X3X3 X2X2 X1X1
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A Test: Could we design a network for Brookline intended for traffic-intolerant cyclists? 3
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4 Proposed Safe Routes Network, Brookline, MA Accepted in 2007 as plan by Brookline Transportation Board
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5 Expanding the Toolbox of Low-Stress Facility Types 1.Off-road path 2.Shared lane* 3.Wide outside lane 4.Bike lane* * New criteria developed for traffic- intolerant riders 5.Contraflow lane 6.No-Passing-Bikes zone 7.Separated paths or “Cycle tracks”
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BICYCLE CONTRAFLOW One-way for cars, two-way for bikes Excellent safety record Bikes do it anyway!
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Recommended Contraflow Site (observe contraflow cyclist) 7
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8 Recommended No-Passing- Bikes Zone (Carlton St.) Self-enforcing Removes stress from cyclists Removes pressure motorists feel to pass unsafely
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9 Cycle Track or Separated Path Stress-free between intersections Design for safe crossings and endpoints Separation is vital on high-speed roads Cycle track on Vassar St., Cambridge
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Refuge Cycle Tracks Carry routes through dangerous intersections
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11 Could We Design a “Safe Routes” Network for Brookline? YES. Greenways Quiet Local Streets, 15 of them with contraflow 5 No-Passing-Bikes Zones 4 Refuge Cycle Tracks at busy intersections Separated paths along high speed arterials Implementation Schedule???
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Boston’s Developing Greenway Network
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Arborway: 8 lanes of highway, no path 13 Jamaica Pond Kelley Circle Murray Circle Arboretum
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Engineering Students’ Design, 2008 14 Regional Traffic Concentrated in Inner Raodway Continuous Paths in East & West Side Medians Net New Greenspace = 4.45 Acres Newly Accessible Greenspace = 5.60 Acres
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Greenway Segments (2+ mi long?) Arborway Route 9 Crossing Sears Rotary “Harbor- Ride” S. Bay / Harbor Trail Harbor Walk Southampton & Old Colony Watertown Branch Community Path Charlesgate Path World Series Path Grand Junction Earheart Dam / Bike to the Sea Downtown Boston South Boston UMass Boston Dorchester Cambridge Watertown Somerville Charlestown Jamaica Pond Brookline Forest Hills Brighton Fresh Pond Missing Mile Bridges
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World Series Path SW Corridor (at Ruggles) to Back Bay Fens 50% on NU campus
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SW Corridor Ruggles Station Huntington Ave MFA NU & first World Series site (1903)
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Shifted median Back Bay Fens Mass. Pike Charles River Mass.Ave. Muddy River Comm. Ave. CHARLESGATE PATH
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Proposed Conditions This is a rendering of what the southbound lanes of the Bowker Overpass will look like. Existing Conditions This is an image taken from the Bowker/Boylston Intersection looking at the southbound lanes of the Bowker Overpass. Moving The Median
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Down & Across the On-Ramp from Comm. Ave. –Ramp Narrowed to 1 lane for entering Bowker Overpass –Signalized crossing, coordinated w/ Comm Ave –No negative traffic impact –ADA ramp to Charlesgate West and Newbury St. Comm Ave
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Coming down to Commonwealth Ave.
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Shifted curb line on Beacon Street crossing the Muddy
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Proposed Path Layout: Connections AND a New 2.5 - Acre Park
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LMA MGH E. Cambridge BU Back Bay NU MIT JP BMC Harvard Sq Allston/Bri U Mass S Boston Roxbury
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Boston’s Future Greenway Network (in part)! www.civ.neu.edu
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