Ride Boldly!

Bikes, bicycling, and road safety.

December 14, 2007
by julie
4 Comments

Bicycle Facilities Issues

A lot of people think a solution to bicycle-friendliness is to build more bike paths and bike lanes. A lot of other people, particularly most League Certified Instructors, don’t really agree with this as a solution or a matter of policy. It all gets down to how one wishes to define the concept of ‘sharing the road.’

There are really three ways to approach bicycle facilities. The first is to have fully segregated facilities, where bicycles have their own place that is not part of the road. This is usually achieved via the construction of bicycle paths or sidepaths. The second is to have separated facilities. A separated facility is most often a striped bicycle lane on a roadway, designed to provide a specific pathway to a bicycle versus a motorized vehicle. The last approach is an integrated facility. This would be building wider lanes, traffic circles and roundabouts, and roads using calming engineering strategies to provide for multiple types of road users without drawing boundaries.

If the true goal is to share the road and promote acceptance, integrated facilities have the most to offer. Other facilities maintain a separation between modes of transport, and can in fact promote ongoing ill-feeling between users of said modes.

For instance, bicycle lanes often promote a belief among motorists that bicycles should only be using streets with such striping, and that bicyclists must remain solely within the lines created by the lane striping. This is not only not in line with the rules of the road in many states, but often encourages unsafe bicycle ‘driving’ behavior as many bicyclists shate this belief. Poorly engineered bicycle lanes — and there are many — often place the bicyclist in a position to the right of a right-turning car if they maintain position in the bicycle lane, rather than moving into the ‘vehicular’ lane. In Saint Paul, Minnesota, two examples of this can be seen within a mile moving westbound from the State Capitol to the River along the John Ireland Boulevard/Summit Avenue bicycle lane. At John Ireland and Kellogg Boulevard, facing the cathedral, the bicycle lane brings cyclists to the right of traffic right-turning from John Ireland to Kellogg. At Dale Street and Summit, the lane curves curbward, once again placing cyclists in jeopardy. I have witnessed multiple bicycle-car crashes at both intersections — and been sworn at for moving into a lane-control position in the rightmost through lane in order to maintain visibility and avoid such a fate myself!

Bicycle lanes also encourage some cyclists to violate one of the first rules of traffic — the slowest traffic should be to the right. However, the presence of a bicycle lane to the right often has bicyclists passing slow or stopped traffic on the ‘wrong’ side. This is not recommended!

Another scarily engineered bicycle lane can be found in Minneapolis, where a bicycle lane on Hennepin Avenue runs to the left of traffic moving northbound, although the cyclists are slower and should be to the right. The bike lane also puts the cyclists facing southbound bus traffic. Head-on bicycle-vehicle collisions tend to be among the most serious, as the bicycle and the vehicle both have approach speed and thus there is more force in the collision – basic physics.

Sidepaths, as a fully separated facility, have a number of issues. First, they very frequently cross over numerous driveways and sidestreets in such a way that users of the path must be on special alert to avoid collision with right- or left-turning cars. Second, such sidepaths often occupy just one side of a roadway, which can promote users of the sidepath travelling contrary to traffic flow on the road. When a bicyclist is travelling counter to traffic, they are less visible. A right turning vehicle is going to look to their right for clearance, not ahead or to their left – which are both possible places for a sidepath user to be. One more issue with a sidepath tends to apply most in northern climates — they’re the last thing plowed or cleared by civic authorities, and in some municipalities aren’t cleared at all. This makes them poor choices for four-season use.

Bicycle paths can have some of the same issues as sidepaths, depending on their location and vision in development. Some bicycle paths are actually pretty acceptable from a cyclo-tourism perspective: They take people to places roads may not exist as such, except sometimes as unpaved country lanes. This may not suit a goal of bicycle as transportation, however, as an idea in transportation planning is to allow multi-modal users to access daily activities and destinations. Minnesota’s Gateway State Trail is a lovely recreational facility, although some of the at-grade crossings are pretty hazardous. However, it’s not going to help a day-to-day user access groceries or employment, generally speaking. The Minneapolis commuter trails (Cedar Lake Trail and LRT East/Midtown Greenway) use railroad right-of-ways to mirror major expressways, which are obviously not bicycle-suited, to create good cycling corridors. However, once again, many of the at-grade crossings can be fairly hazardous, with several crossing fast roads with poor visibility for the trail users.

Both bicycle trails and sidepaths also have an additional associated hazard: They are shared with non-vehicular traffic. Whereas drivers on roads have specific rules and licensing, paths are shared with pedestrians, dogs, children, rollerbladers, and squirrels — none of which have licensing or specific training and rules to regulate their behavior on the facility.

Many trails and sidepaths give users a false sense of security, rather than reinforcing what has been statstically shown again and again: Bicycles fare best when they share the road and are treated as vehicles. For some, the idea of being on a roadway with a vehicle can be scary. But if taught to use proper lane positioning, and to operate according to the basic rules of traffic – not special rules – roadway use is safer than use of most paths and sidepaths. Sure, there are jerks on the road. There are jerks everywhere. We need to model our behavior and transportation planning not around accomodating jerks, but accomodating the day-to-day needs of multiple modes of sustainable transportation.

December 6, 2007
by julie
Comments Off on South Metro Update: MN149 Roadwork

South Metro Update: MN149 Roadwork

Throughout the summer, madcap hijinks and construction have been in place on Minnesota 149 (Dodd Road) between Minnesota 55 and Wescott Road. Typically, the crossing between Argenta Trail to Wescott Road, over Minnesota 149, is part of a number of nice bicycle routings in the area.

As of December 5, the part of this roadway that was closed has reopened. This has several implications for cyclists:

  • Vehicle traffic on Argenta Trail will decrease, as rerouting from MN149 will not be required.
  • There is a shiny new stoplight at Argenta/Baffin and MN149, crossing to Wescott Road, which may make crossing this divided highway easier for cyclists on weeknights. (It’s never been tough weekends – it’s the Thomson-West traffic that makes weeknights rough.)
  • The section of MN149 between Yankee Doodle Road and Wescott has an improved shoulder, making cycling along this 55mph vehicle zone a little nicer.


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November 28, 2007
by julie
Comments Off on More Focus on the Wrong Things in Edina

More Focus on the Wrong Things in Edina

In July, the Star-Tribune had an article about bicycling in Edina that I felt really had all kinds of messed-up priorities — focusing on ‘dedicated’ bikeways instead of sensibly-design streets, people driving while using cell-phones, and attempting to engineer around the standard behavior of children (yeah, good luck with THAT).

Now, in November, the same news source is looking at the recommendations of Edina’s bicycle task force. The very article starts with a pet peeve of mine — a focus on the wrong thing:

Edina has no signed or striped bike routes. That’s an amazing fact when biking is booming in the Twin Cities and Minneapolis is ranked second in the country in the proportion of people who bike to work.

Again I must state: Striping and signs do not ‘create’ bicycle-friendly routings. In fact, many bicycle advocates believe that they create additional hostility toward cyclists. Some drivers perceive that such striping dictates bicycle road position and even roads that cyclists are ALLOWED to use. Reading letters to editors and online comments on various articles about bicycle issues emphasizes that this isn’t me or some tight-pantsed advocate who worries too much just thinking this. There’s evidence of this occurring.

Edina’s plan focuses on building several bike trails and striping a bunch of streets. Much of the proposed striping, in fact, is just wandering around with paint and not making any actual physical changes to roadways or traffic flow — they intend to paint bicycle markings on existing shoulders. Nothing presently prevents a cyclist from using these existing shoulders.

One task force argues that marking roads would prevent cars from honking and telling him to get on sidewalks, I think this is probably optimistic. I’ve had people tell me to ‘Get on the sidewalk!’ while both I and the car were within visual distance of a Share the Road sign. Signs and striping do very little to educate or reduce vehicular hostility. People who want to honk and intimidate are unlikely to undergo attitudinal shift because the shoulder’s been repainted and a sign erected.

That being said, it’s pretty ridiculous that the task force is having to suggest a complete streets policy aimed at improving roadways for multi-modal access during redesign or new builds. Even federal roadway policy already suggests that.

Bicycles fare best when they behave as, and are treated as, vehicles. ‘Separate but Equal’ treatment is not a good transportation or traffic calming strategy. Driver education that reaches both the drivers of automobiles and the drivers of bicycles is a much more needed strategy.

November 28, 2007
by julie
Comments Off on Um, What?

Um, What?

So, the Rochester Post-Bulletin reports nefariously weird bicycle-related activity in Rochester, Minnesota:

According to police, a female guest at Best Western Soldiers Field Tower and Suites, 401 Sixth St. S.W., had used the swimming pool and was showering when she heard a door open about 3:10 p.m. Sunday. She saw a naked man. He ran from the room, pulled on swim trunks, got on a bicycle and rode through the hallways.

He hit a 76-year-old Michican man and the man’s 33-year-old son, said police Lt. John Edwards. The son chased him, tackled him and held him until police arrived. Edwards said both men suffered minor injuries from being hit by the bike.

Strange days in southern Minnesota!