Showing posts with label bicycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycling. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

A Guide For Accessing the LA River Bike Path From Glendale

A friend asked how to enter the LA River Bike Path if you're coming from Glendale. Several of the entrances aren't well marked, so I made an annotated Google Map:


View LA River Bike Path Entrances near Glendale in a larger map

via Fairmont flyover/Glendale Riverwalk:

Towards the north end, you can take the Fairmont flyover bridge from Glendale towards Dreamworks. The bridge, which looks like a freeway bridge but is in fact perfectly legal to bike on (and almost entirely empty), will deposit you on Flower near Dreamworks. From there, you can enter the brand new (and lovely) Glendale Narrows Riverwalk, which ends at the Bette Davis Picnic Area. Cut across the park, cross the Riverside Drive Bridge towards Griffith park and you're at the northernmost entrance to the bike path.

via Chevy Chase:

Take Chevy Chase Drive west until you hit the river. You'll find the newly expanded and re-landscaped North Atwater Park. You can ride the east bank of the river alongside the LAPD stables and the Los Feliz par 3 golf course, which will deposit you a block away from the Los Feliz Blvd entrance to the bike path.

via the Sunnynook Footbridge:

From Los Feliz or Glendale Blvds, take Valleybrink or Glenfeliz to Sunnynook Drive and head west. You'll find a footbridge that connects to the bike path.

from Glendale Blvd:

Stay right (heading UNDER the bridge) at the split for the Hyperion Bridge. The entrance is on your right - watch out for the lip of the curb.
the hole in the fence just south of Los Feliz

BONUS - to access the quiet, pretty, not-really-a-bike-path route on the eastern bank of the river between Glendale Blvd and Los Feliz Blvd:

you have a few options:
  • The Sunnynook Footbridge (see above)
  • A hole in the fence (!) just south of Los Feliz Blvd
  • From the south side of Glendale Blvd you can walk UNDERNEATH the Hyperion Bridge (it can be a little creepy) and you'll be right on the eastern riverbank.
I regularly walk the scenic east bank between Los Feliz and Glendale Blvd and wish there was a more welcoming way to access it than looking for a hole in a fence or ducking under the Hyperion Bridge. Get on that, city of LA!



Let me in!




Tuesday, July 10, 2012

My Letter To The City Council Regarding Proposed Honolulu Road Diet


The proposed Honolulu Road Diet project goes before the City Council for approval tonight.  I wrote this letter to the council expressing my support for the project:


Honorable members of the City Council,

I am writing to encourage you to vote for the proposed road diet project on Honolulu.  This is one lane on one road for one mile.  Literally every other road in Glendale is entirely dedicated to the car, and the opponents don't believe they can share one lane, on one road, for one mile...for six months?  Ask yourselves: is that right?  To have 99.9% of roads dedicated entirely to the benefit of those in cars, and not want to share even one tiny piece with others?

In the 2011 Allstate Insurance report on accident rates in the 200 largest cities in the country, Glendale maintained its ranking as the third most dangerous city in the country in which to drive.  As a Glendale resident, you are 80.8 percent MORE likely to be involved in a collision than the average resident of the 200 largest cities in America.  In the 2011 report, the statistical average interval for a Glendale resident to be involved in a car accident was a mere 5.5 years - almost a year sooner than the Glendale's 2005 average of 6.3 years.

Glendale has an abysmal record of speeding, car accidents, and pedestrians and cyclists maimed and killed.  It's time for the city council to look to the future, slow down speeding and create a safer environment for pedestrians and bicyclists -- and drivers too, even if they don't realize it.

sincerely,

Scott Lowe



Friday, July 6, 2012

Proposed Road Safety Improvements on Honolulu in Trouble, Write to the City Council With Your Support

The Glendale City Council is considering abandoning the proposed road diet test project along a small stretch of Honolulu in Montrose despite hundreds of letters from residents in support of the project and traffic counts that show there will be minimal disruption to traffic flow.  The benefits of the project would be: 
  • Create designated bicycle lanes
  • Create a center two-way-left-turn lane at mid-block locations and separate left-turn lanes at major intersections (where currently nonexistent)
  • Reduce vehicular travel speeds
  • Reduce accident severity, frequency, and number
  • Enhance pedestrian safety
If the council kills this project based on a small amount of opposition, it's unlikely that they will move forward with other infrastructure improvements spelled out in the City of Glendale's bicycle master plan.  While the city has been taking small steps forward, Glendale's bicycle amenities lag far, far behind those of Los Angeles, Pasadena and Burbank, to say nothing of Long Beach or Santa Monica.  Everyone knows that Glendale has an abysmal record of speeding, car accidents, and pedestrians being hit and killed on an alarmingly regular basis.  It's time for the city council -- particularly dithering councilman Ara Najarian -- to show some backbone, slow down speeders and create a safer environment for pedestrians and bicyclists. The Glendale City Council can be contacted with your support for the project at citycouncil@ci.glendale.ca.us. Councilman Rafi Manoukian can be contacted separately at manoukiancouncil@gmail.com.  I asked my friend Alek Bartrosouf if I could publish this letter he wrote to the Glendale City Council regarding the project.  His letter is printed below.


Dear Mayor Quintero and Members of the Council,

I am contacting you today as a private resident of Glendale and very concerned voter.  My impetus for writing comes after months of discussion since December over the road diet test. 

After a bewildering city council meeting on June 19, 2012 where a decision to move forward on a road diet test was postponed and subjective staff report was made public at the request of one council member, I took it upon myself to retrace the steps of Council to understand how we got to a stalemate over our first bicycle infrastructure investment out of the Bicycle Master Plan.

In reviewing the meetings since December, I have found the following:

December 31, 2011
  • Staff recommends a road diet on La Crescenta Avenue at a cost of $64,000.
  • 8 people speak for the project.
  • 1 person speaks against the project.
  • Quintero expresses an interest in Honolulu.
  • Manoukian expresses support for the plan.
  • Najarian says there are few reasons to have this test on La Crescenta and expresses support for Honolulu due to slower traffic and its bicycle shop.
  • Friedman expresses support for this project, but is willing to look at alternatives.

While the majority is willing to explore a road diet, some express interest in looking at other alternatives and have lukewarm opinions about having the first road diet test on
La Crescenta Avenue.

January 31, 2012
  • 10 people speak for the project (with letters of support). 3 people speak against.
  • Quintero supports Honolulu specifically. “Road Diets make sense, it will not create bumper to bumper traffic,” he says.
  • Manoukian is okay with any of the proposed road diet tests from the report.
  • Najarian supports the road diet system as a test on Honolulu.
  • Friedman is fine with Honolulu and supports all of Honolulu.
  • Council votes 4 to 1 to move forward with Honolulu as its Road Diet Test.

June 19, 2012
  • Staff presents opinions stated by the public both for and against the road diet test.
  • Quintero asks “why Honolulu?” to staff.
  • A petition with 300 signatures, letters from nearby residents, senior living centers, and businesses in favor of the project are presented to the council.
  • 26 people speak for the project
  • 7 people speak against the project
  • 1 person speaks neutrally on the project
  • City Manager Ochoa mentions a special meeting for Whiting Woods residents.
  • Mr. Haghani, Director of Planning, says main streets should be multi-modal and include various forms of transportation.  “Montrose does lend itself to this type of test.”

Based on the dialogue I am hearing from the majority of council members at these meetings, there is a clear and blatant interest in moving forward with a road diet test. My understanding, and please correct me if I am wrong, is that there is increased pressure from a small group of organized residents in the Montrose area who do not want this project to be tested – the type of folks who promise that this will turn out to be a “disaster”.  It is my understanding that some council members, who were initially in support for Honolulu specifically, are now looking for ways to avoid a minority vote in favor of this road diet test.

I would like to think that I have voted for council members who are forward thinking and progressive leaders who can think independently and look at cases before them in an objective manner.  It is true that public opinion is an important piece of the puzzle and it should be taken seriously, especially when hundreds of people who have expressed explicit support for the Honolulu Road Diet.

Equally important, however, is the ability to step back from the opinions of the public and make an objective decision based on what you feel is best for our community.  Many of you have reiterated in the past – this is only a test.  The only way we can move forward with bicycle improvements is to try things we simply have not tried in the past.  Road Diet studies are consistently clear in their findings to reduce speeds and rates of collision.  Implementing a road diet on Honolulu will also give our community what they want – an overwhelming majority of residents on Honolulu agree that speeds are too high and this project would alleviate that serious concern.

I think that City Council should move forward with this test on Honolulu, which is a street with the least amount of daily traffic from the set of streets presented as options to Council on January 31st. 

I encourage you to seriously consider the future of Glendale and its willingness to be innovative, creative, bold, and appealing to those of us who grew up here and are looking for reasons to stay.  Many of us will be disappointed to observe a minority vote for a project we worked hard for since December in our outreach efforts and start the process all over in another part of town because of a few loud opposers.  The reality is there will always be a few folks who will not be interested in improving the level of service on our streets for all users. The question you face is: are you going to buckle to the pressure?

Your opportunity to lead is now.  Please do what is right for this community and adopt a standard that our children will be proud of.

Sincerely,

Alek Bartrosouf


Again, The Glendale City Council can be contacted with your support for the project at citycouncil@ci.glendale.ca.us. Councilman Rafi Manoukian can be contacted separately at manoukiancouncil@gmail.com.



Monday, April 30, 2012

Friday, March 30, 2012

City Council Approves Draft Bicycle Master Plan!

The Glendale city council voted on the draft bicycle master plan Tuesday and it's moving forward!  Fantastic news.

From the Glendale News-Press:
The first of its kind in 15 years, Glendale’s new draft Bicycle Transportation Plan includes recommendations for new bike lanes and routes, coloring in some lanes, adding more shared lane markings — known as sharrows — and even slimming down some roads to make way for dedicated bicycle lanes. 
“I think there are many, many reasons to do this and very few reasons not to,” said Mayor Laura Friedman during the special City Council meeting. 
A HUGE THANK YOU to Mayor Laura Friedman, who has been incredibly supportive from day one, and the rest of the council (except Weaver).  Laura even organized and led the first ever Glendale "Mayor's Ride" in September.  Check out photos from that ride on my Flickr.

Mayor Friedman with Glendale police officers Josh Luna and Sue Shine. [photo by Martin Orozco]


If you are interested in these issues, I highly recommend you follow local advocates Walk Bike Glendale to stay up to date: