Quote:
Originally Posted by PHX31
I would think you would want at least a 9' parallel parking lane. God knows people can't parallel park... people will be crowding the through lanes since they can't get near the curb, especially those with slightly wider cars/trucks.
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8' is the Federal Standard, and if people are struggling to parallel park, it means traffic is moving even slower, which on a street like this is a good thing.
But I won't quibble over a foot here or there.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PHX31
I'm starting to like the parallel parking idea, but as a bicyclist I'd be a little wary riding down these bike lanes with the threat of a car door suddenly opening in front of me from a passenger of someone parking in the parallel parking spaces.... hopefully the curb would be enough to prevent a car from riding into the bike lane when they are trying to parallel park.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vicelord John
PS, Hoover, the idea of a bike lane being on the passenger side of parallel parking scares the living bejeebus out of me. Drivers are typically more cognizant of opening their doors into traffic, but their passengers are in the habit of just opening the doors automatically... I feel my chance of getting the door prize is much higher that way, so I'd be using the car lane no doubt.
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I agree it seems odd at first. They have them in Boston and it took me some getting used to, but once people get used to it, its great. Often times people aren't carpooling, so being doored isn't a concern. Plus you could theoretically put a sign on trees/parking meters that said "Look for bikes!" or whatever.
I personally felt safer in these "Cycle Paths" protected by 2 tons of steel from moving traffic with my only worry being doored (as opposed to being doored and hit by traffic).
Plus since its on sidewalk level, on 1st Fridays, you simply disallow the bikes in the Cycle path and now you've got a much wider side walk.
But again, if they were on the other side, thats OK too. But the City is so far off base we had to BEG and FIGHT them to get any bike lanes at all in the fucking first place! Notice how their last project, 1st St, has none! Ug.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vicelord John
who the fuck are these morons?
Mill Avenue is, by far, the most urban/walkable street in Maricopa County,
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Right, obviously Mill Ave is the "right" answer, thats why I asked the question!
I expected them to both reply "Mill Avenue" and then I could basically erupt and say "then just copy Mill Avenue you morons!" (but nicer than that, ya know). But there answers were so stunningly stupid it caught me off guard.
As to "who the fuck are these morons"....I think the issue is, these are people who got their Traffic Engineering degrees in the 70s. We were still in the throws of "urban renewal", "arterial streets", et cetera. So unfortunately, thats what they know, and they haven't kept up with the times. By the time they've been in the City long enough to get to the top of their Department, their older and pretty set in their ways.
Joseph Perez, the City of Phoenix Bike Coordinator, is the only person in the whole Department worth anything. He's got a lot of good plans, but Phoenix's bike budget is around the level of Bismarck, ND's...so he can't do much.