traffic-intolerant bicyclists and boston’s greenway network peter g. furth professor

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1 Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists and Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists and Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Northeastern University. Bicycle Ridership Depends on Traffic Stress. Low stress facility draws high ridership. Riders. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

1

Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists

and

Boston’s Greenway Network

Peter G. Furth

Professor

Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering

Northeastern University

Page 2: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

2

Bicycle Ridership Depends on Traffic Stress

degree of traffic stress

Rid

ers

Unimproved

Low stress facility draws high ridership

Many

improvements

serve only traffic-

tolerant riders

X3

X2X1

Page 3: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

A Test:

Could we design a network for Brookline

intended for traffic-intolerant cyclists?

3

Page 4: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

4

Proposed Safe Routes Network, Brookline, MA

• Accepted in 2007 as plan by Brookline Transportation Board

Page 5: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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Expanding the Toolbox of Low-Stress Facility Types

* New criteria developed for

traffic-intolerant riders

5. Contraflow lane

6. No-Passing-Bikes zone

7. Separated paths or “Cycle tracks”

Page 6: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

BICYCLE CONTRAFLOW• One-way for cars, two-way

for bikes

• Excellent safety record

• Bikes do it anyway!

Page 7: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Recommended Contraflow Site (observe contraflow cyclist)

7

Page 8: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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Recommended No-Passing-Bikes Zone

(Carlton St.)

• Self-enforcing

• Removes stress from cyclists

• Removes pressure motorists feel to pass unsafely

Page 9: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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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

Page 10: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Refuge Cycle TracksCarry routes through dangerous intersections

Page 11: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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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???

Page 12: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Boston’s Developing Greenway Network

Page 13: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Arborway: 8 lanes of highway, no path

13

Jamaica Pond

Kelley Circle

Murray Circle

Arboretum

Page 14: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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

Page 15: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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

CambridgeWatertown

Somerville

Charlestown

Jamaica Pond

Brookline

Forest Hills

Brighton

Fresh Pond

Missing Mile Bridges

Page 16: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

World Series Path

SW Corridor (at Ruggles) to Back Bay Fens

50% on NU campus

Page 17: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

SW C

orridor

Ruggles Station

Huntington Ave

MFA

NU & first World Series site (1903)

Page 18: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Shifted median

Back Bay Fens

Mass. Pike

Charles River Mass.Ave.

Muddy River

Comm. Ave.

CHARLESGATE PATH

Page 19: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Proposed ConditionsThis is a rendering of what the southbound lanes of the

Bowker Overpass will look like.

Existing ConditionsThis is an image taken from the Bowker/Boylston

Intersection looking at the southbound lanes of the Bowker Overpass.

Moving The MedianMoving The Median

Page 20: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

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

Page 21: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Coming down to Commonwealth Ave.

Page 22: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Shifted curb line on Beacon Street crossing the Muddy

Page 23: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Proposed Path Layout: Connections AND a New 2.5 - Acre Park

Page 24: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor
Page 25: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

LMA

MGH

E. Cambridge

BUBack Bay

NU

MIT

JP

BMC

Harvard Sq

Allston/Bri

U Mass

S Boston

Roxbury

Page 26: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor
Page 27: Traffic-Intolerant Bicyclists  and  Boston’s Greenway Network Peter G. Furth Professor

Boston’s Future Greenway Network (in part)!

www.civ.neu.edu