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Inflation or that Lyft’s stock has been absolute shit this past year?
https://www.google.com/search?q=lyft...&client=safari |
BeltLine: Long-awaited Southside Trail construction to start in March
Atlanta - The unpaved Southside Trail section between Glenwood Avenue and Boulevard—Segments 4 and 5—is scheduled to officially close and be under construction sometime in March 2023. The scope of the 1.2-mile project includes rebuilding the United Avenue bridge. Once Segments 4 and 5 open, BeltLine users will be able to travel from Piedmont Park down to Boulevard, south of Zoo Atlanta, on a contiguously paved and protected multi-use trail. Once the next Southside Trail piece opens, it will create roughly five miles of uninterrupted BeltLine on the east and south sides of town, with only a half-dozen at-grade street crossings along the route. https://atlanta.urbanize.city/sites/...?itok=2UIT46mq |
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Rideshare always was and always will be unprofitable. |
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https://grist.org/solutions/new-orle...micromobility/ |
This stretch of bikepath on the western side of Stockholm's Old Town is getting widened. It is one of the main 3 bikelanes/paths connecting the northern half with the southern half of the inner city (of the whole metro area, really!).
Construction is planned to start in 2024. https://vaxer.stockholm/projekt/cyke...rholmskanalen/ https://www.skyscrapercity.com/cdn-c...7-png.3779846/ Still a bit narrow, yes, but this looks about twice as wide as the current situation (which is scary at times). https://www.skyscrapercity.com/cdn-c...7-png.3779848/ google maps: https://www.google.com/maps/@59.3247...7i16384!8i8192 |
Atlanta awarded $30,000,000 for bike/ped connection from downtown to the Southside Beltline trail.
"Safety upgrades along that route call for bike lanes, crosswalk lighting, roadway reconfigurations, medians, safer speed limits, and rectangular rapid-flashing beacons, among other changes." https://atlanta.urbanize.city/sites/...?itok=ocLjPUbK |
The Atlanta project is part of the 37 implementation Safe Streets and Roads for All grants announced yesterday.
The Department is awarding 473 action plan grants and 37 grants for implementation projects in this first round of the program. Here is a snapshot of the types of communities being funded through these awards:
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road diet, bike lanes and more for dangerous delancey street --
Gillibrand, local pols unveil $18M federal grant to redesign dangerous stretch of Delancey Street By Ethan Stark-Miller Posted on February 6, 2023 A roughly $18 million federal grant will fund long sought-after traffic safety improvements to a dangerous stretch of Delancey Street near the foot of the Williamsburg Bridge on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and a cadre of local pols announced Monday. The grant will pay for the city Department of Transportation’s (DOT) implementation of a so-called “road diet” along the dangerous stretch of Delancey, the senator said during a news conference at the corner of Delancey and Norfolk Streets Monday morning. The road diet consists of reducing traffic lanes, building protected bike paths and adding accessibility improvements to the busy thoroughfare between Clinton and Bowery Streets. more: https://www.amny.com/transit/gillibr...lancey-street/ |
^ Any graphics showing what this will look like?
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not yet, but i found something better -- 1919 -- delancey street and the williamsburgh bridge -- in full swing in the streetcar era. :cheers: https://ephemeralnewyork.files.wordp...bridge1919.jpg |
^ Seen that shot before. Ahhh...what a time to be alive. I mean you could die of TB or a simple infection, but other than that...
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If anyone is interested, the National Center for Sustainable Transportation (NCST) is hosting a webinar titled "The Role of Micromobility in Public Transit Planning" on March 8th at 1pm Eastern Time. Register at this link:
https://ucdavis.zoom.us/webinar/regi...ica%2FNew_York Quote:
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ok — nyc is slow on the draw with these:
Oonee unveils new free bike parking pod at Port Authority Bus Terminal By Ben Brachfeld Posted on March 15, 2023 Local micromobility startup Oonee on Wednesday opened up its newest hub for bike parking at the Port Authority Bus Terminal, part of what the company hopes is ultimately a network of secure storage for two-wheelers throughout the five boroughs. The Oonee “pod” on 42nd Street outside the bus terminal can securely hold 20 bikes, and is completely free to use with a membership, allowing access via a keycard or phone app. Spots on the vertical, “smart-locked” racks are available on a first-come-first-served basis, and can be held for 72 hours before the app sends a notification about inactivity. more: https://www.amny.com/transit/oonee-u...-bus-terminal/ https://www.amny.com/wp-content/uplo...5-1200x900.jpg The new Oonee Pod outside Port Authority Bus Terminal. Photo by Ben Brachfeld |
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