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So Chicago guys (well, and anyone else in a transit-oriented city), I've got a question.
First an explanation: my cycling friends and I have noticed certain SF neighborhoods and districts we once considered remote or hard to access via public transit are now easily accessible. Biking has reordered our mental maps of the city's geography, and shaken up which areas/bars/parks/stores etc. are easy to get to. Has cycling altered your impression of your own city like that? |
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We're getting a few nice things here. There are bike lanes on select streets all around town, even in the suburban areas. Of course, not all of the streets have them, and some of those streets are nearly impossible to ride on because of killer hills and higher speed limits, say above 35 miles an hour. Bikes are accepted on the streets here, since not all of them have bike lanes. From my house going into downtown, there's only one major street with bike lanes to downtown. So that's the one I take. There are 3 other streets that lead either into downtown, or near it. Those three don't have bike lanes, but two of those allow bicyclists to ride in the street and even take the full lane. The third street is pretty much off limits to bikes since the terrain goes up and down like a roller coaster. So we have bike lanes, bikes are allowed to take the full lane on at least some streets (where it's safe), and we're even getting some bike boulevards in downtown. Quote:
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\ Also one thing.....cycling has shown me how far the northside has come and how far parts of the southside and westsides need to go......god if we could just get those parts of the city as health as much of the northside Chicago would be really something else |
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$242 for failure to obey a traffic control device. I knew a guy in Portland who was tackled by multiple PPD officers for not having a front bike light: http://bikeportland.org/2008/06/11/m...rtland-police/ ========================= As for not being able to ride a bike and being well dressed? Seriously?!?! http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3364/...383c509685.jpg Picture courtesy of larsdaniel on flickr Via www.copenhagencyclechic.com Check out this: http://www.copenhagencyclechic.com/s...0in%20a%20suit http://bikeportland.org/wp-content/u...01/tweed11.jpg Picture courtesy of bikeportland.org |
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according to the chicago muni code you need a light at night.....not during daylight....nonetheless he threatened me with a ticket unless I accepted a free light that was being passed out by some bike ambassador....fcukin brown shirts don't even know the law 9-52-080 Headlamps, reflectors and brakes. (a) Every bicycle when in use at nighttime shall be equipped with a head lamp which shall emit a white light visible from a minimum distance of 500 feet from the front and with a rear red reflector capable of reflecting the head lamp beams of an approaching motor vehicle back to the operator of such vehicle at distances up to 200 feet or a rear lamp emitting a red light visible from a distance of at least 200 feet from the rear. --Correction to above....I should have said twilight, not dusk, and twilight would begin at sunset |
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^^^ Ouch! Did you sue the crap out of the person that doored you? That's why I never ride on Ashland (not the dooring, but the traffic as you mention), especially not up in that area, people treat the segment between Lawrence and Clark like a freaking freeway. That attitude continues on up Ridge/Peterson and Clark for quite a ways too.
I actually came within inches of destroying some moron on his bike with my car at the corner of Ridge and Clark because he completely blew a red light. He was going North on Clark and I was going NW on Ridge so he was coming at me from 45 degrees back and to my left so it was even harder to see him. He blew the light so badly that I had already begun accelerating into the green and had moved about 10 feet forward when he came tearing in front of the van in the left lane and I. That guy was a complete moron and will probably be dead within 6 months if he keeps riding like that, especially in intersections like Ridge and Clark. Re: Posting the entire code, it doesn't take a lawyer to look up and read the Municipal code. But anyhow, the mistake I made was reading the section on Bike Messengers and seeing that they have to have an ID on them and not noticing it was in a subsection re: bike Messengers. |
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http://la.streetsblog.org/wp-content...cletrack_1.jpg http://www.treehugger.com/portland-cycle-track-lane.jpg http://bikeportland.org/wp-content/u...ckbrochure.jpg In the third picture, as you can see, a special green painted box exists to allow bicycles to turn left across traffic when the light crosses pedestrians. |
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as one example, my sister lives WAY the hell out in the exburban boondock wastelands of lake county illinois, but i can ride my bike from my downtown home out to her house with all but about 10 of those 65 miles on off street bike paths. how freaking cool is that? as for bars, i still use public transit and cabs for bar nights because riding a bike when i'm black-out drunk is just downright dangerous. |
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This is actually a test, the other test street is Oak and Stark, where we reduced the lanes by one to create a bike lane that sits in between parked cars and moving cars. This idea also has its pluses and minuses, it is easier to see people on bikes, but you also have idiots who dont pay attention to paint and think their car can drive anywhere they want. Also you get an issue with people swerving into the bike lane to try to get a street parking spot. There is also an issue of cars using the bike lane as a turn lane, which is also wrong of car drivers. |
The Sharrow
March 28, 2010 http://media.signonsandiego.com/e2/s.../sosd_logo.png Read More: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2...cks-geraniums/ Quote:
http://media.signonsandiego.com/img/...95d379f58af1c4 |
A few months ago some idiot, by himself, got my city to change a plan for bike lanes on just one block of street to sharrows so that he could park his car in front of his house on the street instead of in the driveway behind the house.
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Bicycles are a form of transportation that is best combined with Neighborhood Electric Vehicles, like golf carts, etc.
Most other motorized vehicles are not human-scaled. They generate air and noise pollution. And, they are unsafe because they weigh several tons and can travel at high speeds. Neighborhood Electric Vehicles, conversely, are able to provide short-range transportation for those users who are, otherwise, opposed to bicycles. The ideal is for privately-owned vehicles, like bicycles and Neighborhood Electric Vehicles, to be combined with: walkable mixed-use development; high-quality transit (everything from high-speed trains to local circulators); and clean-energy car and bike sharing (subscription-based rentals of cars and bikes, as well as Neighborhood Electric Vehicles). |
US Transportation Secretary pushes bike reform
6 Apr 2010 By Kirsten Frattini Read More: http://www.bikeradar.com/news/articl...-reform--25643 Quote:
A 'complete street' has provisions for motorized and non-motorized users. http://cdn.mos.bikeradar.com/images/...6r0-798-75.jpg |
Brooklyn Welcomes Bike-Friendly Policy
04-14-2010 By Joan Lowy & Raanan Geberer http://www.brooklyneagle.com/images/bde_logo.gif Read More: http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categor...id=31&id=34786 Quote:
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my dad has a truck he uses for recreational purposes... hmmmmm i wonder what John Cook would think about that.
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