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  #6261  
Old Posted May 23, 2023, 8:47 PM
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A couple other pics from the Urbanize article above:



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  #6262  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 12:55 AM
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As it should be. It's pathetic, a massive waste of money and ridiculous that they spent hundreds of thousands of dollars traveling the world to come up with this.
Aaaaand it just made the New York Times. Congrats, La Sombrita!

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/25/u...s-angeles.html
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  #6263  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 1:13 AM
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It looks beautiful! Congratulations.
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  #6264  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 10:54 PM
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From the Los Angeles Times:

The ‘Sombrita’ bus shade controversy obscures an important story about women and transit


A view of the “Sombrita” sunshade and lighting system on Gage Avenue in East Los Angeles. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times)

BY CAROLINA A. MIRANDA | COLUMNIST
MAY 25, 2023 11:30 AM PT

First thing’s first: La Sombrita is not a bus shelter, and it was not funded with government money.

Now that we’ve got some of the frequently misreported facts out of the way, let’s get into how a prototype sunshade deployed at four Los Angeles bus stops came to dominate social media over the last week, becoming a political Rorschach test for the failures of government — thus burying a far more interesting story about how we can make public transportation more friendly to women.

The controversy erupted last week, when leaders from the Los Angeles Department of Transportation along with L.A. City Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez held a press conference to announce a new prototype sunshade and lighting system at a bus stop in Westlake. In the photos, the design looked less than enthralling: a skateboard-shaped piece of perforated metal hung from a pole that looked to cast a sliver of shade over, at most, two or three people. At night, a solar-powered light is intended to help illuminate the sidewalk.

In a city where the lack of shade around bus stops is a serious problem (made worse by climate change), La Sombrita, as the design was dubbed by its creators, came off as a joke. I’ll admit, that was my first reaction. The photos of the press conference, showing a group of officials looking up at a glorified pole, quickly became a Twitter meme.

Making things worse was the public relations spin. A media alert breathlessly announced a “First-of-its-Kind Bus Stop Shade Structure” and framed it as part of an effort to bring gender equity to public transit. If you were following the story on Twitter, it was wildly unclear how exactly a piece of metal on a stick was going to help women. It felt merely like a capitulation to the habit already forced on Angelenos sweltering at countless bus stops; tucking themselves behind utility poles and praying they don’t fry their brains.

Within hours of the press conference, La Sombrita was being held up as a symbol of everything wrong with cities by observers across the political spectrum. On the left, it indicated an uncaring government doing less than the bare minimum for its citizens. On the right, it was evidence of a blue city mired in regulation — dopey Los Angeles unable to execute. “How to Fail at Infrastructure,” trumpeted a post from the conservative Cato Institute.

The real story of La Sombrita, however, is more complex.

To reiterate — because there are many half-truths circulating — La Sombrita is not a bus shelter. Nor is it intended to replace bus shelters. LA DOT, in fact, is not the city agency in charge of bus shelters. That would be StreetsLA, a.k.a. the Bureau of Street Services, which is part of the Department of Public Works.

La Sombrita instead has its roots in an intriguing 2021 study conducted by LA DOT titled “Changing Lanes” that examined how public transit could be more equitable to women.

Many urban transit systems were designed around nine-to-five commuters — frequently men. And transit infrastructure — such as grab bars and seat heights — were designed around men’s bodies. But over the decades, riding patterns have changed. On LA Metro, which serves L.A. County, women constituted a majority of bus passengers prior to the pandemic, according to a Metro survey published last year. Currently, they make up half the bus-riding population.

Yet these systems were not designed with their needs in mind. Routes might be functional for taking travelers to work and back, but are wildly inefficient at getting a caregiver traveling with children from school to soccer practice, to the supermarket and back home, in a timely manner. And there’s the additional challenge of navigating the system with an infant in a stroller. (I invite any Twitter bros getting their yuks over gender equity to ride a bus across L.A. while juggling an infant, a toddler and two bags of groceries. Or to traverse lonely boulevards at night without the benefit of a working lamppost.)

The 2021 study was a first step toward giving the issue serious consideration. It was commissioned by LA DOT and led by Kounkuey Design Intititiative (KDI), a nonprofit group focused on design and community development. (They’ve worked on L.A.-based projects before, including LA DOT’s “Play Streets” project, which temporarily shut down city streets and turned them into improvised playgrounds.)


Women represent half of Metro’s bus riders, yet their needs are often not taken into consideration.(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

“Changing Lanes” homed in on women riders in three neighborhoods — Watts, Sawtelle and Sun Valley — areas that not only represent different urban conditions but also have high proportions of women workers without cars. At the level of design, the report concluded, “Not only do entire systems fail to adequately account for women, the infrastructure used in those systems prioritizes men’s experience.”

The recommendations included collecting better data, improving recreational transit options, revamping itineraries to better reflect women’s travel patterns and improving design and safety.

The report has already resulted in some small changes to the system: In 2021, LA DOT launched a test of of on-demand stops along four routes on its DASH bus system between the hours of 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. to help shorten nighttime walks through risky stretches. It remains in effect.

Currently, KDI is at work on an action plan titled “Next Stop” that will help guide the implementation of some of the broad policy recommendations in their initial study. “It’s a roadmap of actions that DOT can take along their 54 lines of business,” says KDI’s founding principal and Chief Executive Chelina Odbert, “that can add up to transit infrastructure that is more gender-inclusive.”

The action plan, which is expected to be completed by the end of this year, will offer recommendations on hiring, data collection and fares. Women, says Odbert, tend to make more transfers — which means “they bear a disproportionate financial burden when we don’t have free transfers between systems.”

The team is also scrutinizing how processes that require the input of multiple city agencies might be streamlined. Bus shelter installation, for one example, has been famously held hostage to bureaucratic red tape and the whim of individual City Council members.

To support the action plan, KDI and LA DOT have also established two working groups: One made up of city residents and another of representatives from various agencies. Throughout, Odbert said they have looked for ways to support long-term policy with small infrastructural solutions. So they decided to tackle an issue that had come up repeatedly in their conversations with women during the initial study: shade and light.


La Sombrita blocks the sun on a temperate afternoon.(Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times)

KDI produced a variety of concepts, including standing shade structures of various widths, some that rotated and some with seats. As a starting point, however, they decided to prototype a model that could be installed in minutes on LA DOT poles, which wouldn’t require additional permitting or utilities. And thus La Sombrita came to be.

To be clear, the design and prototyping was funded by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; no city money was used to create the shade. Each prototype came to about $10,000 including design, materials and engineering, says Odbert, but the idea is that the cost for each shade would drop to about $2,000 if mass produced.

Another clarification: The designers did not, as has been widely reported, spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on travel to study shade structures in other cities. There was travel involved, says Odbert, but it was early on in the process to study how transportation agencies in other countries serve women riders. “Shade,” she says, “wasn’t a known focus at that point in the project.”

La Sombrita, moreover, is a prototype. Depending on feedback, it may be amended or discarded; different prototypes may follow.


Alex Godinez, 14, left, and Daniel Mejia,14, sit at a Metro bus stop with no shade on Oxnard Street, near Coldwater Canyon.(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

La Sombrita, however, had the misfortune of landing at a moment of peak frustration among L.A.’s bus riders, who have been contending with years — yeeeaaars — of broken promises on questions of shelter. In a story published last fall, my colleague Rachel Uranga detailed how an ad-driven model delivered only 660 out of 2,185 promised shelters over two decades. Yet, despite this failure, the City Council opted for another ad-driven contract with a different vendor last year.

Curbed correspondent Alissa Walker took to Twitter to note the rage currently directed at La Sombrita would have been better aimed at that bus shelter contract.

Freeways, after all, aren’t generally forced to earn their keep in this manner. As Jessica Meaney, director of the mobility advocacy group, Investing in Place, told LAist last year: “The fact that we won’t invest in improving our bus stops unless it’s tied to advertising is such an outdated and, frankly, punishing position to take for people who ride the bus who are already dealing with a bus service that hasn’t really seen significant improvement in 30 years.”

Already, the rollout of the new shelters — designed by Tranzito-Vector — has been pushed back from this summer to late fall, according to a report published by dot.LA in March. (A spokesperson for DPW was not able to provide an update in time for this story.)

A representative for LA DOT noted that La Sombrita “is not a replacement for critical investments we need more of — like bus shelters and streetlights. This pilot treatment is designed to test ways of creating small amounts of shade and light where other solutions are not immediately feasible.”

As far as design solutions go, the shade is better than nothing. I paid a visit to the East L.A. prototype Monday and found that it helped shade my upper body in the late afternoon sun — though, admittedly, it was only 71 degrees. But I had to choose between shade and seating because the two are not aligned.

Streetsblog’s Joe Linton writes, in a smart piece, “the project tries to find a constructive niche in a highly inequitable L.A. already suffering from severe disparities. It tries to navigate the byzantine street furniture allocation mechanisms hamstrung by having tied transit shelters to advertising revenues. But ... La Sombrita still feels inadequate.”

This much Twitter got right: It is underwhelming. But the study that led to La Sombrita is not. It’s a smart step toward making transit more responsive to all the people who use it. And as a woman who has waited for buses on lonely streets, I welcome that.

Ultimately, the biggest mistake here wasn’t trying out a new design. It was holding a press conference that shed more heat than light.


Link: https://www.latimes.com/entertainmen...en-and-transit
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  #6265  
Old Posted May 27, 2023, 12:17 AM
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Wow that is a lot of nonsense. It's a shitty project, you can just accept that.
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  #6266  
Old Posted May 27, 2023, 1:45 AM
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I think that the Sombrita is fine.
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Last edited by SFBruin; May 29, 2023 at 7:25 PM.
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  #6267  
Old Posted May 29, 2023, 5:31 PM
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  #6268  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 2:04 PM
jmecklenborg jmecklenborg is offline
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Video Link

What a mess.

In a smaller city, this would be an all-caps SCANDAL that consumes local news for 5+ years.
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  #6269  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 3:03 PM
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It should get better once the K Line Northern Extension gets built but that probably won't be until 2050.
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  #6270  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 5:27 PM
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It should get better once the K Line Northern Extension gets built but that probably won't be until 2050.

You can't get a networking effect without...a network. Unfortunately, it's politically impossible for publicly-financed rail transit networks to prioritize high ROI lines that are perceived to be redundant or too close to an existing line.

Somehow extending this line southward (the current green line) toward Torrance, which promises no increased networking, is a priority over extending it northward to the u/c Wilshire subway. Obviously, the southward extension is much cheaper, but it's not going to accomplish much of anything.

Last edited by jmecklenborg; May 30, 2023 at 7:48 PM.
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  #6271  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 9:59 PM
homebucket homebucket is online now
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Wow that is a lot of nonsense. It's a shitty project, you can just accept that.
Yeah. Nice idea but poor execution. Maybe just plant more trees? Not only would it provide shade, but it'd also have the benefits of reducing air pollution and heat island effect much more than a piece of metal installed onto the sidewalk.
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  #6272  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 10:18 PM
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Yeah. Nice idea but poor execution. Maybe just plant more trees? Not only would it provide shade, but it'd also have the benefits of reducing air pollution and heat island effect much more than a piece of metal installed onto the sidewalk.
Trees would definitely be better, but not every bus stop location is going to have room for a tree. There would need to be either a road verge, a neighbouring property with the willingness and space, or a wide enough sidewalk that some can be dedicated to a planter or cut out. Plus, trees don't provide light at night, one of the two functions of the shades which, according to the article, have solar panels used to power lighting.
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  #6273  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 10:30 PM
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Originally Posted by jmecklenborg View Post
What a mess.

In a smaller city, this would be an all-caps SCANDAL that consumes local news for 5+ years.
I agree.
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  #6274  
Old Posted May 30, 2023, 11:05 PM
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The K Line is a long-term project that will, when it is fully open and connected to LAX, serve the region well during the 2028 Summer Olympics. It's not being heavily used right now because generally Metro train ridership has not bounced back from the pandemic-induced drop, and also because the K Line specifically is incomplete.

I guess Metro could have chosen not run trains on the portion that is finished, but the exact same people complaining now would be complaining in that circumstance as well.
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  #6275  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 2:12 AM
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The real scandal is the $900 million that LA Metro is paying to build the interface station between the K line and the LAX people mover. In what universe does it make sense to pay that kind of money to build a station that isn't even underground? Even if it does have public restrooms. Even if it does serve as a glorious welcome mat to LAX.

And on the subject of La Sombrita: I believe it was the NY Times article that mentioned that full-fledged bus shelters in LA cost about $50K to build and install. The cost of the K line boondoggle station for the LAX people mover would have paid for 18,000 bus shelters across LA County. Even if you spent $100 million on the people mover station, which seems generous to me, that would leave money left over to install 16,000 bus shelters. Though the LA Times article points out that it is the LA Bureau of Street Services that is responsible for bus shelters, so I suppose excess K line money wouldn't be available for bus shelter installation. But that begs the question of why LA Street Services rather than LA Metro (which runs the buses) is on the hook to provide bus shelters. No wonder they are such a low priority.

Back to LA Times article on La Sombrita: how do the new shelters serve the special needs of women bus riders? Maybe women have more security concerns so the weak night time light provided by La Sombrita helps a little, but it's not as if men riders aren't interested in security, and they are as likely to need of shade in the hot summer sun as women are. And if the city really is interested designing a transit system that women feel comfortable using, it should focus efforts on upgrading bus and train security. Newfangled bus stop amenities can come later.
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  #6276  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 2:59 AM
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The real scandal is the $900 million that LA Metro is paying to build the interface station between the K line and the LAX people mover. In what universe does it make sense to pay that kind of money to build a station that isn't even underground? Even if it does have public restrooms. Even if it does serve as a glorious welcome mat to LAX.

Also, the LAX and Aviation/Century stations are incredibly close. Per google earth's measure tool, the platforms are only 1,300 feet from each other. My guess is that the Century stop will mostly attract bus transfers...if so, why not have those buses travel 1/4 mile north to the LAX station?

In the (distant) future, the Sepulveda heavy rail line could be made to divert eastward from LAX and serve the stadium and arenas as the line's terminal station:
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  #6277  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 3:00 AM
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Back to LA Times article on La Sombrita: how do the new shelters serve the special needs of women bus riders? Maybe women have more security concerns so the weak night time light provided by La Sombrita helps a little, but it's not as if men riders aren't interested in security, and they are as likely to need of shade in the hot summer sun as women are. And if the city really is interested designing a transit system that women feel comfortable using, it should focus efforts on upgrading bus and train security. Newfangled bus stop amenities can come later.
It isn't so much that women have different needs than men when making the same trips for the same reasons. It's that women are statistically likelier to make different trips at different times for different reasons (transporting children, or running other errands etc.) The article noted that women statistically make more transfers than men as a result. It therefore stands to reason that women would spend more time waiting at bus stops on average since if you take a trip without transferring you're only waiting once rather than two or more times.

Security also tends to be a greater concern for women since they tend to be physically weaker than men making them more vulnerable. And while they might have similar risks from things like aggressive panhandlers or muggers, they're much more likely to experience sexual harassment and assault.
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  #6278  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 6:41 AM
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I think that it's admirable that LACMTA is working to help women riders.
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  #6279  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:07 PM
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Originally Posted by jmecklenborg View Post
Also, the LAX and Aviation/Century stations are incredibly close. Per google earth's measure tool, the platforms are only 1,300 feet from each other. My guess is that the Century stop will mostly attract bus transfers...if so, why not have those buses travel 1/4 mile north to the LAX station?

In the (distant) future, the Sepulveda heavy rail line could be made to divert eastward from LAX and serve the stadium and arenas as the line's terminal station:
It does look like the Aviation/Century stop is closer to the hotels and airline maintenance/cargo hangars, so I'm guessing that station will still see a decent amount of traffic from airport/hotel workers even after the LAX/MTC station opens. Although it looks like Airport/Century would've been a better, more central location for such a station.

And then we're starting to go down the rabbit hole of why isn't the LAX/MTC station closer to LAX. Seems like if we're planning for a future Sepulveda Transit Corridor line to connect the SFV to the Westside (Phase 1) and then to LAX (Phase 2), the huge parking lot at the northwest corner of Sepulveda and Century, would've been ideal location for a large intermodal station connecting the STC, the K Line, and the LAX APM, all at the footstep of Terminal 1. Now, instead passengers coming from the Westside via the STC will need to veer off a mile further east to the LAX/MTC station at Aviation/96th, and then backtrack back on the LAX APM. Not to mention the LAX/MTC station, which you've already spent $900 million on, will have to be redone to ensure a smooth STC transfer. I don't see anything in the plans that future proofs this station for this, so it might just have to be frankensteined on or something. Just seems like very poor long term regional planning either way.
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  #6280  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:52 PM
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Not to mention the LAX/MTC station, which you've already spent $900 million on, will have to be redone to ensure a smooth STC transfer. I don't see anything in the plans that future proofs this station for this, so it might just have to be frankensteined on or something. Just seems like very poor long term regional planning either way.
I also don't see anything in the plans to specifically plan for the STC transfer, although there very well could be technical specifications in there that we haven't looked into. But if you look at the station site plan and the fact that it's at/above grade, it does seem to lay out ok for the transfer. Assuming the STC comes up Arbor Vitea, you could have have the STC portal either in the bus plaza or further south closer to the K line platform. In either case, it would be ~600ft (or roughly 2 min) walk between the STC platform and the K line or APM platforms. If the portal is adjacent to the K line platform, then you could put moving walkways in the tunnel between the portal and the STC platform.

You'd obviously rather have the platforms right next to each other, but I don't know if that would have been possible given the geography, the 3 lines intersecting, and all of the airport facilities in the area.
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