6/25/2010

Jeff Donnelly reports on Bikeways meeting; Historic Preservation Board Likely to Hear the Issue on August 10, 2010

Items learned or confirmed at the Bikeways Committee meeting on Wednesday June 23.


Euclid BODR

In 2002, the City Commission approved a BODR for the 70 foot Euclid right of way divided east to west as: 14 feet for sidewalk, swale, and encroachments; 9 feet for parking; 12 feet for one traffic (bikes and/or autos) lane; 12 feet for the reverse traffic lane; 9 feet of parking, and 14 feet for swale, sidewalk and encroachments on the other side of the street. The primary purpose of this design was to emulate Meridian Avenbue as the best pedestrian street in the neighborhood.   In addition to the exiting Meridian template, bump outs of approximately 9 feet were added to several corners, making the pedesatrian east-west crossing of Euclid at those points a maximum of 24 feet.
AGN Bikeways

Afterwards, the City Commission approved a bike ways plan for the City that named bicycle lanes as the only method of providing a bicyle facility or bicycle mode on Euclid. This approval, it turns out, conflicted with the 2002 EDAW BODR for Euclid that the Commission had previously approved. Specifically, the BODR called for a 24 foot moving vehicle space and the AGN bike lane proposal would require a minimum of 30 feet of moving vehicle space (20 for autos and 10 for bikes). Had the City Commission approved the bikeways proposal without specifying the bike lane mode, but allowed for the possibility of any of the three other modes -- bike paths/trails, bike boulevard, bike route -- there might not be a conflict. But the Commission, badly advised, failed to allow other bicycle modes or to resolve the conflict.

The City's application for changes in the BODR to accommodate the AGN Bikeway will come before the Historic Preservation Board on August 10, 2010.

On August 10, the Historic Preservation Baord can vote to maintain the BODR's 24 foot (two 12 ft travel lanes (bike and/or auto) with bump outs to limit pedestrian crossing distances and create a viable pedestrian north-south walkway or modify that BODR. Depending on the type of proposal, it may take 4 or 5 votes to modify the 2002 BODR.

Jeff Donnelly

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