The issue with the 61st Ave connection to Burke-Gilman that it's _very_ steep. Fixing it is on Kenmore's agenda, with funding tied to Sound Transit 3's RapidRide construction starting this year. (See https://www.kenmorewa.gov/our-city/projects/current-projects/sr-522-west-segment-b-improvements-57th-to-61st-avenues for a light overview.) But obviously, that doesn't help for this closure.

King County could suspend parking on 175th and use that for a walking detour, but there's no paved connection from that section of parking to 61st Ave NE, and setting up a temporary barriered area in the road would create a dangerous two-way single-traffic-lane next to a park popular with children.

So. Closure. Plan accordingly.

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#Seattle #Northshore #LakeForestPark #Kenmore #KingCounty #biking #BurkeGilman #BurkeGilmanTrail #closure

Burke-Gilman is going to be closed for up to five days in Kenmore between 61st Ave NE and 65th Ave NE starting February 16th. It's probably hillside reinforcement.

People on bikes can detour onto 175th, which runs in parallel. It's low-traffic, but what traffic is there includes heavy industrial from the cement plant.

Since there are no sidewalks on 175th - at all - people on foot are advised to go uphill to Bothell Way. Despite some business driveways, that length of sidewalk is perfectly reasonable, and next to a bus lane rather than full traffic. However, the climb up from 61st is very steep and is _NOT_ ADA-compliant.

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#Seattle #Northshore #LakeForestPark #Kenmore #KingCounty #biking #BurkeGilman #BurkeGilmanTrail #closure

two unusual views of Burke-Gilman Trail on a wet but not rainy day

#BurkeGilman #BurkeGilmanTrail #seattle #bothell #photography #autumn #northshore #cascadia

saw this on burke-gilman while going to the drug store today: trail work in lake forest park

there ARE going to be detours and the only true "closure" according to the _text_ is for _five_ days - and even then there will be a detour, so it's not a complete closure.

And it's also not a month _and_ five days. so it's confusing sign.

#seattle #BurkeGilman #LakeForestPark #biking #BikeTooter #BurkeGilmanTrail #trail

Feedback calls for walk/bike separation in Leary/Market plan, but people still prefer Shilshole for Missing Link

People still prefer the city’s fully-designed Burke-Gilman Trail plan on Shilshole, though that project remains held up in a web of legal challenges. So if the city decides they must move forward with a route along Leary Way and Market Street instead, they want to see much more separation between people walking and biking than what has been shown in early designs.

SDOT released the outreach summary report (PDF) for Councilmember Dan Strauss’s Burke-Gilman Trail Missing Link alternative on Leary Way and Market Street this week, and the responses are fairly straightforward and uncomplicated.

It seems tough to misread this chart. Folks do not like the idea of simply widening the sidewalk on Market Street and calling it a trail. No other point in the entire feedback report got more support than this. People riding bikes don’t want to try to bike through a crowded sidewalk in a business district, and people walking, rolling or hanging out on sidewalks don’t want people biking there either. I can’t imagine business owners love the idea of their front doors letting out directly into the path of a designated bike trail, either. This is just not how it’s supposed to be done.

The feedback report specifically points to Seattle Bike Blog at the reason for this result, noting, “Seattle Bike Blog published an article encouraging readers to share their feedback with SDOT about the project. This included a note to share specifically that SDOT should separate the path for people walking and people biking in front of businesses. This may have led to a higher number of comments for this particular theme.” First off, good work, everyone. But second, we were not the only ones making this point. A group of folks at the Ballard Landmark retirement and assisted living building as well as Carter Subaru and real estate developers Teutsch Partners have been fighting the Leary concept, and they also list a lack of separation between pedestrian and bicycling spaces as a problem. “There is no divider between the Missing Link and the sidewalk,” notes the NoLinkOnLeary website. “This makes the path more dangerous as pedestrians won’t know where to expect to meet bicyclists and scooters.” So it’s not just the Seattle Bike Blog readers who see the problem here, which is why that bar is so much longer than the rest of the chart. It’s a point of cross-community agreement.

One Leary, the results were a little muddier. Support for the project outpaced opposition 2 to 1, but the amount of opposition is notable. This is most likely from the NoLinkOnLeary campaign. Separating pedestrian and bicycling spaces is still the top point of agreement, though there is big support for safer intersections and crosswalks. The report notes that there was a lot of support for adding missing crosswalks at Vernon and Ione, which were points Seattle Bike Blog had suggested.

Again, separating modes was the top suggestion for the short section on 17th between Shilshole and Leary, though preserving trees made a good showing here.

Finally, the general feedback question showed a huge response for “prefers another route.” The reports explanation notes that most of these folks preferred the Shilshole route because it is more direct and has fewer conflict points such as driveways and busy commercial sidewalks. Cascade Bicycle Club has been consistent that while they support safety improvements and a bike route on Leary and Market, they do so in addition to their continued support for the trail plan on Shilshole. However, it wasn’t just bike riders pushing for Shilshole. The NoLinkOnLeary group has also been pushing for Shilshole as their preferred option. Someone at the Ballard Landmark even posted a poem about putting the trail on Shilshole in the window as well as signs pointing people to the NoLinkOnLeary.org website.

SHILSHOLE, OH SHILSHOLE,
YOU’RE MY BIKE TRAIL OF CHOICE.
I’M A ROLLING OLDIE, WHO LIVES NEARBY,
HOPING YOU’LL HEAR MY VOICE.
I WANT TO ROLL BUMPLESS BY THE CANAL,
WITH BOATS AND THE SEAGULLS’ SQUAWKS,
AND NOT DIVERT TO LEARY,
ON MY STROLL TO THE CHITTENHAM LOCKS.

-COLLEEN COGHLAN

Now, as much as I love a good trail advocacy poem (and I do, a lot), I don’t agree with everything on the NoLinkOnLeary site. There are ways to design a bike route that safely avoids conflicts with accessible loading zones, and SDOT’s team so far has clearly not been able to convince folks at the Ballard Landmark that they have the right solution. But I hope the folks are open to solutions other than just not building a bike route at all. There are a lot of potential benefits in this plan for Landmark residents, such as dramatically shorter and safer crosswalks. Bike riders seem ready to fight for a much improved design, and it would be great if folks can unite behind a shared vision. Folks should ask themselves, “If the city insists on building this trail on Leary, what are our demands?” Any missing crosswalks in the area? Any missing curb cuts? Do residents feel cut off from certain area destinations? Come up with a list. Bike advocacy groups are always going to be wary of language that implies total opposition to the idea of a bike route on a major street like Leary. But when I read the NoLinkOnLeary site, I see more points of agreement than differences. You can see the points of synergy in these charts. That’s a winning coalition.

Dead-end ideas

Every time the Missing Link comes up, there are a couple ideas people suggest that have already been ruled out and are not coming back. So I figured I’d address them here just in case you come across them somewhere.

A Ballard High Line

Like New York City’s amazing elevated park the High Line, why not build an elevated bike path on Shilshole that flies over the business driveways?

Well, as much as that does sound fun, it would be wildly expensive. If we are going to invest that kind of money in a piece of biking and walking infrastructure, then we should be spending it to cross actual barriers like freeways, ravines or waterways, not political barriers like a group of businesses that keep suing. Plus, these are maritime businesses that may need to move tall things in and out, so the path would need to be very tall. But also, what if someone wants to exit to visit Ballard destinations rather than just flying over the area? Are we going to have long and winding off-ramps along the way? Plus, anyone traveling to any point between trail access points would still be forced to navigate all the existing Missing Link challenges and hazards. I appreciate the dream behind the idea, but it doesn’t make sense here. I’m sorry. I’d love to talk about some other areas where this kind of thinking might work better, though.

Ballard Ave

Ballard Ave is currently the best bike route option for many people, but mostly because Shilshole and Leary are so terrible. Ballard Ave was included in the city’s list of options for the Missing Link route during the environmental review process, and people were extremely emphatic that they hated the idea. During public feedback, it registered only 1% support as the route preference (Shilshole received 81%). The Ballard Market folks in particular got mobilized very quickly and made it clear they were against it. I can assure you people would come out strongly against it all over again if it ever shows up on a list of options again, which I highly doubt will happen (it was listed in the study because the city had to show they considered all the options, and it was ruled out as quickly as possible). But even without the clear opposition from businesses and the market, Ballard Ave is a terrible place for the Missing Link. It’s got cobblestones for one, which is not accessible. It is also very active at various times of day and completely closed for travel every Sunday. Then after all those disadvantages, it would also require a redesign of Market Street with all the same issues the Leary design is facing there. So I agree that Ballard Ave is the best bike route today and that people will continue biking there even after the Missing Link is complete because that’s where many destinations are. But it is not the best place for a trail.

#SEAbikes #Seattle

Feedback calls for walk/bike separation in Leary/Market plan, but people still prefer Shilshole for Missing Link – Seattle Bike Blog

People still prefer the city's fully-designed Burke-Gilman Trail plan on Shilshole, though that project remains held up in a web of legal challenges. So if the city decides they must move forward with a route along Leary Way and Market Street instead, they want to see much more separation between people walking and biking than…

based on debris the theory that LFPTC took some massive windshear up from the lake looks pretty solid - burke-gilman is clear to at least NE 130th but the further you get from LFPTC and Uplake (which strides LFP and Kenmore) the less debris is piled up on the sides

#LakeForestPark #seattle #biking #Kenmore #Northshore #burkegilmantrail #burkegilman

Major Burke-Gilman detours in Fremont and Ballard end as sewer work progresses

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3MAKmWdcRE

Seattle’s least-discussed infrastructure megaproject has wrapped up a pair of multi-year, trail-disrupting closures in Fremont and Ballard in recent weeks. Work on the $561 million Ship Canal Water Quality Project has taken place in multiple locations, including bike-route-disrupting closures on Stone Way in Fremont and near Fred Meyer in Ballard. Work at both sites is wrapping up, and conditions have been restored to the way they were before construction began.

As Hanoch at Best Side Cycling demonstrated in a recent video (above), the Ballard Fred Meyer section of the Burke-Gilman Trail is back to its pre-2020 design, including the odd half-concrete section and the awkward double-ramp curb cut at the intersection with 11th Ave NW. It is much better than the sometimes awful trail detour conditions during construction, but I was hoping that work would have improved some of this section to meet modern design standards.

The half-concrete section between 9th and 11th Avenues NW is a bit confusing because people don’t know if we should treat the whole thing as one trail or if the concrete section is for walking and the asphalt section is for biking. I’ve never witnessed or heard of any dangerous situations arising from this confusion, but it is awkward. I’m a firm believer that the trail should always follow trail rules (all users stay to the right and pass on the left) except where the walking and biking spaces are adequately separated, like sections on and near UW campus east of the University Bridge.

Screenshot from the Best Side Cycling video. The natural path to the trail from the rider’s perspective would go straight through the raised section of the curb.

The awkward curb ramp on the Fred Meyer corner of 11th Ave NW can be dangerous, unfortunately. I have personally witnessed someone crash because the curb is raised in the middle where the natural flow from the street to the trail would be. As you can see at the 1:10 mark of the Best Side Cycling video, riders need to veer awkwardly far to the right in order to use the curb ramp. This can be especially awkward if someone in a car has stopped too far forward. Alternatively, riders can use the left curb ramp to take a more direct line, but then they are heading into the oncoming direction, which is not ideal. The water quality project did destroy this corner, so it is very frustrating that they rebuilt the same flawed design. This is not the appropriate curb cut design for a mutli-use trail. The Washington State Design Manual (chapter 1515), for example, states, “Curb ramps (excluding any flared sides) on shared-use paths must match the full width of the shared-use path.” I didn’t get out a tape measure, but I don’t think these ramps meet that standard.

Over on the Fremont/Wallingford border, a different worksite for the same project is wrapping up, restoring the important intersection at N 34th St and Stone Way N. Stone Way is the least steep route up the hill from the Burke-Gilman Trail to Green Lake, and N 34th Street is an important bike route for accessing the Fremont Bridge. This closure has been annoying for basically everyone, so it’s nice to see it finally reopening.

There is still work remaining, so be prepared for some periodic closures. For example, from November 21–27 crews “will temporarily shift a short segment of the trail north a few feet to go around a work area in the trail” in Fremont near 2nd Ave NW. In the past, project detours in this area were handled well so hopefully that will be the case this time as well.

#SEAbikes #Seattle

WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK

TWICE IN TWO DAYS WHY

#biking #seattle #burkegilmantrail #burkegilman

was EVERY OTHER ROAD IN THE CITY OF SEATTLE not GOOD ENOUGH for you

GUESS NOT HUH

#seattle #biking #BurkeGilman #BurkeGilmanTrail