manhattan kansas bicycle master plan revision
DESCRIPTION
Presented at the February 23rd Bicycle Advisory Committee meeting in Manhattan, Kansas. The presentation presents an update to the 1998 Master Plan, recommending that we focus more on the 60% of potential riders who are "interested but scared" by creating a low-traffic, low-speed "green grid" for bicycle commuting.TRANSCRIPT
Where we are now …
Amsterdam = 40% CPH = 33% Davis = 17% Boulder = 12.3% Berkeley 9.9% Portland 5.8%
Missoula, Montana
• Population 57,000 in 2000, now 69,000+• College Town• 7.2% bicycle mode share• 64% of arterials with bike lanes
“The Missoula Model”
• Retrofit streets to max of 3 lanes• Replace traffic signals with single lane
roundabouts emphasizing bike/walk• Connect all bike lanes, sidewalks, and trails• One street per neighborhood = “green street”• Max 25 mph speed in city limits• Double bus service
1998 Master Plan
• Complete Linear Trail• Develop inter-city bicycle facilities• Bicycle parking• Policies for future growth
Types of Cyclists• A: operate under most conditions • B: casual riders. Prefer low-speed, low-volume streets
or paths • C: child riders. Require comfortable areas.
1998 plan for completing the bike network
• “wheel and spokes” concept• “All streets should be accessible to bicycle travel.”• “An inter-connected network of designated bicycle
routes – spokes – should be developed throughout the community.”
• “ideally, a rough grid of approximately ¼ - ½ mile spacing”
• Designated major streets as bicycle routes (College, Browning, Kimball, Poyntz, 14th, Juliette, etc.)
Ehreth’s 2004 critique of the Master Plan
Curb lane widths under 12 ft.
Topography
Traffic Volume
Traffic Speeds
Expert Observations
Final calculations
Ehreth’s 2004 critique of the Master Plan
“on-street road segments suggested by the Master Plan were very unsafe for
shared use of bicycles and automobiles” – Ben Ehreth 2004
Current shortcomings
• Not up to date with latest paths• Unfamiliar with backroads, cut-throughs,
unofficial paths, and B-biker workarounds• Focus on A-bikers (<2%)• Recent innovations in bicycle planning
A revised approach …• Focus on B-bikers not A-bikers• Focus on everyday commuting, not just recreation• Goal: Complete ½ mile unbroken grid network• Use separate low-traffic routes when possible (B-
biker friendly)
Why B-bikers?
• Over 85% of potential riders• A-Bikers will ride anyway • B-bikers not swayed by A-focused
improvements
Types of Cyclists (Portland DOT Revision)• Strong & Fearless = 1-2% (prefer no amenities … ride
with traffic)• Enthused & Confident = 6% (will ride with traffic, but
prefer amenities)• Interested but scared = 60%• “No way. No how” = 32%• Aim for the 60%
“safe and comfortable”
Goal: An unbroken “green” gridA-Bikers Only Some B’s B-Bikers C-Bikers
Level 0 1 2 3 4 5
Color Red Orange Yellow Green Bicycle Boulevard
Path
Routes 7,000+VPDShared lanes
40+ MPHNo Shoulder
3,000+VPD12-15 ft crbln30-40 MPH
1-3,000 VPD30 MPH Max
1500 max VPD
Under 25 MPH
1500 max20 MPHSigned
HPVs only
Crossing None Light but no Xwalk
Xwalk X-walk with
button
Bike-specific crossing
light
Underpass/Overpass
Ehreth’s 2004 calculations
Adding Points of Interests (POIs)with an iPhone using Mapzen
Sharing Tracks on iPhone
OSMTracker for Android
We’re closer than we think …
B-biker accessibility
Projects Needed
How do we get there?
Step One: Mark and promote current network
Step Two: Transform informal network into official Bicycle Boulevards
12 miles needed=
• $56,000 for signs• $30,000 for road
markings• More for signals,
etc. if needed
9th & Houston
Advantages of BBs
• Cheap! (as little as $3,500/mile)• Works for B-bikers (Portland State study)• B-biker access to key destinations• Preliminary studies show dramatic increase in ridership • Creates *liveable* streets• “For people concerned with safety and avoiding traffic, a
well-connected network of low-traffic streets, including some bicycle boulevards, may be more effective than adding bike lanes on major streets with high volumes of motor vehicle traffic.” – Jennifer Dill 2009 JPHP
But they don’t solve all our problems …
Still needed
• 2.5 miles of essential trails (Hayes, Anderson, Poliska, Miller Ranch – Anneberg, etc.)
• 2 miles of recommended trails• 2 miles of recreational trail (N. Linear)• 6 crossings of “the beltway”• A few other intersection/crossing
improvements
Setting Specific Priorities: Garden City example
Austin Model (1,600 projects!)
The Manhattan Formula
• # of key destinations served by route• x # of people served by that route• x level of improvement of that route• + “network score” which =• 1,000s of people brought into network• + centrality of the improvement• + miles of bike-able routes it adds to network• / total cost = Impact per Dollar
Improvement MatrixA-Bikers Only Some B’s B-Bikers C-Bikers
Level 0 1 2 3 4 5
Route Color
Red Orange Yellow Green Bicycle Boulevard
Path
Main Features 7,000+VPDShared lanes
40+ MPHNo Shoulder
3,000+VPD12-15 ft crbln30-40 MPH
1-3,000 VPD30 MPH Max
1500 max VPD
Under 25 MPH
1500 max20 MPHSigned
HPVs only
Crossing None Light but no Xwalk
Xwalk X-walk with
button
Bike-specific crossing
light
Underpass/Overpass
Other notes:Bike Lanes = +1Soft Surface => Hard Surface = +1Smooth Surface => +1(Soft => Smooth = +2)Sidewalk = Street Score +1 (min.2)
Current priorities posted on city website
Summary of suggested revisionsCurrent Master Plan
1. bike lanes on core major arterials, complete Linear Trail
2. Bike lanes on outer arterials (including roads with existing multi-use paths)
3. Bike lanes in new developments
Suggested Revisions
1. Bicycle boulevards(BBs), complete core connections (will increase ridership)
2. Complete outer connections using short multi-use paths connecting living streets / BBs.
3. With money saved, dream big. Manhattan Greenway Project.
4. (Update code to include requirement for BB/connections every 2,000 feet in new developments. Culdesacs must have pedestrian/bicycle connectivity.
Additional slides from Talbert & Vickrey for brainstorming session