Sure, but for people riding through, it would at worst be a brief gauntlet of gathered gawkers at the top, rather than the mile plus of it on the Brooklyn Bridge. I'm fairly capable of riding on crowded mixed use paths, but the one time I rode across the Brooklyn Bridge, I spent most of the ride thinking, "never again," to myself.In any case, the new GLX high bridge could draw elevated traffic levels, so to speak, should it become a destination.
Even after the McGrath is grounded, the narrow crappy sidewalk on the McGrath Hwy bridge over the Fitchburg Division RR will still be there.The real "answer" to the bike bridge isn't going to come now (we'll have to see how it "bikes in real life") and it isn't going to come from GLX (it was a freebie/afterthought here) but real bike routes are coming when McGrath Highway gets boulevardized (for Grounding The McGrath thread)
Either it will:
1) Be sparsely used due to hard grades
2) Be used in a self-limiting way (always a bypass for adventurous cyclists and a few picture takers)
3) Get widened in sections (and "overlook" at the top)
4) Be so heavily used that when the concrete decking is due for replacement, they'll swap in new wider sections on the same steel supports.
But really, I think the real answer is: be just another link in the network, where the network is the valuable thing, not any one link.
I am hoping they do bus-bike or road diet (3 inbound, 2 outbound with bike lane) (the lanes on the bridge over the tracks are already 1~2' too wide and the side most are at least 3' too wide)Even after the McGrath is grounded, the narrow crappy sidewalk on the McGrath Hwy bridge over the Fitchburg Division RR will still be there.
I’m curious about the OCS engineering. They’re going with bases on the edges of the right of way. Why not use a single set of posts down the middle of the right of way, except for stations?
Or how long before the "walk bikes" signs go up, as they have recently on the North Bank Bridge (which was designed to its width to accommodate bicycling).OK, I'm taking bets on the over/under for how long will it be before that ramp is closed to the public for safety concerns after the first several "I lost the grip on my baby's stroller" accidents.
Or how long before the "walk bikes" signs go up, as they have recently on the North Bank Bridge (which was designed to its width to accommodate bicycling).
As a pedestrian and a bicyclist, I'm more worried about the various high-speed devices people are zipping around on, such as the Segway, powered bikes, powered skateboards, etc. I'd rather have a sign that bans these than one requiring walking of un-powered bicycles. As a bicyclist I've almost been run over by powered devices speeding around.Or how long before the "walk bikes" signs go up, as they have recently on the North Bank Bridge (which was designed to its width to accommodate bicycling).
As a pedestrian and a bicyclist, I'm more worried about the various high-speed devices people are zipping around on, such as the Segway, powered bikes, powered skateboards, etc. I'd rather have a sign that bans these than one requiring walking of un-powered bicycles. As a bicyclist I've almost been run over by powered devices speeding around.