Biking in Boston

In my experience, despite DC and Baltimore being in the same CSA (though separate MSAs), the two don't share a lot on the day-to-day level. I.e. I've met more than one person who lives in DC and has never been to Baltimore or can go years without visiting. I imagine, however, the inverse is less common. I guess, in a way, it's akin to me having never been to Worcester. Living in Boston, I'd never have a reason to go. Arguably, the only thing that Baltimore has over DC is the aquarium.

I'd like to think they might have looked into how many people might commute from one city to the other and might like to use a bike for at least part of their commute. But, I can also easily see how they might not have. Civic pride and not wanting to become even more of a second fiddle in the region than it already does may have played a role. It's hard not to let optics sway political decisions. Either way, it's not terribly surprising to me that commonality between DC and Baltimore might not have weighed heavily on "Bawlimer's" decision not to go with Bixi.

Erik -- the only two connections that matter:
1) BWI airport is convenient for the people working in the sector of Fed Belt North of DC [Bethesda through Greenbelt]
2) Sports in Baltmore was better -- though this has been less of an issue since the Bullets moved from Baltimore to DC and became the Wizzards and the Expos moved from Montreal and became the Nationals
 
It looks like the November 21 closure is set in stone, as a closing event is being held at government center.

Still baffling that weather is absolutely not a factor here. The days are warm and mostly sunny, with no signs of change. My "local" ski resort (In California) is opening this weekend. If they can decide with little notice when to operate, why can't Hubway?

The facebook page also keeps repeating the March 1st opening date. If this is a normal winter, either that will be delayed (false optimism here), or theyll get snowed in.

Average snowfall by month:

November: 0.6 <-But none since 2004
December: 12.0
January: 14.9
February: 11.8
March: 7.0 <- 10 in 2008 and 2006
April: 0.3

http://www.erh.noaa.gov/box/climate/bossnw.shtml

Another source lists December average as 7.6...less than March at 8.0
http://www.climate-zone.com/climate/united-states/massachusetts/boston/


Of course, the street sweeping schedule says a lot as well. That's on hold from Dec 1 to April 1, but sweepers operate anyway if the weather allows it.
 
Finally have time to reply to nobody. Will also be posting lots of new bike lane pics soon.

And my g key is not working right, so if a g is missing and I dont catch it, my apologies.

All quotes below from nobody.

That's good for b-cycle. Lets keep 30 station systems in perspective though. I mean in the next 12 months Capital Bike Share is adding something like 80 stations in DC and 50 in Arlington. Plus you are likely to see Hubway to add 20 stations in Cambridge and a few more in Brookline/Somerville next year.

My intention was just to report news, not have a penis measuring contest.

I just want to clarify something. You appear to have mistaken my intentions. I don't, and never have worked for B-cycle. I don't hate Bixi, Alta, or anyone. Indeed, I want bikeshare to be wildly popular in Boston and all of NA. I feel that Boston is posed to be the most successful bikeshare system in the country in terms of use (obviously not total size, that will be NYC).

My criticism of Alta are because I want to see the system done right, and they've made lots of amateur mistakes. Nothing to kill the system, but stuff that's kept ridership down. That's bad for a whole bunch of reasons. A lackluster acceptance means federal funding becomes harder for Boston and others. It means the city may become more hostile to expansion and so forth.

I want Hubway to be extraordinarily successful. After all, I started working on bike share in Boston in 2008. While Im no longer involved, I obviously am still highly invested in it personally.

On another topic. How do you feel about that timeline? 10 months from being awarded the contract to the actual launch? I actually think it's pretty reasonable.

I feel like Baltimore was unfortunate to wait so long to finally hand out a contract. The Baltimore process has been ongoing since 2008...I was involved in it as well. Lots of false starts.

DC and Boston also didnt get their systems online until late summer. It's far from ideal.

I can tell you though that Alta/Bixi were out of the running a long time ago, mainly because of the financials of the deal.

You should keep track of those financial issues as well. B-Cycle has to raise 1.2 million to pay themselves for the stations and the beginning of operations. It will be interesting to see if in the end they get to 1.2 million or if they have to eat much of the cost by giving the stations away for less than they want to.

1.2 million is quite frankly, not very much at all. That's, what a single green line train?


Whats interesting is that what Baltimore is doing is what they said theyd do from the start.

It's also what Boston had initially said.

-No taxpayer monies, 100% financed by bike company
-You even pay to use street parking (repay lost meter monies).

Of course, as we've discussed, Boston threw all this out and issued a new RFP with a giant money bag. In part, thanks to the MBTA application and winning of funds.

First, this "This is a change of policy. " Here is the language from the actual user agreement each user agrees to when they sign up. It's easily found on the join page of the website.

Change of policy from what was originally announced, not what was launched. Like how the 61st station was never installed.


Removing 60 stations in 3-4 days would be a terrible idea because you'd incure huge costs uncessarily.

To remove/drop a station you need a crane truck, a flatbed and at least 4 staff. On a perfect day one team could do 6 stations. So to do all 60 in 3 days you'd need 3+ teams of crew + trucks.

Now, how many trucks do you think Alta has at hand? Why would they keep 4 crain trucks on hand, what would those trucks do all year? I'm guessing Alta has a single crain truck and they rent another truck when they need to. So in order to remove all 60 in 3 days Alta would have to rent a minimum of 3 more trucks, with certified crane operators, 3 flatbeds and have another 12 people working with those 3 extra crews. You add all those things up and you are talking easily over 5 figures a day in 'extra' costs.

I dont know how many trucks Alta has. But Alta has one big advantage. By operating Boston, DC, and future NYC, they can share assets.

Montreal closed up November 15th. I dont see why Alta couldnt have used the Montreal trucks 2 weeks later for Boston. These same trucks can then head down to Arlington/DC to help with their winter expansion. Then, they could coordinate to launch NYC and reopen Boston and Montreal in the spring.

Quite frankly, it is quite dumb to have independent materials for each city. So I hope they do this, for their own sake. As you said, these trucks are idle most of the time. Put them to work.

Plus, I'd imagine the city/alta have looked at the numbers and they know which stations and station pairs are getting the bulk of the trips and which are seeing no more than 2-4 trips a day. In systems like this, especially at this time of year, I would estimate that 80% of the trips begin/end at a subset of the stations that is less than a 3rd of the whole network.

Its a network. Its incredibly foolish to look at individual station numbers or even station pair numbers, unless certain portions of the system operate independently (ie, DC and future Alexandria, Boston and future east Boston etc).

Its also a customer service problem, because not everyone is always informed about whats happening. What will ruin a day, and indeed the concept, faster than someone biking to a station that was there yesterday and is now gone?

Shut down the entire system at one point, remove the bikes, and then start removing the stations, just like startup in reverse. Yes, you "punish" the informed riders....but its worth it.



Also, from the facebook
STATION REMOVAL LIST FOR NEXT WEEK (Mon & Tues).

MONDAY, 11/21/11
BU Central,Brigham Circle, Buswell/Park, Overland/Brookline, Dudley Sq.
TUESDAY, 11/22/11 (Pie Ride - see post below).
Agganis Arena / 925 Comm Ave, Boylston / Mass Ave, Yawkey Wy /Boylston St, Milk / India, Chinatown
 
And now enough pictures to kill the internet.

New bike lanes from South Station to North Station.

We begin at Atlantic and Essex, and move north.

The right turn only lane has been shifted right, and a bike lane added outside of South Station.

The placement is good, however almost every car was using the bike lane instead of merging all the way right.

To be fair, it was dark and rainy, and white lines do tend to disappear under these conditions. In further pictures, youll note the reflections of the pavement make them almost invisible.

I would add green pain though.

It begins
IMG_2923.jpg


Almost every car was like this.
IMG_2924.jpg



Across the street, you can see what used to be a very stupid and useless shoulder. That was mostly erased (rather lazy job) and a new bike lane added by narrowing the right lane.

IMG_2925.jpg


Like most lanes in Boston, they were being well patronized.

IMG_2926.jpg


IMG_2927.jpg


IMG_2928.jpg


For reference, we're by by occupy
IMG_2929.jpg


Lanes are painted across intersection.
IMG_2930.jpg


I then took a detour of russia wharf, pics in that thread.

IMG_2942.jpg


IMG_2943.jpg


Here the bikelane becomes a floating lane, with a loading/parking area.
IMG_2944.jpg


Bonus: Whats this?
IMG_2945.jpg



IMG_2946.jpg


IMG_2947.jpg



This is interesting, a small doorzone buffer was painted. I approve.
IMG_2948.jpg


A good sized lane, big enough for even these larger bike-blocking monsters
IMG_2949.jpg


Bonus:
IMG_2950.jpg


IMG_2951.jpg


Floating, once again.

IMG_2952.jpg


I decided to check if the bike lane was painted on both sides. The southbound side was marked, but as of last Thursday, no final paint, just preliminary markings.
IMG_2953.jpg


IMG_2954.jpg


This next part was confusing. Not a single bikeperson thingy had been installed, so there was confusion among bikes and drivers on what was a lane, a bike lane, and a buffer. A majority of the cars decided to drive here for well over 100 feet. Again, green paint? You can see two cars ahead in the bike lane.

IMG_2955.jpg


Right turn lane begins.
IMG_2956.jpg


Again, lazy erase job.

IMG_2957.jpg



Design fail. A bike lane to the right of the right turn only lane?
IMG_2958.jpg


This implies that bikes must turn right. There is no bike lane ahead, but bikes can still go straight. This is where Atlantic turns right.
IMG_2959.jpg



There is no more bike lane on the greenway.
IMG_2960.jpg


But there is on Atlantic.
IMG_2961.jpg


By the park
IMG_2962.jpg


Both directions have been painted.
IMG_2963.jpg


At this point, I was freezing my ass off, and left the bike lanes for coffee. More in a bit


Also: There are new bike lanes the length of High St, and a green bike box at the intersection of High and greenway. Sorry, no pics.
 
Much like the weather, those photos kinda made me wet. :)

Thanks for posting.

Also, to give you some perspective with Bixi, that launched here in Toronto this year with 1,000 bikes and something like 100 stations. Despite more bikes and a two-and-a-half month head start, Bixi Toronto recorded its 100,000 ride only a week or two before the Hubway did. So, for comparison's sake, Toronto had more bikes and took about two months longer to reach a milestone than did Boston, with only 60% the number of bikes. Pretty impressive.

Those bike lanes are sure to help as time goes on.
 
Jazz, thanks for posting the pictures, I look forward to riding on these. Boston is starting to have some pretty significant bike lane mileage. Does anybody know whether there is an official/comprehensive map of both existing and planned lanes?
 
Finally have time to reply to nobody. Will also be posting lots of new bike lane pics soon.

And my g key is not working right, so if a g is missing and I dont catch it, my apologies.

All quotes below from nobody.



My intention was just to report news, not have a penis measuring contest.

I just want to clarify something. You appear to have mistaken my intentions. I don't, and never have worked for B-cycle. I don't hate Bixi, Alta, or anyone. Indeed, I want bikeshare to be wildly popular in Boston and all of NA. I feel that Boston is posed to be the most successful bikeshare system in the country in terms of use (obviously not total size, that will be NYC).

My criticism of Alta are because I want to see the system done right, and they've made lots of amateur mistakes. Nothing to kill the system, but stuff that's kept ridership down. That's bad for a whole bunch of reasons. A lackluster acceptance means federal funding becomes harder for Boston and others. It means the city may become more hostile to expansion and so forth.

I want Hubway to be extraordinarily successful. After all, I started working on bike share in Boston in 2008. While Im no longer involved, I obviously am still highly invested in it personally.



I feel like Baltimore was unfortunate to wait so long to finally hand out a contract. The Baltimore process has been ongoing since 2008...I was involved in it as well. Lots of false starts.

DC and Boston also didnt get their systems online until late summer. It's far from ideal.



1.2 million is quite frankly, not very much at all. That's, what a single green line train?


Whats interesting is that what Baltimore is doing is what they said theyd do from the start.

It's also what Boston had initially said.

-No taxpayer monies, 100% financed by bike company
-You even pay to use street parking (repay lost meter monies).

Of course, as we've discussed, Boston threw all this out and issued a new RFP with a giant money bag. In part, thanks to the MBTA application and winning of funds.



Change of policy from what was originally announced, not what was launched. Like how the 61st station was never installed.




I dont know how many trucks Alta has. But Alta has one big advantage. By operating Boston, DC, and future NYC, they can share assets.

Montreal closed up November 15th. I dont see why Alta couldnt have used the Montreal trucks 2 weeks later for Boston. These same trucks can then head down to Arlington/DC to help with their winter expansion. Then, they could coordinate to launch NYC and reopen Boston and Montreal in the spring.

Quite frankly, it is quite dumb to have independent materials for each city. So I hope they do this, for their own sake. As you said, these trucks are idle most of the time. Put them to work.



Its a network. Its incredibly foolish to look at individual station numbers or even station pair numbers, unless certain portions of the system operate independently (ie, DC and future Alexandria, Boston and future east Boston etc).

Its also a customer service problem, because not everyone is always informed about whats happening. What will ruin a day, and indeed the concept, faster than someone biking to a station that was there yesterday and is now gone?

Shut down the entire system at one point, remove the bikes, and then start removing the stations, just like startup in reverse. Yes, you "punish" the informed riders....but its worth it.



Also, from the facebook
STATION REMOVAL LIST FOR NEXT WEEK (Mon & Tues).

MONDAY, 11/21/11
BU Central,Brigham Circle, Buswell/Park, Overland/Brookline, Dudley Sq.
TUESDAY, 11/22/11 (Pie Ride - see post below).
Agganis Arena / 925 Comm Ave, Boylston / Mass Ave, Yawkey Wy /Boylston St, Milk / India, Chinatown

Jass, I'm sure you are a smart guy and you want bike sharing to be successful. I'm not questioning that at all.

I have just tried to point out on numerous occasions that with a lack of experience in bike sharing and a lack of actual behind the scenes knowledge that many of your statements just miss the mark.

Whether it be the reasons behind why the 61st station was never installed, the winter shutdown plan, the website launch, the station locations, etc. You just don't have all the information but yet you want to say Alta is doing it wrong.

The most recent example would be your thought that Alta could take trucks from Montreal. Montreal is run by PBSC, not Alta. There is no way that PBSC would just allow Alta to borrow it's trucks and drivers for free. Additionally, the drivers would need US crane operator certifications and US work permits. Lets just say that's a lot of red tape. Alta would have no need to have 5 guys in each city certified as crane operators, so even if they got PBSC trucks for free they'd still need to hire operators or bring in operators from their other cities.

Alta surely would share equipment between cities. But as you know the Boston stations are coming off the street now and the DC stations are being installed at the same time. So Alta needs a truck in each city, do you think DC would just allow Alta to finish up in Boston before making them install in DC? DC has stations ready and they want them on the ground and Boston has decided to pick up the stations and they want them picked up now.

You made a comment about your local ski resort operating on short notice so "why can't hubway". The fact is they can, they just decided not to based on all factors involved.

I could get into the issues of customer service or what effects there are on the network of removing certain stations but I'll skip it. I'm willing to accept that all these things have been considered by people with the proper expertise and it would be pretty boring reading anyway.

You never answered my question on why you stated GPS was a big factor in Baltimore even though Bixi will have 2 GPS enabled systems before Baltimore launches? Maybe you have information I don't.

Also, I wasn't trying to have a penis measuring contest either, I was trying to keep things in perspective. 30 station systems don't create much profit for a company like Bixi or B-cycle. You DID quote my statement that B-Cycle needed to win "Chicago, Vancouver or some other 75 station city" so I pointed out that they hadn't done that, they'd only won a small city.

Lastly, are you saying you have never had a relationship with B-Cycle?

Who was BikeNow going to get it's bikes from? Or maybe you had no affiliation with BikeNow either?
 
Nobody, once again, full reply as soon as I can. I do have enough time to finish the pictures right now, which I uploaded last week.


Anyway, we get to the corner of Hanover and Commercial/Atlantic.

Unfortunately, YAY, turns to, "wait, what happened!?"

This is what the city presented in July.

A completely parking protected bike path/lane on the north. The south would have a standard bike lane, to preserve the ever so important parking.

A lane would be removed to install the bike lane and bike path.

hanover.jpg


I was excited to turn the corner. With abated breath, I awaited the wonders of a parking protected bike lane.

But instead....that wasn't to be. Without notice, it seems like the city decided a regular bike lane would be placed.

I wonder who made a call, undermining the entire public process? Why wasnt there a community presentation about scaling back the benefit that had been discussed for so damn long?

A lane was removed, but no parking protected lane was installed. A grand total of 15 parking spaces would have been removed by the bike path.

IMG_2967.jpg


IMG_2968.jpg


IMG_2969.jpg


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And as we get to the ice rink, the bike lane is whittled away to simply a sharrow.

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IMG_2972.jpg


:(



Bonus:
IMG_2979.jpg
 
In addition to the High Street bike lane, there is also a lane going in the opposite direction along Franklin.
 
"Unfortunately, YAY, turns to, "wait, what happened!?""

Almost as bad at the Charlestown lane removal fiasco; some politically connected snobs killed the cycle track option through some maneuvering behind closed doors. A few phone calls overruled all the comments at public meetings and letter writing periods.

Nicole Freedman was supposedly quite angry, but not in a position to do anything beyond adding conventional lanes. Better than nothing given the crap that sometimes goes on during the approval process.
 
Im sure the local media jumped right on to criticize that blatant corruption and cronyism, amirite?
 
Not sure I like having a cycle track to the right of parked cars. Isn't that just asking for passenger-side dooring, with no way to escape?
 
I'm also not convinced it's the best option, especially this one, as it was pretty wiggly.
 
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Not sure I like having a cycle track to the right of parked cars. Isn't that just asking for passenger-side dooring, with no way to escape?

1) Every car has a driver. Most cars dont have passengers.

2) There would be a 2 foot buffer.
 
A two-foot buffer doesn't sound like enough to me. Also, you can (if you have time) swerve left out of the way of a driver-side door. How would you avoid smacking into a passenger-side door on the right?
 
A two-foot buffer doesn't sound like enough to me. Also, you can (if you have time) swerve left out of the way of a driver-side door. How would you avoid smacking into a passenger-side door on the right?

2 foot buffer + 5 foot lane is far more than you get anywhere else. And Id rather swerve onto a sidewalk curb than a truck.

I cant find the stat for the longest car door length, but cadillac style doors are no longer common. Add in those white plastic hit posts, and people will be careful.

Its not a new concept....not even in Boston. It works
 

Stat -- I tink a superior approach is to have angle parking with the bike lane behind the cars

That way bikes can see drivers getting into the traffic flow and people know that the bikes are there in the rear view mirror

a win-win

and if you make the corners peninsulas with no parking just the bike lane then the pedestrians win as well
 
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Uhg, keep fighting the good fight people.

Protected bike lanes are awesome so long as people are educated about them. I'm surprised there is even room for them on the streets of Boston but more need to be installed.
 

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