Biking in Boston

The Ritz Boston Common actually has thermal heat lamps installed under the awning of its main entrance, to ward off the nasty climate while patrons wait for taxis and the like. Surprised it's not more common for high-end buildings.

I havent seen a hotel in Boston that DOESNT have this.

Also, it appears that most brownstones have a heating system under their exterior stairs. Theres like a mini manhole and when theres light snow that area is always dry while the rest of the sidewalk has some snow.

Im sure someone know what im talking about.
 
Those mini manholes are the old coal chutes for the buildings. The basement of most the brownstone/rowhouses actually extends out under the side walk. It's the warm basement more than likely melting the snow.

I used to work in fire alarm servicing and most the sprinkler equipment is located down there.
 
Those mini manholes are the old coal chutes for the buildings. The basement of most the brownstone/rowhouses actually extends out under the side walk. It's the warm basement more than likely melting the snow.

I used to work in fire alarm servicing and most the sprinkler equipment is located down there.

Oh I see. Was it an unintended benefit or smart design? Having the stairs defrost on their own is always a nice feature.
 
It's an unintended benefit which also causes significant problems with condensation and mold on the underside of the stairs, which requires some creative solutions.

The whole city could have heated sidewalks and streets using rooftop solar water heaters. The problem is our century old utilities and keystone cop maintenance crews have no concept of 'repairing in-kind'.
 
Biking in Boston is still a really scary experience: I saw a cyclist get hit by a car on the corner of South Huntington Ave. and Centre Street a few months ago. I also saw a biker run into a girl crossing the street on Lamartine Street....NO I DIDN'T ASK IF EITHER WAS OKAY!
 
Streetfilms are always good. However, the shared bicycle and car lane is a joke. We have one over on South Street by Forest Hills and bikers are just begging to be hit at rush hour.
 
The grand street bike lane shows that even smaller Boston streets can have a fully separate bike lane while allowing for parking.

While many of the new bike lanes in NYC are working very well, the Grand St bike lane is IMO too much for the street. If they eliminated the parking then the traffic would flow but as they changed it even I feel like it is going too far.
 
^^Best thing you've posted so far. That's great. :)
 
French Ideal of Bicycle-Sharing Meets Reality

By STEVEN ERLANGER and MA?A DE LA BAUME
Published: October 30, 2009

PARIS ? Just as Le Corbusier?s white cruciform towers once excited visions of the industrial-age city of the future, so V?lib?, Paris?s bicycle rental system, inspired a new urban ethos for the era of climate change.

Residents here can rent a sturdy bicycle from hundreds of public stations and pedal to their destinations, an inexpensive, healthy and low-carbon alternative to hopping in a car or bus.

But this latest French utopia has met a prosaic reality: Many of the specially designed bikes, which cost $3,500 each, are showing up on black markets in Eastern Europe and northern Africa. Many others are being spirited away for urban joy rides, then ditched by roadsides, their wheels bent and tires stripped.

With 80 percent of the initial 20,600 bicycles stolen or damaged, the program?s organizers have had to hire several hundred people just to fix them. And along with the dent in the city-subsidized budget has been a blow to the Parisian psyche.

?The symbol of a fixed-up, eco-friendly city has become a new source for criminality,? Le Monde mourned in an editorial over the summer. ?The V?lib? was aimed at civilizing city travel. It has increased incivilities.?

The heavy, sandy-bronze V?lib? bicycles are seen as an accoutrement of the ?bobos,? or ?bourgeois-boh?mes,? the trendy urban middle class, and they stir resentment and covetousness. They are often being vandalized in a socially divided Paris by resentful, angry or anarchic youth, the police and sociologists say.

Bruno Marzloff, a sociologist who specializes in transportation, said, ?One must relate this to other incivilities, and especially the burning of cars,? referring to gangs of immigrant youths burning cars during riots in the suburbs in 2005.

He said he believed there was social revolt behind V?lib? vandalism, especially for suburban residents, many of them poor immigrants who feel excluded from the glamorous side of Paris.

?It is an outcry, a form of rebellion; this violence is not gratuitous,? Mr. Marzloff said. ?There is an element of negligence that means, ?We don?t have the right to mobility like other people, to get to Paris it?s a huge pain, we don?t have cars, and when we do, it?s too expensive and too far.? ?

Used mainly for commuting in the urban core of the city, the V?lib? program is by many measures a success. After swiping a credit card for a deposit at an electronic docking station, a rider pays one euro per day, or 29 euros (about $43) for an annual pass, for unlimited access to the bikes for 30-minute periods that can be extended for a small fee.

Daily use averages 50,000 to 150,000 trips, depending on the season, and the bicycles have proved to be a hit with tourists, who help power the economy.

But the extra-solid construction and electronic docks mean the bikes, made in Hungary, are expensive, and not everyone shares the spirit of joint public property promoted by Paris?s Socialist mayor, Bertrand Delano?.

?We miscalculated the damage and the theft,? said Albert Ass?raf, director of strategy, research and marketing at JCDecaux, the outdoor-advertising company that is a major financer and organizer of the project. ?But we had no reference point in the world for this kind of initiative.?

At least 8,000 bikes have been stolen and 8,000 damaged so badly that they had to be replaced ? nearly 80 percent of the initial stock, Mr. Ass?raf said.

JCDecaux must repair some 1,500 bicycles a day. The company maintains 10 repair shops and a workshop on a boat that moves up and down the Seine.

JCDecaux reinforced the bicycles? chains and baskets and added better theft protection, strengthening the mechanisms that attach them to the electronic parking docks, since an incompletely secured bike is much easier to steal. But the damage and theft continued.

?We made the bike stronger, ran ad campaigns against vandalism and tried to better inform people on the Web,? Mr. Ass?raf said. But ?the real solution is just individual respect.?

In 2008 , the number of infractions related to V?lib? vandalism rose 54 percent, according to the Paris police.

?We found many stolen V?lib?s in Paris?s troubled neighborhoods,? said Marie Lajus, a spokeswoman for the police. ?It?s not profit-making delinquency, but rather young boys, especially from the suburbs, consider the V?lib? an object that has no value.?

Sometimes the bikes are also victims of good old adolescent anarchic fun. These attitudes are expressed by the ?freeriders,? and a bicycle forum, where a mock poll asks riders whether the V?lib? can do wheelies, go down stairs and make decent skid marks.

It is commonplace now to see the bikes at docking stations in Paris with flat tires, punctured wheels or missing baskets. Some V?lib?s have been found hanging from lampposts, dumped in the Seine, used on the streets of Bucharest or resting in shipping containers on their way to North Africa. Some are simply appropriated and repainted.

Finding a decent one is now something of an urban treasure hunt. G?raldine Bernard, 31, of Paris rides a V?lib? to work every day but admits having difficulties lately finding functioning bikes.

?It?s a very clever initiative to improve people?s lives, but it?s not a complete success,? she said.

?For a regular user like me, it generates a lot of frustration,? she said. ?It?s a reflection of the violence of our society and it?s outrageous: the V?lib? is a public good but there is no civic feeling related to it.?

Still, with more than 63 million rentals since the program was begun in mid-2007, the V?lib? is an established part of Parisian life, and the program has been extended to provide 4,000 V?lib?s in 29 towns on the city?s edges.

So despite the increasing costs, Paris and JCDecaux are pressing on. The company invested about $140 million to set up the system and provides a yearly fee of about $5.5 million to Paris, which also gets rental fees for the bikes. In return, the company?s 10-year contract allows it to put up 1,628 billboards that it can rent.

Although JCDecaux will not discuss money figures, the expected date for profitability has been set back. But the City of Paris has agreed to pay JCDecaux about $600 for each stolen or irreparably damaged bike if the number exceeds 4 percent of the fleet, which it clearly does.

In an unsuccessful effort to stop vandalism, Paris began an advertising campaign this summer. Posters showed a cartoon V?lib? being roughed up by a thug. The caption read: ?It?s easy to beat up a V?lib?, it can?t defend itself. V?lib? belongs to you, protect it!?

Link
 
the bikes cost $3,500 each ?! Why? Perhaps if they used cheaper bikes, they would be less attractive targets for thieves.

Anyone know if Montr?al is having similar problems?
 
the bikes cost $3,500 each ?! Why? Perhaps if they used cheaper bikes, they would be less attractive targets for thieves.

Anyone know if Montr?al is having similar problems?


That number is wrong. I know that the bikes cost $1,500 each.

The Montreal bikes (which Boston will see) are cheaper, $700 or so.

Also, Paris has the theft problem because
-There were problems with the locking system initially. Most of the thefts happened early on
-They have a lenient policy. When you get a bike, theres a $500 or so charge if you lose it.....but you get 3 times before they actually charge you.
 
If you live in Cambridge I suggest voting for craig kelly (councilman) if you want even better bike commitment.

I do not work for or ever have worked for craig kelly....but I have worked WITH him on a bike project.
 
Tomorrow:

Annual Boston Bikes Presentation - 12/10, 6:30 PM, Rabb Hall, Boston Public Library Learn what Mayor Menino and the City of Boston are doing to make Boston a bike-friendly city. Hosted by LivableStreets Alliance.

I look forward to hearing why half of the 2009 bike lane projects did not happen.



Taken yesterday, looks like the MBTA finished painting kenmore. Im not a fan of paint on the brick pavement, but oh well.

Not shown: Sharrows on kenmore outbound for bikes heading for beacon st outbound (complimenting bike lanes for comm ave and brookline)


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We all know that a visual jumble of lane markings and strict separation of spaces makes all road users and pedestrians so much more careful around each other.
 
What is with the overzealous landscaping effort on some of these traffic islands. Is that Cape Cod dune grass on one of them? Are they just planting this shit now so people will assume it's intentional when no one weeds them?
 

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