paperless paul
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Braintree MBTA station has the worst biking experience (ok, perhaps not the worst, I haven't been to every station).
I used Braintree yesterday for a reverse bike trip yesterday. The pedestrian access was poor, but the biking access was ridiculously poor. Like all of Braintree, Quincy and part of Weymouth these places feel intrinsically bike inhospitable including the drivers, the people, the lanes, the signage, the roads, the lights, the retail, even the parks. The station feels like it was designed by someone who was born grew up and went to school without ever leaving a car. It has that Miami feel to it where bikes and people walking just aren't even considered to exist.
Just leaving the station required a very complicated calculus about where one was supposed to travel. Union St looked like a no go because of the 'interstate sized' rotary under route 3. But Ivory St was no better with a typical south shore 4-lane divided no shoulder 50m/hr throughway with no way to cross the street. Luckily one side had a sidewalk. Immediately you run into strip mall fast entry/exits. And as far as I can tell there is no way to exit the station to the east.
This city has a long long long way to go before it can said to be embracing TOD or similar philosophies.
Everytime I go through there I remind myself never to come back. Which is a shame, because I love to bike along the south shore and it is a lovely trip from Boston through the harborwalk JFK (even the missing Dorchester piece isn't terrible), but getting from the Neponset River to Hingham is horrible.
I would much rather take the commuter rail to the South Shore, of course it does not run on the weekends. I have read the discussion here, if there is insufficient demand, then I understand it may not be worth it. Such a service might need some creative marketing and development support, and likely would not be worth it in the winter. But it would be a terrific summer destination. 2 miles to beaches in Hingham, Hull, Cohasset, Scituate. Access to the ocean. Rivermoor Park, Wompatuck, Great Esker etc.
It's a long walk to these places, but possible, it would be an easy bike ride, a shuttle could also work, or shared biking. Through running with a North South link would help as well. Of course places like Cohasset probably don't want anyone to show up. But, I don't see why such a service should be any less successful than weekend Rockport/Newburyport.
I used Braintree yesterday for a reverse bike trip yesterday. The pedestrian access was poor, but the biking access was ridiculously poor. Like all of Braintree, Quincy and part of Weymouth these places feel intrinsically bike inhospitable including the drivers, the people, the lanes, the signage, the roads, the lights, the retail, even the parks. The station feels like it was designed by someone who was born grew up and went to school without ever leaving a car. It has that Miami feel to it where bikes and people walking just aren't even considered to exist.
Just leaving the station required a very complicated calculus about where one was supposed to travel. Union St looked like a no go because of the 'interstate sized' rotary under route 3. But Ivory St was no better with a typical south shore 4-lane divided no shoulder 50m/hr throughway with no way to cross the street. Luckily one side had a sidewalk. Immediately you run into strip mall fast entry/exits. And as far as I can tell there is no way to exit the station to the east.
This city has a long long long way to go before it can said to be embracing TOD or similar philosophies.
Everytime I go through there I remind myself never to come back. Which is a shame, because I love to bike along the south shore and it is a lovely trip from Boston through the harborwalk JFK (even the missing Dorchester piece isn't terrible), but getting from the Neponset River to Hingham is horrible.
I would much rather take the commuter rail to the South Shore, of course it does not run on the weekends. I have read the discussion here, if there is insufficient demand, then I understand it may not be worth it. Such a service might need some creative marketing and development support, and likely would not be worth it in the winter. But it would be a terrific summer destination. 2 miles to beaches in Hingham, Hull, Cohasset, Scituate. Access to the ocean. Rivermoor Park, Wompatuck, Great Esker etc.
It's a long walk to these places, but possible, it would be an easy bike ride, a shuttle could also work, or shared biking. Through running with a North South link would help as well. Of course places like Cohasset probably don't want anyone to show up. But, I don't see why such a service should be any less successful than weekend Rockport/Newburyport.