Biking in Boston

Are there any plans for Kirkland St. to get protected bike lanes? It's a critical link between Union Sq and Harvard that gets heavy bike traffic already despite being quite dangerous, and feeds directly into Somerville's excellent bike lanes on Washington St. Crossing the city line into Cambridge right now is jarring.
 
Are there any plans for Kirkland St. to get protected bike lanes? It's a critical link between Union Sq and Harvard that gets heavy bike traffic already despite being quite dangerous, and feeds directly into Somerville's excellent bike lanes on Washington St. Crossing the city line into Cambridge right now is jarring.
Under the CSO https://www.cambridgema.gov/streets...ancesandplans/cyclingsafetyordinance/Projects

It is not slated to get bike lanes other than a short stretch in front of Memorial hall. It is a little awkward since the Somerville version of it (Washington St) did receive bike lanes. It seemed Cambridge's bicycle plan was not planned in coordination with Somerville's. If you look at the map I linked it does not really prioritize any crosstown connections.
 
Under the CSO https://www.cambridgema.gov/streets...ancesandplans/cyclingsafetyordinance/Projects

It is not slated to get bike lanes other than a short stretch in front of Memorial hall. It is a little awkward since the Somerville version of it (Washington St) did receive bike lanes. It seemed Cambridge's bicycle plan was not planned in coordination with Somerville's. If you look at the map I linked it does not really prioritize any crosstown connections.
Somerville has only had a bike plan for maybe 2 years now? Cambridge's came out in 2015. Kirkland St is identified as a transit corridor, with biking routes using other, lower volume streets. You're right that it's a clear shot between Harvard and Union, but that's also what makes it critical for transit.
 
Somerville has only had a bike plan for maybe 2 years now? Cambridge's came out in 2015. Kirkland St is identified as a transit corridor, with biking routes using other, lower volume streets. You're right that it's a clear shot between Harvard and Union, but that's also what makes it critical for transit.
Yeah I mean you’re right but the 109 goes right up Washington through Kirkland and the street width doesn’t meaningfully change as you go across the border. And Washington street has bike lanes.
 
Yeah I mean you’re right but the 109 goes right up Washington through Kirkland and the street width doesn’t meaningfully change as you go across the border. And Washington street has bike lanes.
Once cambridge has all of its CSO connected network complete, we need to encourage the city to remove (free) resident parking from one side of neighborhood streets (and just having it on one side instead of both). That space could be freed up for a contraflow bike lane, protected bike lane, secure bike parking, widened sidewalks, child play space, etc. Kirkland st would benefit greatly from this, as well as key neighborhood streets (Inman st, Pearl St, Charles St, Linnean St, etc). This would open up more direct routes for cycling (and encourage folks who are only comfortable cycling in a protected lane, even on neighboorhood streets, like riding with your toddlers to school/sports). Similar to dutch neighborhoods, which use street space for a mix of street parking, plants, playgrounds, trash bins, and bike parking, instead of just two full lanes of free parking.

Yes, I know utilization of free resident parking does approach 100% in certain busier areas at peak times (i.e. at night). BUT, this isn't true of every neighborhood (Neighborhood Nine and near fresh pond seem to always be half empty) and we shouldn't be giving up more productive uses just so some people can park their private property for free, for 8 hours overnight.
 
Are there any plans for Kirkland St. to get protected bike lanes? It's a critical link between Union Sq and Harvard that gets heavy bike traffic already despite being quite dangerous, and feeds directly into Somerville's excellent bike lanes on Washington St. Crossing the city line into Cambridge right now is jarring.
So Cambridge is definitely planning some kind of reconstruction for Kirkland, but unclear if that will included protected bike lanes.

Cambridge's 2015 bike plan was updated in 2020, and the documents on that process talk about some of the segments that weren't added to the network plan despite tons of public comments asking for them. Kirkland is among those streets, see page 254 of this doc, which outlines their rationale. TL;DR it states they want to put bus queue jumps approaching the Beacon intersection and that means no room for quick build bike lanes in that section. And they propose an alternate route for cyclists using Scott/Beacon, which I'm fairly certain no one will use...

More recently though, I've seen references to a sewer separation project in the Baldwin neighborhood that will also provide an opportunity to overhaul the roadway/sidewalks on Kirkland with construction, instead of being limited to quick-build. But while they acknowledge it's a key bike route, as well as reference complete streets/vision zero, they have not yet committed to bike lanes here. But maybe they will reconsider given the improvements Somerville has made on its section of the corridor?

Cambridge's FY26 budget mentions the plan for the Baldwin project is an FY27 appropriation for design, and a FY29 appropriation for construction, a timeline also corroborated by the most recent version of the 5-year sidewalk and street reconstruction plan (but take with a grain of salt as the schedules in this doc have slipped a few times before). So keep an eye out for public meetings when the design process kicks off in 1-2 years, I guess.
 
So Cambridge is definitely planning some kind of reconstruction for Kirkland, but unclear if that will included protected bike lanes.

Cambridge's 2015 bike plan was updated in 2020, and the documents on that process talk about some of the segments that weren't added to the network plan despite tons of public comments asking for them. Kirkland is among those streets, see page 254 of this doc, which outlines their rationale. TL;DR it states they want to put bus queue jumps approaching the Beacon intersection and that means no room for quick build bike lanes in that section. And they propose an alternate route for cyclists using Scott/Beacon, which I'm fairly certain no one will use...

Thanks for the link and overview. The city's rationale is incredibly thin here.. Somerville took literally the same street and implemented everything Cambridge claims to want (bus queue jumps, improved transit facilities) PLUS protected bike lanes. Whether or not Cambridge wants it to be, Kirkland St. is a key bike corridor and needs to be treated as such. Ideally before someone gets killed.
 
Thanks for the link and overview. The city's rationale is incredibly thin here.. Somerville took literally the same street and implemented everything Cambridge claims to want (bus queue jumps, improved transit facilities) PLUS protected bike lanes. Whether or not Cambridge wants it to be, Kirkland St. is a key bike corridor and needs to be treated as such. Ideally before someone gets killed.
I will not give credit where it's not due because I am someone who has been almost run over by a wacko bus driver on the new Washington Street - the bus jump lane replaces a key section of protected bike lanes going into Union Square.
 
Agreed that bike lanes are needed there, but unfortunately it will probably take significant advocacy/public pressure to make it happen.

The current Cycling Safety Ordinance's deadline is November 2026 (all mandated quick builds done by then, all construction projects underway by then), so it'll soon be time to start thinking about what's next for the bike network. North-south protected routes are probably going to be the next big point of contention, especially with the Grand Junction path significantly delayed (or possibly dead) and upcoming/planned improvements to River St/Central Square making the gap between there and Union Sq even more glaring.

The Cambridge city council passed a policy order last December directing staff to start on the planning for this, and the staff response was rather than another bike plan update, they will work on creating a more "holistic" Cambridge Access and Mobility Plan (CAMP) which "will begin development in FY26"/"estimated to be complete by end of 2027." So again, keep an eye out!
 
Cambridge has been busy with their bike lanes this summer:
- Broadway (Portland to Columbia) was largely installed in July. Looks like just posts and symbols remain: https://bsky.app/profile/cyclejargon.bsky.social/post/3lt3isbd3mk2b
- Main St (Portland to Sidney Ext) was also largely installed in July and same: just posts and symbols remain: https://bsky.app/profile/ojc.bsky.social/post/3lvvajkjoq22p
- Waverly St: (Brookline St to Henry St): was largely installed in July and same: just posts and symbols remain.
- Vassar St (Memorial Dr to Amesbury St): looks like the existing markings have been ground out and layout of the new lines is visible.
- Aberdeen Ave: Street was repaved over the last few weeks and the layout lines for separated bike lanes along the median are visible.
- River St: It's moving along, but not a paint and post project, so it's slow.
- Mass Ave (Harvard to Porter): the median on Mass Ave has been removed to enable utility work that's a precursor to the separated bike lanes.
Updates:
- Broadway (Portland to Columbia) flex posts were installed. looks like just symbols and green remain.
- Main St (Portland to Sidney Ext) flex posts were installed and some of the symbols. No green yet: New video: https://bsky.app/profile/cyclejargon.bsky.social/post/3lyutawd45c25
- Waverly St: (Brookline St to Henry St): flex posts were installed as well as some green. Looks like markouts for additional symbols remain.
- Vassar St (Memorial Dr to Amesbury St): Pretty much done except for the yellow line and symbols. I saw them doing flex posts there yesterday.
- "Mid" Mass Ave (Central Sq to Trowbridge St/Putnam Ave): I missed this one earlier, but it finally got its green back following last year's repaving.
 
I wouldn’t mind some stricter enforcement of rules on mopeds, but conflating mopeds and bikes is disingenuous.
The challenge is high performance e-bikes definitely blur the lines between e-bikes and mopeds. When you have top speeds in the 30-40 mph range, you should have crossed classifications (but often don't).
 
The challenge is high performance e-bikes definitely blur the lines between e-bikes and mopeds. When you have top speeds in the 30-40 mph range, you should have crossed classifications (but often don't).

I'd love to see something like:
  • Class 1: Human powered or motorized assist up to 20 mph (gas or electric shouldn't matter) continuing as-is. No license or registration required and allowed on all bike lanes and multi-use trails.
  • Class 2: Any vehicle up to 100 pounds with motorized assist up to 30 mph should require a license (its own class), registration, and insurance. They should be prohibited from limited access highways, as well as prohibited from operating in pedestrian spaces (sidewalks, multi-use trails). They should be permitted to operate in bike lanes and cycle tracks, though.
  • Class 3: Any vehicle that is either over 100 pounds or has motorized assist above 30 mph should require the full licensing and registration that a standard motorcycle requires. They should be prohibited from bike lanes, paths, etc, as a standard motorcycle would be.
This demarcation would draw from best practices internationally.
 
One issue is how easy it is to manipulate these. I bought a class-2 (Under MA/common USA definitions, not as @bigeman312 described. AKA - up to 20mph) recently and discovered that I could lift the pedal assist speed governor just by clicking a button in the associated app. I...shouldn't be able to do that? Like, this is low hanging fruit. I can only up it to 25mph, but I shouldn't be able to do that if my location is in MA or another state that doesn't qualify that as an ebike anymore.

The classes you described above would essentially make cargo bikes illegal in the state. I don't disagree that there's more regulation required but it needs to be thought through much more than the above, which are not at all aligned with international best practice. 100 lbs is a blatantly arbitrary threshold. The power of the bike is what matter, and to a lesser degree things like width. You can and do have a >100lbs pound bike limited to 20mph that's built to shuttle around kids, why should that be regulated like a motorcycle?
 
One issue is how easy it is to manipulate these. I bought a class-2 (Under MA/common USA definitions, not as @bigeman312 described. AKA - up to 20mph) recently and discovered that I could lift the pedal assist speed governor just by clicking a button in the associated app. I...shouldn't be able to do that? Like, this is low hanging fruit. I can only up it to 25mph, but I shouldn't be able to do that if my location is in MA or another state that doesn't qualify that as an ebike anymore.

The classes you described above would essentially make cargo bikes illegal in the state. I don't disagree that there's more regulation required but it needs to be thought through much more than the above, which are not at all aligned with international best practice. 100 lbs is a blatantly arbitrary threshold. The power of the bike is what matter, and to a lesser degree things like width. You can and do have a >100lbs pound bike limited to 20mph that's built to shuttle around kids, why should that be regulated like a motorcycle?
on the flip side, i have a class 3 ebike. i love being able to whip around an open road at 30mph. but when i commute to work on a shared use path, i set it at class 2 level and tend to ride at the 15-20 range. there’s absolutely no reason to ban that on shared use paths, and doing so would be harmful.

operating at a class 2 level should absolutely positively not be treated like a motorcycle w/licensing and insurance. and there should never ever be a prohibition against riding any bike on a sidewalk unless a fully protected bike lane exists next to it
 
on the flip side, i have a class 3 ebike. i love being able to whip around an open road at 30mph. but when i commute to work on a shared use path, i set it at class 2 level and tend to ride at the 15-20 range. there’s absolutely no reason to ban that on shared use paths, and doing so would be harmful.

operating at a class 2 level should absolutely positively not be treated like a motorcycle w/licensing and insurance. and there should never ever be a prohibition against riding any bike on a sidewalk unless a fully protected bike lane exists next to it

Let’s learn from countries who are further ahead of the US when it comes to best biking practices. Places like the Netherlands, Denmark, and Germany emphasize that access to bike paths and shared-use paths should be based on the design speed and capability of the vehicle, not just rider behavior. This is a fairly logical approach.

While it’s understandable to want flexibility in how faster e-bikes are used, even if a Class 3 e-bike is operated at lower speeds, its weight, acceleration potential, and enforcement complexity make it unsuitable for pedestrian-heavy paths. Lower-powered electric micro-vehicles (including what Massachusetts calls “Class 1” and “Class 2” e-bikes (up to ~20 mph)) are widely accepted without licensing or insurance requirements, and that should remain the case. However, sidewalk riding is generally prohibited across the most bike-friendly countries, not just where protected bike lanes exist, to preserve pedestrian safety and encourage the development of proper cycling infrastructure. Banning vehicles that are capable of motorized assist of 30 mph from operating on the sidewalk is a much smaller step, and a very basic one to protect pedestrians from high-speed vehicles. The goal should be to focus on infrastructure and clear rules, not exceptions based on rider intent.
 

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