grand_junction
New member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2022
- Messages
- 30
- Reaction score
- 99
Quickbuilds in Cambridge are great, and they're really well done. That being said, from a technical/design perspective, they're basically identical to what Boston has done on Cambridge St NB, South Huntington, etc--just flex posts and paint, no digging or curb reconstruction. And despite this, Cambridge has been able to build a much more substantial network in the same amount of time.I know they aren't as expansive reconstructions as what is happening on Tremont, but the Cambridge has really impressed me with the speed at which it has reconstructed places like Hampshire and Brattle in recent years, with solid new protected cycle infra. Boston seems to either install new bike infra without fixing the underlying surface (rendering the new lanes in states ranging from uncomfortable to borderline dangerous) or take what seems like years to do the full street reconstructions (e.g. Comm, Tremont).
The issue is less about the technical constraints and more about political will and avoiding projects getting bogged down in meetings, review, stakeholder complaints, etc (just see Charles Street from the circle to the common--perfect candidate and yet locked up in complaints from business owners along the street.
The Cambridge process, and it's Cycling Safety Ordinance, force the city to build and take action rather than delaying over and over, because it has strict timelines and success criteria. If Boston is serious about this, they must consider a similar strategy.