And frustratingly, it is morning inbound only. Yes, great, but the outbound evening traffic is worse. And while many might mode shift to bus+OL if the lane is there, many won't if it's only there for one direction. Seems like a missed opportunity to really actually fix things.
I live in Roslindale and this almost certainly the biggest shortfall of an otherwise positive step. The question is how to create that outbound lane, I don't think they could use the same parking restriction as they do with the morning inbound. The only way to get a two way dedicated bus lane is remove all that on street parking which I doubt the neighborhood would agree to. Would love to hear if anyone has some solutions.
What would be the easiest way to just switch the lanes for the afternoon/evening? Convert the inbound bus lane into the normal inbound lane, the inbound lane into the outbound lane and the outbound lane into the outbound bus lane.
I think you could run into a safety issue with the southbound afternoon bus doors opening on the righthand side into traffic and I don't think they'd be handicap accessible.
They could just actually switch the lanes and parking bans though to the proper sides of street depending on the rush hour direction - I swear I have seen it work elsewhere.
The hours are probably fine for inbound purposes, but there definitely needs to be an outbound bus lane in the afternoon. I'm thinking baby steps. Get this one established and permanent, it serves as a proof of concept. Then get to work on the other direction, and other high ridership corridors (ie Blue Hill Ave, Hyde Park Ave., Dot Ave., etc.).
Everett says it's harder to do an evening lane because you're stopping parking on that side mid-day rather than extending the overnight parking ban like what happens in the morning on the other side.
Everett says it's harder to do an evening lane because you're stopping parking on that side mid-day rather than extending the overnight parking ban like what happens in the morning on the other side.
We're struggling with this in Everett too. The afternoon outbound traffic on Upper Broadway is awful, often worse than the morning inbound traffic that has the IB morning peak bus lane. I frequently get off the 104/109 once we get past Sweester Circle, walk home up Broadway and often beat the bus.
Everett says it's harder to do an evening lane because you're stopping parking on that side mid-day rather than extending the overnight parking ban like what happens in the morning on the other side.
Washington DC has made an art of banning parking in the rush direction. You just have to get merchants comfortable with the idea that most customers after 4pm will arrive by bus.
Jay Monty, Everett's Transportation Engineer and mastermind behind the bus lane, said at our Beer & Transit that the City is about to take those two spots to build a bus platform there. Those two spots wreak havoc on the traffic on Upper Broadway.Is there any great value in having the two on street parking spaces right in front of the Rite Aid parking lot? I'm wondering if a 24/7 northbound bus lane between 2nd St and the north end of the Rite Aid parking lot would make sense.
Jay Monty, Everett's Transportation Engineer and mastermind behind the bus lane, said at our Beer & Transit that the City is about to take those two spots to build a bus platform there. Those two spots wreak havoc on the traffic on Upper Broadway.
And you're right. That portion right after the rotary is a major trunk line. A more surgical approach up to Everett Square might be a good middle ground.