Tuesday 18 June 2013

Hoan alternative: build up set to start on city's first raised bike lane

cycling

Construction will begin later this month on Milwaukee’s first raised bike lane, a section of pavement built up four inches above the traffic lane on Bay St., roughly from Beulah Brinton Park off E. Potter St. to the Wrought Washer plant at S. Lenox St.

The bike lane is part of a larger project to improve cycling between the Bay View neighborhood and Downtown Milwaukee, and the alternative picked by the Department of Transportation after it rejected proposals to install a bike path on the Daniel Hoan Memorial Bridge.

When tied to the Kinnickinnic River Trail, the route will include the bike lane, an off-street path on a former rail corridor and lanes marked for bikes on S. 1st St., Kinnickinnic and S. Water St.

Scheduled to be completed in 2012, the bicycle route will link the Oak Leaf Trail in Cupertino Park to the connection in Lakeshore State Park.

It has been studied since 1997.

Other large cities, including New York and Portland have experimented with various approaches to separate bikes from motor vehicles. Only Vancouver, B.C., and Bend and Eugene, Ore., have installed the raised bike lanes used more commonly in Europe, according to Dave Schlabowske, the bicycle and pedestrian coordinator in the Milwaukee Department of Public Works.

Included in the overall Milwaukee bicycling master plan, this will be Milwaukee’s first project to go beyond paint on pavement.

“Right now, we’re doing this as a pilot,” Schlabowske said. “As far as I know, this is the first such facility in the state of Wisconsin.”

The bike lane will be slightly more than five feet wide, extend about 1,700 feet on Bay St., and cost $178,000. It will be installed as part of a larger portion of the Downtown to Bay View Bikeway that will cost $1.85 million, according to city figures.

Federal grants will be used to pay for roughly $1.5 million, with another $378,000 in city funds devoted to the project.

Phase II is set for construction in 2012.

That will connect the bicycle lane on Kinnickinnic Ave. to the KK River Trail at E. Maple St., and follow an off-road path on abandoned rail bed to E. Washington St. From that point, S. Water St. will be reconstructed, the railroad crossings improved and a bike lane added to connect to E. Pittsburgh St. and an on-street pathway to the lakefront.

“What we’re trying to do is match the on-road experience with the separated trail experience for the users,” Schlabowske said. “For many people, a bike lane is not as pleasant an experience as a separated bike trail.”

Ald. Tony Zielinski, who represents the area, called it an improvement in safety for bicyclists using the city streets.

"Bay View embraces new ideas and thinking out of the box, so it's very appropriate that it be done in this area," Zielinski said.

A pre-construction meeting with planners and the contractor, Stark Asphalt, will be held on June 21. Construction will follow. 

58 Comments for "Hoan alternative: build up set to start on city's first raised bike lane"

  1. "thinking out of the box" is so cliche.

    klisch Jun 15, 2011 9:21 AM

  2. Thanks for the post and research Tom. Bay Street is usually desolate so it’s a good street to try the raised bike path. I like the idea but I have to wonder, do hipsters like off-road bike paths? Furthermore, if a hipster is being cool on an off-road path but nobody is there to see them, are they still cool?

    JTBA Jun 15, 2011 9:34 AM

  3. I haven't ridden that portion of the trail is a long time, due to the nature of the street in the section. Uneven concrete, potholes, etc. I felt like I might hit a big bump that would send me into traffic.

    STB1 Jun 15, 2011 10:34 AM

  4. This is great news for Bayview. We need a safe, viable connection to downtown as there are many, many bike commuters taking this route. I, for one, am excited to finally bike with my kids downtown to the Children's Museum and Discovery World in a safe manor. Can't do that currently. Very exciting and can't happen soon enough.

    Hilarious post JTBA...thanks for that

    Convinced of the Hex Jun 15, 2011 10:40 AM

  5. One can only imagine a bike ride across the hoan with high wind warnings of today

    udaman621 Jun 15, 2011 11:03 AM

  6. This is great news! way to go MKE!!!

    Modra Jun 15, 2011 11:23 AM

  7. no need for this!! the number of bike riders does not justify millions for this worthless project. Put the money to good use by not spending it or fix existing roads with it.

    btanderson05 Jun 15, 2011 11:29 AM

  8. btanderson05, do you stand at the corner of beecher(aka Bay) and KK every
    morning and count the number of bike commuters who go by?

    waxworks Jun 15, 2011 11:53 AM

  9. btanderson,

    You either live in the suburbs where people drive to their mailboxes, or you are completely blind. Bayview commuters to downtown/third ward are quite numerous. The current route gets pretty dicey along first street where there is not even a bike lane. Hopefully these upgrades will not only provide a safer route, but also encourage more riders.

    CanalStreetExit

    Jun 15, 2011 12:04 PM

  10. @Btanderson05, more drivers off the road and onto bikes = less road maintenance AND more bike lanes = more people on bikes ergo less cars, less health care costs as people turn away from their sedentary lives, less costly subsidies to oil companies, less taxes paid for wars to control oil resources, and less taxes spent to bail-out moribund auto industries. Also, this project will create jobs. YEAH, that makes more financial sense!

    Modra Jun 15, 2011 12:07 PM

  11. Please explain the Hoan Bridge to me....there are nets installed to catch falling concrete...yet they move the Miller stage under the bridge with
    gigantic speakers vibrating

    IWONDER99 Jun 15, 2011 12:21 PM

  12. I agree that bikers hogging the lanes and not following laws is very annoying. But I also agree that this will be great to get them off the streets and it may even be fun for myself to ride every once in a while.
    I do have a huge question for anyone who knows-How will they bridge the gap across the river? Or will they go a different route?

    subtleT Jun 15, 2011 12:23 PM

  13. I'm a taxpayer and I approve of spending on bike lanes.

    The RTS Jun 15, 2011 12:30 PM

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