Bicycling promotion at the neighborhood scale
In "Making cycling irresistible in DC 2.0" (2008) and "Best practice bicycle planning for suburban settings using the action planning method" (2010), I mentioned the need to promote bicycling at the neighborhood scale, to increase biking take up.
-- "Salt Lake woman organizing ‘bike bus’ method as new transportation for school kids," Fox13
-- "Salt Lake woman organizing ‘bike bus’ method as new transportation for school kids," Utah Public Radio
The $6.4 million bicycle-pedestrian route project will connect the Rhode Island Avenue Trolley Trail to the Anacostia Tributary Trail in Hyattsville, Maryland. The new, 10-foot wide, half-mile-long paved path stretches from Farragut Street to Charles Armentrout Drive, connecting to the Northwest Branch Trail that comes out of Silver Spring leading into D.C.
Joe McAndrew, assistant secretary for transportation for the state’s Department of Transportation, said the path will also improve safety and accessibility.
“It’s a critical connection, connecting the town of Hyattsville [and] College Park, to many trail connections that will take you into the District of Columbia, and throughout the state of Maryland,” McAndrew said.
Hyattsville leaders see it as another magnet for customers and visitors to the city’s restaurants, breweries and cultural scene.
Labels: bicycle and pedestrian planning, sustainable mobility platform, urban design/placemaking
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