Asphalt mix-up closes bike gaps on SE 20th/Ankeny median – Updated

SE 20th and Ankeny before…

If you’re one of the over 1,200 or so people who ride on SE Ankeny every day, be extra careful when you get to SE 20th. Earlier today, city crews filled in the gaps that allow bikes to pass through the median island (see photo below). The City says it was just a mistake and they plan to clean it up as early as tomorrow morning.

I got several reports from readers concerned that people would be caught off guard when they try to ride through.

… and after.
(Photo: Moira Ray)

Around 12:30 today someone posted this to the “damnportlanders” Livejournal:

“I Just watched a city truck drive up to the intersection at SE 20th and Ankeny. Two guys got out and them asphalted-in the two big gaps in that median divider, completely blocking them off and making that intersection far, far more dangerous to cross on a bike. Be warned.

I have no effing clue why they would have done this.”

Gabrielle R. wrote to me via email that, “Right now it’s really not safe for any skinny-tired bike to cross 20th there.”

I called Citybikes, a shop just west of the intersection. An employee there confirmed the situation. “I went outside and looked and thought, what hell are they doing?” she said, “It’s causing a lot of havoc.”

(Photo: Gianluca/Citybikes)

I also called PBOT to confirm what had happened. They say that this was just a mix-up. It’s likely related to work that will happen sometime next week in advance of Sunday Parkways Southeast. In preparation for that event, the City will place temporary asphalt on the median to turn the curbs into ramps for the large crowds. However, the gaps are supposed to stay open.

A source at PBOT told me a few minutes ago that, “It’s definitely coming out tomorrow morning.”

If you ride through SE 20th at Ankeny, be a bit extra careful. Hopefully it will be gone before the morning bike commute rush.

UPDATE: Someone has taken a shovel to the asphalt and put the bike gaps back in place. Read more

http://damnportlanders.livejournal.com/17756970.html

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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John Mulvey
John Mulvey
12 years ago

The city that works…

Rob Sadowsky
12 years ago

Recommended alternative route: Pine Street.

BURR
BURR
12 years ago
Reply to  Rob Sadowsky

Personally, I prefer Ash Street.

Schrauf
Schrauf
12 years ago

No mix-up. More likely City employees that dislike people who bike for transportation. Probably not the actual employees that filled in the gaps. Somebody told them to do it.

Please, how would one honestly make a mistake like that??? It’s obvious what the purpose of each gap is.

jeff
jeff
12 years ago
Reply to  Schrauf

you never screw up at your job, right?

q`Tzal
q`Tzal
12 years ago
Reply to  jeff

Screw up? Really?
Anyone whose job it is to do what they did could easily recognize on their first day that no material was needed there. The part they filled in was not specified as part of their job.
This “patch job” they did on the bike cut throughs took effort, material, time and thought; planning you might say.

Also there is the stereotype of government workers in play: these guys get paid by the hour and had no incentive to do what they did.

Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity, but don’t rule out malice.

Mike Early
12 years ago
Reply to  q`Tzal

don’t rule out those to which are uninformed. 5 years ago I didn’t know what the break in Ankeny at 20th was for. There are no signs that say the purpose. Only signs that say right turn only. I can admite, i have driven over the barrier, but only cause i was uniformed, not because i was malicious or stupid, ignorant of the truth, yea sometimes, but not on purpose, maybe laziness. step back and realize we aren’t the same, that can mean so many thing on so many levels.

Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson
12 years ago
Reply to  Mike Early

All the more reason the gaps should have MUTCD-compliant bike lane markings for Ankeney.

Schrauf
Schrauf
12 years ago

Further, someone is going to get hurt there each night until it gets fixed. Will it be part that person’s fault for not looking close enough? Sure. But who expects random curbs to pop up? It’s even more dangerous if the new curb is black asphalt rather than light cement (I don’t know what the curb is in this case…).

Joe Rowe
Joe Rowe
12 years ago

I wonder why the BTA director and Jonathan Maus are posting here, but not posting about the near end of any public input on the $4 billion CRC meeting I attended this week. It lasted over 6 hours and will mean construction could come as soon as the people in charge of the fast track LUFO give the green light for Oregon to take these loans.

Investigate the workers who filled in the bike pathway with cement bumps. Investigate why many people in the bike community say almost nothing about the project that will put big bucks in the pockets of their friends and friends.

Take Mia Burke and her huge donations to Rex Burkholder who is the driving force behind the CRC and was the first to motion for fast tracking the CRC. Include: The bike gallery, hopworks, etc, etc.

Adams Carroll (News Intern)
Reply to  Joe Rowe

Joe,

You know full well that I understand how serious and important it is that we all know what’s happening with the CRC project — however it sort of bums me out that you come on this thread and direct your frustrations about that project toward me.

Feel free to investigate anything/anyone you want about anything, but please don’t imply that I am somehow avoiding covering the CRC because someone is lining my pockets with big bucks. Give me a break.

It’s ironic you say that, because I’ve actually made financial sacrifices to stay 100% independent with this business.

Thanks for your participation in the comments. I hope to do some CRC coverage next week.

John Mulvey
John Mulvey
12 years ago

Jonathan — Thanks for being the most credible source of info in the city on the CRC and other transportation issues.
-John

Joe Rowe
Joe Rowe
12 years ago

Teachers, Cops, Reporters, Bloggers. We all take jobs knowing there will be people on all sides. It kinda burns me you gave Sam Adams an interview with no CRC mention. It’s your company, your income on the line. I respect you and at the same time I can raise questions. I’ve healed my burns.

Andrew N
Andrew N
12 years ago
Reply to  Joe Rowe

No dis on Jonathan intended here, but in a sense I’m happy to second Joe, who is rightfully frustrated. Clearly not enough has been said/exposed about the back-slapping corruption that has gotten the CRC “process” this far along. Burkholder in particular should be utterly ashamed. Luckily the federal and state funding is looking very shaky, regardless of how many of our local electeds (Sam, Metro, I’m looking at you) choose to roll over in the face of a project that goes against so much that this city is supposed to stand for.

Dabby
Dabby
12 years ago
Reply to  Joe Rowe

Get over it Joe.
We need a bridge.
We however do not need to turn every thread into a thread about how much people don’t want a new bridge.

I say build it now!

On another note while this asphalt does not belong, it is no reason for a panic.

And, really, City workers who don’t like bikes did this on purpose?
Some of you actually are suggesting this is why it happened?

Too much time on your hands..

Janet
Janet
12 years ago

thank you for posting about this so quickly!

Racer XXX
Racer XXX
12 years ago

Anyone have some white paint…to temp mark the new asphalt so Friday night rider see it before hitting it.

John Mulvey
John Mulvey
12 years ago
Reply to  Racer XXX

I’m concerned about people riding through there tonight too.

Peter W
12 years ago

Joe Rowe
…it will mean construction could come as soon as the people in charge of the fast track LUFO give the green light for Oregon to take these loans.

Just to clarify: The vote approved the LUFO, but Councilor Roberts successfully passed an amendment to not immediately give Tom Hughes the authorization to sign the Final EIS (Environmental Impact Statement), so that part of Metro council’s decision making will be delayed by a few weeks.

Lets hope someone can poke some really big holes in the EIS within the next few weeks. After that the fight would move to the state level where opponents would need to block funding from passing at the legislature.

Jonathan, thanks for you super coverage of the CRC in the past and I look forward to seeing more from you when you get a chance.

Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson
12 years ago

It would probably help if the median striping didn’t continue through the intersection there, ie, also had a gap, and possibly even had it’s own left orange and right white shoulder stripes in the gaps, to make it more obvious that it’s a legal lane and needs to be maintained as such.

dwainedibbly
dwainedibbly
12 years ago

Did you know that gasoline dissolves asphalt?

q`Tzal
q`Tzal
12 years ago
Reply to  dwainedibbly

… and diesel and hot engine oil.

Carl B.
Carl B.
12 years ago
Reply to  dwainedibbly

And would cause the whole area to be deemed a hazardous waste spill site, closed to traffic, and require an expensive cleanup, which could only begin after all the necessary permits could be obtained. Letting the city scrape it off tonight is a much better idea.

Mike Early
12 years ago

Geez, i can’t believe everyone talking like this. Do you have a shovel? I do. And i commute through this intersection 5+ days a week. So i brought my shovel and changed the situation. I honestly think this was a random mistake. And im the one who fixed it. Haters gonna hate. So hate else where. If you want to be a productive member of society then DO something. Don’t get on here and whine before the fact.

Keep portland Weird, not a bunch of whiney hippies! (coming from a dreaded cummuter who loves the city he lives in)

Mike Early
12 years ago

Sorry, not everyone, just some of you

joel
12 years ago

seriously, this didnt need a bikeportland discussion – all this needed was someone to hop out there as soon as the truck drove away, and tear the new patch out with a pick and a shovel. problem solved.

Mike Early
12 years ago

joel
seriously, this didnt need a bikeportland discussion – all this needed was someone to hop out there as soon as the truck drove away, and tear the new patch out with a pick and a shovel. problem solved.
Recommended 0

Just took a flat shovel 😀 problem solved. ODOT needs to go clean up a pile though 😀

mmann
12 years ago

Thanks for getting to the bottom of this – I went through there about 4:30 this afternoon and wondered. I’m pretty confident this will be cleared soon – They built and dismantled asphalt ramps overnight in the same location last year when Sunday Parkways rolled through there.

Mike Early
12 years ago

An unofficial comment from an unknown Parkways worker/helper said that it had nothing to do with Sunday Parkways. It was just a mistake from a city worker that thought the “curb” was broken. Just doing his or her job.

Nothing more to see here.

Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson
12 years ago
Reply to  Mike Early

All the more reason why the striping for the bike lanes through the median should be properly marked.

BURR
BURR
12 years ago
Reply to  Mike Early

No doubt when they finish removing it the road surface will be worse than before….

mmann
12 years ago

All better now.

jim
jim
12 years ago

Bikes should use a decent headlight at night. Then they can see things before they crash into them and cry that it is someone elses fault

Jacob
Jacob
12 years ago

Those woulda made sweet jumps!