How Portland wants to finally close the notorious Naito Gap

naitocrossingmap

The project would build a new crossing of Naito, add bike lanes, realign the greenway path, and add railroad crossing safety features.
(Graphic: PBOT)

The “Naito gap” is one of the most glaring gaps in Portland’s vaunted bikeway network. Ever since Portland decided to take down a suspended overpass in 2003 (due to, ironically, safety concerns), the 120 feet across Naito Parkway between Waterfront Park and NW 1st Avenue has prevented people from walking and biking between Old Town/Chinatown and the Steel Bridge.

“Since the shortest path from the Steel Bridge path to Old Town Chinatown is to cross Naito at Flanders or Glisan, many pedestrians and bicyclists make an unsafe and illegal crossing at this location every day.”
— From PBOT grant application

Now the bureau of transportation has a solid plan — and more than half the funding — to finally close the gap. The plan includes a new crossing of Naito for biking and walking traffic, new bike lanes on Naito between NW Davis Street and north of the Steel Bridge, a re-alignment of the existing Willamette Greenway path, and safety improvements to the Union Pacific Railroad crossing.

Last month PBOT applied for a state grant that would fund this $1.1 million project. They’ve already committed $630,000 and all they need is $500,000 from ODOT’s Connect Oregon grant program to cover the rest.

It all sounds good, but we’ve been here before. To say this project is overdue is a huge understatement.

Not only did the City of Portland remove an existing bridge that used to be suspended over Naito in this location back in 2003, they’ve missed several opportunities to address the problem ever since.

In 2007 PBOT completed a $10 million repaving of Naito but that project inexplicably failed to address this gap. A fix has been promised no less than four times since then: In 2007, 2009, 2011, and again in 2013.

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naito_streetview_ped

A new crossing here is sorely needed. This view is looking northeast toward the Steel Bridge overcrossing.
(Photo: Google Streetview)

Back in 2010 we highlighted five languishing projects and this is the only one on that list that still hasn’t gotten done.

This grant might be PBOT’s best chance ever to rectify the situation.

Here’s how they describe the problem in the state grant application (emphasis mine):

“In 2003 a suspended pedestrian undercrossing of the Steel Bridge ramp was removed at the request of Portland Police Bureau due to public safety concerns. Ever since, there has been a gap of 1100 feet between legal crossings in this segment of Naito Parkway. Since the shortest path from the Steel Bridge path to Old Town Chinatown is to cross Naito at Flanders or Glisan, many pedestrians and bicyclists make an unsafe and illegal crossing at this location every day.

Bike lane gap on Naito Parkway between Davis Street and just north of railroad crossing. Due to constrained roadway geometry and the sharp angle of the railroad crossing, the bike lanes on Naito Parkway disappear just north of the railroad crossing and are not provided again until Davis Street several blocks to the south. This forces bicyclists to move into travel lanes or ride on sidewalks to maintain a direct path, neither of which are safe or comfortable options.”

The need for this project is even greater now that PBOT has installed bike lanes on NW 3rd.

The strange wrinkle in this project is that PBOT has to coordinate these bike/walk improvements with Union Pacific. The railroad company has signed off on the project and, if it’s funded, they’ll be on the hook to install some signficant changes to their crossing. (Technically, the Connect Oregon grant would pay for the railroad improvements and PBOT would pay for the bike/walk improvements.)

Currently, both the Waterfront Park path traffic and vehicle traffic on Naito Parkway cross the railroad tracks just 100 feet away from each other. To improve visibility and safety (and the need for multiple horns), this project would bring the greenway path and (new) bike lanes together and put them adjacent to Naito.

Connect Oregon funds are very competitive. Even with this detailed plan already in place and 57 percent of the funding already in their pocket, PBOT might not get the funding. It would be unfortunate if that happens. But given the long history of the Naito Gap, it wouldn’t be a huge surprise.

— Jonathan Maus, (503) 706-8804 – jonathan@bikeportland.org

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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Gniles
Gniles
8 years ago

I’m glad it’s finally getting done, but hoo-boy, that was a long wait for bike lanes and a crosswalk.

David
David
8 years ago
Reply to  Gniles

You might want to read more than just the headline before getting too excited.

nuovorecord
nuovorecord
8 years ago
Reply to  Gniles

Curb your enthusiasm.

maxD
maxD
8 years ago

Sounds promising! I hope they extend bike/ped facilities (sharrows, at least) out Front to Kittridge. Withe new planned Forest Park entrance and the number of apartments, condos, jobs and hotels going in along Front and in the North Pearl, it seems like an obvious connection, and one that only get harder to create as traffic counts increase. I would love to see PBOT get in front of the curb and make a very low-cost investment here.

Social Engineer
Social Engineer
8 years ago
Reply to  maxD

PBOT is already planning on new buffered bike lanes on Naito/Front from 9th to at least as far north as 17th where a new office development is being planned.

maxD
maxD
8 years ago

I believe it, but my point is that PBOT is always trailing development and need. I realize they can’t afford to build out buffered lanes to Kittridge (that will likely never be necessary), but that route is just getting busier. It provides a really nice recreational/commuter link to Hwy 30/Forest Park. Painting some sharrows or a bike lane would pretty low-cost and simply establishes the route and reserves some space for bikes/pedestrians. AS use increases and road improvements are made, these can be upgraded. I welcome the connection to 17th, but it seems short-sighted to me

maccoinnich
8 years ago

Are they planning that in an aspirational sense, or are they actually working on drawings to build it? That new building will have 290,000 sq ft of office space, which will result in a lot of new people traveling along Naito/Front every morning and evening. It would be great if the bike lanes were installed from the day the new building opens. Based on current SDC rates for offices ($3.64 a sq ft) the developer will be paying PBOT something around $1 million, which I would think would be more than enough to pay for re-configuring the road between NW 9th and 17th.

paikiala
paikiala
8 years ago

Not sure the two lanes in each direction are needed for autos. Removing a lane and adding a buffered bike lane seems feasible.

Social Engineer
Social Engineer
8 years ago
Reply to  paikiala

There absolutely is no justification for four lanes north of Davis. PBOT has been actively considering a road diet with buffered bike lanes here.

We might even see the southbound Steel Bridge loop on-ramp knocked down at some point.

Social Engineer
Social Engineer
8 years ago

This project is a critical component of the Flanders Street Greenway. I hope PBOT is able to win funding and connect this missing link.

Anne Hawley
8 years ago

Hey, it took me four or five southbound Naito trips from Northwest to the Steel before another person on a bike showed me the secret trick where you leave the bike lane just as car traffic is accelerating into two lanes, and then you cross both of those lane plus a turn lane, plus the two oncoming lanes, then ride on the sidewalk.

Man, just when I was feeling pretty tricky, they go and threaten to make the whole thing easy.

Endo
Endo
8 years ago

From that photo it looks like Naito has four lanes. How about we trim it down to two and give one of the lanes to bikes/peds? That’s a real Vision Zero move (and not one we’ll be seeing from the city any time soon).

dwk
dwk
8 years ago

What about the other end of Naitto?
Far worse situation… Someone at PBOT or the BTA tell us how to get our bikes from Barbur to Naitto safely?

Tom Hardy
Tom Hardy
8 years ago
Reply to  dwk

dwk
What about the other end of Naitto? Far worse situation… Someone at PBOT or the BTA tell us how to get our bikes from Barbur to N…
Wear bright clothing and ride like a motorist is climbing your back wheel.
Because they might!

dwk
dwk
8 years ago
Reply to  Tom Hardy

Thanks….and you are right.
Getting from the new max tracks to past the Hawthorne bridge is a joke,
either take the lane and try not to get killed or go on the sidewalks and try and not hit pedestrians.
Nice Going BTA……

Robert Burchett
Robert Burchett
8 years ago
Reply to  Tom Hardy

Well, it’s a downhill. Get some 45C or larger tires and pump them up to the recommended maximum pressure. Teach yourself to spin, then shift up. They’ll have to break the speed limit to get on your wheel.

Kiel Johnson / Go By Bike
kiel johnson
8 years ago

does the bike/ped crossing include a signalized crossing?

Social Engineer
Social Engineer
8 years ago
Reply to  kiel johnson

There likely won’t be signals there because of ODOT Rail’s concern about cars backing up onto the railroad tracks. But a road diet will reduce the crossing distance and calm traffic speeds, making it much more conducive to cross.

Captain Karma
8 years ago

Yeah, it’s be great if the crossing of the tracks could be done at a for sure right angle, thinking of 6 – 8 months of slimy rain, mold, litter and maybe even some actual leaves. I would still swerve to make a right angle, but then that could cause it’s own problems with fellow riders of bikes.

resopmok
resopmok
8 years ago

Am I misreading, or did the article state that half the funding needed was to pay Union Pacific to improve the railroad? When is the city going to offer me reimbursement for the sidewalk improvements I was required to make when I bought my house?

Beeblebrox
Beeblebrox
8 years ago
Reply to  resopmok

Wait, what? Union Pacific is not required to do anything whatsoever. The city needs to pay them to do the work because it’s work the city wants done. Why would the railroad pay for it? This isn’t anything like your sidewalk situation.

Adam
8 years ago

The bike lanes need to be physically separated, not just with paint. People drive way too fast around this curve and almost certainly will encroach on any painted bike lane.

Adam
8 years ago
Reply to  Adam

How would this project connect to the Better Naito protected bike lanes? Or has that been scrapped since the Mayor is no longer running for re-election? City Council and PBOT have been quiet about it as of late.

Beeblebrox
Beeblebrox
8 years ago
Reply to  Adam

It’s not entirely clear, but potentially this crossing could be the transition point from two-way bikeway on east side of Naito south of there to bike lanes on each side north of there.

Adam
6 years ago
Reply to  Adam

The bike lanes need to be physically separated, not just with paint

Hey, it looks like PBOT listened to me! 😀

Scott Kocher
8 years ago

The need for these improvements is huge. Fingers crossed this time.

J_R
J_R
8 years ago

What I find really interesting is that PPB wanted the previous crossing removed for “public safety concerns.” I wonder what that was all about.

Maybe in the name of “safety,” we could get PPB to issue more citations to people who choke on a soda and kill a pedestrian, for example.

Robert Burchett
Robert Burchett
8 years ago
Reply to  J_R

It had the reputation of being a shooting gallery.

mark
mark
8 years ago

oh no…not that.

peejay
peejay
8 years ago

Meanwhile, Vancouver, BC is putting in nine twelve new physically protected cycleways in their city.

Adam
6 years ago

This article was written in 2015. It’s currently 2017 and the “new pedestrian/bicycle crossing of Naito from Willamette Greenway Trail to NW 1st Ave” has yet to materialize.

Ken
Ken
5 years ago

Are there any updates on this?