Developer ready to pay for one block of protected bike lane on NW 14th

Concept proposed by Killian Pacific — and designed by PBOT — as part of the Lovejoy Square mixed-use development in the Pearl District.

A developer has offered to pitch in $250,000 toward a significant upgrade to the bikeway and sidewalk on NW 14th between Kearney and Lovejoy.

The Portland Bureau of Development Services says Killian Pacific has proposed to set aside the money as one of several options to gain permission from the Design Commission to make their 78-unit Lovejoy Square project four stories higher. In a memo (PDF) filed last week, BDS wrote that the “NW 14th Street Improvements” could include: “traffic study, protected bike lane, bike box & Lovejoy signal, bike sharing station, storm water planter, sidewalk extensions on both east and west intersections, concrete sidewalks at Kearney to cleanly terminate the cobble stone area, and removing existing asphalt and concrete patches and restoring cobblestones along NW Kearney.”

A preliminary drawing of the proposed street upgrades done by the Portland Bureau of Transportation (above) shows the bike lane and sidewalk concept. By extending the curb 25-feet to the west, it would be a significant change to this block of 14th (which is one-way northbound). As we detailed during our NW Portland Week coverage last year, NW 14th is a key piece of the bike network that leaves much to be desired. The current cross-section has five lanes: a bike lane sandwiched between two standard vehicle lanes and two lanes used for auto parking. One block south (at the REI store) is a door-zone bike lane.

Aerial view of current conditions.
Current conditions on NW 14th looking toward Lovejoy.

The Pearl District Neighborhood Association is in full support of the proposal. They voted 8-2 in favor of it at the December 19th meeting of their Planning and Transportation Committee. Here’s an excerpt from a letter they sent to BDS yesterday:

“As a gateway into the neighborhood from I-405 and an edge street with few stop-controlled intersections, NW 14th Avenue can often feel hostile for pedestrians crossing on foot and bicyclists riding along northbound. The current condition of the block in question is a vestige from the era where this location was primarily industrial in nature and when the Lovejoy viaduct touched down at NW 14th. The 16-foot wide right turn only lane on this block of 14th creates an excessively long crossing distance (50 feet) between curbs, which increases exposure to passing car traffic and detracts from the pedestrian experience which is highly uncharacteristic for this eminently walkable neighborhood. The setback crossing reduces the visibility of pedestrians waiting at the NE corner of 14th and Kearney, while the expanse of pavement encourages motorists to increase speeds and reduces safety for bicycle riders that are navigating the existing merge point.

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The Pearl District is classified by the city as a “Pedestrian District” and a “Bicycle District” in the Transportation System Plan. Increasing pedestrian and bicycle safety along NW 14th Avenue is a major priority for the Pearl District Neighborhood Association, and the proposed concept would help meet these goals by better defining the corners of the intersections at Kearney and Lovejoy and creating a more intimate, pedestrian-scale environment that’s conducive to slower vehicular speeds and easier pedestrian crossings. In addition, it would eliminate the need for right turning motorists to merge across the bike lane by adding a new protected right turn signal and bicycle signal at 14th and Lovejoy. Furthermore, these streetscape improvements combined with new proposed retail spaces will help activate the street frontage along the east side of 14th.”

What makes this developer’s timing even better is that the Portland Bureau of Transportation has chosen NW 14th as a future protected bike lane couplet with NW 16th as part of the planning work for the Central City in Motion project. We’ve highlighted the NW 14th corridor and the Johnson-to-Kearney section in PBOT’s graphic below…

Having a developer pay for a protected bike lane would also be a win for PBOT Director Leah Treat. In 2015 she sent around an internal agency memo that protected bike lanes should be the default bikeway treatment. And, as reported by People for Bikes, PBOT is also working toward a more binding administrative rule that would require developers to pay for protected bike lanes with new buildings, similar to the current requirement for sidewalks. In November 2015 Treat told the Bicycle Advisory Committee that she was serious about the new design standard. “This is where we’re starting from,” she said, “so you in the private sector have to back me down from there and you have to convince me otherwise.”

While Killian Pacific’s proposal won’t be reviewed until a January 25th Design Commission work session, initial feedback from the City of Portland has been positive. In the BDS memo the “staff recommendation” states that the protected bike lane concept “would consitute a substantial public amenity.”

From here the developer will have a month to refine the concept with PBOT and come up with a more detailed plan and cost estimates. If you’d like to tell BDS how you feel about this, you can email comments to Planner Puja Bhutani at Puja.bhutani [at] portlandoregon.gov. You can also testify at the Design Commissioner hearing today (12/21 at 1900 SW 4th Avenue – 2nd Floor – Room 2500B) or at a follow-up hearing on January 25th.

(Thanks to Next Portland for the sleuthing on this one.)

(Note: This post didn’t initially make it clear that the concept drawing of the protected bikeway was created by PBOT. Sorry for the oversight and any confusion.)

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

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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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Andrew Kreps
Andrew Kreps
6 years ago

14th ave is, end to end, the worst bicycle-infrastructure enabled street I’ve ridden in the city core. I never use the bike lane, it’s too dangerous. I’d welcome the addition of actual protections here.

Zach
Zach
6 years ago

This is amazing! Absolutely top-notch infrastructure. When people see how great this block is and how terrible other blocks are in comparison, maybe it’ll create some urgency to replicate it again and again. This is a world-class bike lane.

SafeStreetsPlease
SafeStreetsPlease
6 years ago

Finally, a world class, SAFE proposal from the city! Oh wait… from a developer?!?!? And that, in a nutshell, is why I’m so frustrated with PBOT. This is the caliber of design that PBOT should be pumping out citywide. Not painted lines and occasional bollards that are constantly ran over. I’ll take it where we can get it I guess, but how amazing would it be if PBOT was this visionary and assertive?

Momo
Momo
6 years ago

That design actually came from PBOT.

Zach
Zach
6 years ago
Reply to  Momo

Glass half full: This quality of infra doesn’t exist *anywhere* downtown (unless you include Moody). This bike lane, AKA showing people what’s possible, is a fantastic first step to building political will.

maccoinnich
6 years ago
Reply to  Zach

Given that this is unlikely to be built for at least 2-3 years, I really hope it isn’t a first step.

MJS
MJS
6 years ago
Reply to  Momo

That’s actually what concerns me the most: Would this be part of an entire street redesign, or is this just going to be for one block? When Amazon paid for protected bike lanes for their Seattle offices, it was only for the three blocks of 7th Street on the land they owned. This left most of 7th and the surrounding areas without any other infrastructure to get to the bike lanes.

Inconsistent infrastructure from block to block can be more frustrating than no infrastructure improvements at all.

Chris Bassett
Chris Bassett
6 years ago

So unless your neighborhood is gentrifying, good luck getting developers to pay for improved bike facilities. The smart growth coalition wins again.

maccoinnich
6 years ago
Reply to  Chris Bassett

Over the last 10 years developers have paid PBOT $75 million in Systems Development Charges. Those are used to build capital projects all over the city, and neighborhoods like the Pearl that see a huge amount of development generate a really large proportion of those fees.

In this particular case the developer will probably contribute somewhere over $400,000 to the citywide SDC fund, in addition to the ~$250,000 they’re spending on the transportation improvements immediately adjacent to their site. The developer can absorb that cost because they’re building a 10 story building with 78 apartments and about 30,000 sq of office space (on the same amount of land taken up by four single houses in an R5 zone).

Maybe if other neighborhoods stopped freaking out over 4 story buildings on their main streets and allowed the kind of density that the Pearl allows they’d find that developers could afford to build protected bike lanes there too.

Doug
Doug
6 years ago
Reply to  maccoinnich

Exactly.!

Jason H
Jason H
6 years ago

Wish we could get the infrastructure without building another viewless glass and aluminum canyon. Seems like any block in the Pearl with buildings only a few stories has it’s days numbered. Might as well re-name it NoWa since it’s starting to look just like the South Waterfront. The West side will soon be a wall of glass from Ross Island to NW Kittridge. But I’m just a curmudgeon who remembers nighttime urban biking the train yards under the Lovejoy viaduct columns up to Bridgeport brewery, back when you could only grab a slice of pizza to go with your beer.

maccoinnich
6 years ago

I listened the audio of yesterday’s Design Commission hearing. The Commission was strongly in support of the proposed right-of-way improvements, and other unrelated changes the architect made since their first hearing. This project will almost certainly be approved in January, with a condition requiring that these upgrades to NW 14th be incorporated into the Public Works Permit.

Todd Boulanger
Todd Boulanger
6 years ago

Does anyone know if this new intersection will also prohibit “right turn on red” once it is constructed?

Social Engineer
Social Engineer
6 years ago
Reply to  Todd Boulanger

Yes, that’s standard practice in the MUTCD and I trust that it would the case here as well.

q
q
6 years ago

This is quibbling, because the improvements sound great. But I’ve always questioned the idea of height bonuses for things unrelated to building massing.

When the zoning code states a height limit, it’s really saying, “This is the tallest building that’s appropriate for this location”. If a developer says, “We’d like to build four stories taller, and in return we’ll make the massing of the building narrower, which will mitigate the negative impacts of blocking light and views that the taller building will have” that to me makes some sense to grant extra height, because of the direct mitigation.

But bike infrastructure (or affordable units, or artwork or most things the zoning code will accept for bonus granting) are unrelated to height, so granting height bonuses for them means the code is saying, “This is the tallest building that’s appropriate for the site, but go ahead and make yours taller”.

But there are benefits to the bonus system. So instead of the code saying, “This is the height limit, but you can go higher if you provide amenities from our bonus list”, it would seem better to set the height limit higher (the highest that can be achieved through bonuses) and say, “This is the height limit, but you can only build that high if you provide amenities from our list”.

Again, it’s quibbling, because the resulting development would be the same, but I think that’s a more honest, logical approach.

chris m
chris m
6 years ago
Reply to  q

To add to this I also think that any system that relies on an ad hoc determination of whether the “give” for the bonus is sufficient opens up huge opportunities for corruption, or at least for the people who approve the bonuses to steer money to their pet projects. There are a lot of cases where giving smart bureaucrats the discretion to make decisions on what’s best for the city are good. I don’t think it makes sense for them to be deciding which developers’ urban design plan (whether that’s a bike lane or a park or whatever) is a sufficient payoff for the city to permit a taller building. It would really seem to invite a sort of corruption where the developers need to curry even more favor to the zoning board than normal.

maccoinnich
6 years ago
Reply to  q

At 148′-6″ to top of parapet the project is almost maxing out the 150′ of height that’s allowed on that site (for now; next year the allowable height will probably go up to 250′). In this case 90′ of the height limit is earned automatically, and the remaining 60′ allowable height is at the discretion of the Design Commission. The zoning code explicitly allows them to approve additional height in this locaiton if they find that the “increased height will result in a project that better meets the applicable design guidelines”. I’m only pointing this out to make it clear that nothing is being proposed that’s beyond the zoning that is already in place for the site.

The connection is admittedly a little tenuous, but in this case the developer is saying that with the extra height they’re willing to do something that wouldn’t otherwise be required, and that thing meets a number of the design guidelines in ways not typically seen in other developments.

maccoinnich
6 years ago

This project was approved on January 14th, with a conditions that require the protected bike lane to built as part of the project.

Drawings:

http://efiles.portlandoregon.gov/Record/11586705/File/Document

Final Findings and Decision by the Design Commission:

https://www.portlandoregon.gov/bds/article/672491