…because he’s riding to work! Our very own City Commissioner Sam Adams was recently spotted at the Lloyd District Bike to Work Day Event.
(Thanks to Jessica Roberts of the BTA for the photo).
…because he’s riding to work! Our very own City Commissioner Sam Adams was recently spotted at the Lloyd District Bike to Work Day Event.
(Thanks to Jessica Roberts of the BTA for the photo).
The Monday Night Bike Race Series over at PIR (Porltand Int’l Raceway) is in its 18th year. Because of the wide-open course and sweeping turns, it’s a perfect place to get your first experience racing in a pack. They also make mentors and experienced racers available for questions and advice…if you’ve been thinking about jumping into competitive road racing, you can’t go wrong. I might even drag my desk-jockey self over there tomorrow night for a few laps.
The series is put on by Lakeside Bicycles.
There’s a $12 entry fee to race ($1 discount for not driving!)
Here’s a schedule.
And they’ve even got a website with all the info.
The folks over at the BTA will like this one. An interesting tool for getting a quick estimate on how much a certain bike facility would cost. (from Velorution)
From the homepage:
How much do bicycle facilities cost? Can we quantify their benefits? In what cases do estimates of benefits outweigh costs?
If your community is considering building a new bicycle facility you can use this tool to estimate costs, the demand in terms of new cyclists, and measured economic benefits (e.g., time savings, increased livability, decreased health costs, a more enjoyable ride, decreased pollution).
The folks over at the BTA will like this one. An interesting tool for getting a quick estimate on how much a certain bike facility would cost. (from Velorution)
From the homepage:
How much do bicycle facilities cost? Can we quantify their benefits? In what cases do estimates of benefits outweigh costs?
If your community is considering building a new bicycle facility you can use this tool to estimate costs, the demand in terms of new cyclists, and measured economic benefits (e.g., time savings, increased livability, decreased health costs, a more enjoyable ride, decreased pollution).
The folks over at the BTA will like this one. An interesting tool for getting a quick estimate on how much a certain bike facility would cost. (from Velorution)
From the homepage:
How much do bicycle facilities cost? Can we quantify their benefits? In what cases do estimates of benefits outweigh costs?
If your community is considering building a new bicycle facility you can use this tool to estimate costs, the demand in terms of new cyclists, and measured economic benefits (e.g., time savings, increased livability, decreased health costs, a more enjoyable ride, decreased pollution).
From Velorution, Having a valet stash your bike at the stadium? Priceless
Some “bike guy” is doing a bike valet service at SBC Park in San Francisco. How cool is that? I can definitely see this happening at PGE Park and The Rose Garden.
Last week I posted some bad news regarding how the new St. Johns Bridge isn’t looking too good on the bike-friendly scale. But at the same meeting I learned about the bridge I also heard Portland bike-czar Roger Geller present his plans to make some exciting bike accessibility improvements to Marine Drive. Playing with some serious grant money, Roger and his crew will work to create a seamless and safe pedaling experience on Marine Drive from Kelly Point Park along the Columbia all the way to the Gresham border.
In other news…
On a tip from the Oregonian’s Jonathan Nicholas…PDX Airport and the Port of Portland are teaming up to increase bike and ped access to the airport. According to the official press release (PDF):
Once completed, the improvements will provide a convenient bicycle and pedestrian path between the airport, Cascade Station, and regional bike paths and roadways. Facilities for locking bikes are already in place at the airport. However, the project will also install a new secured bike parking area for airport workers at the north end of the lower roadway near Concourse E. Additional work, in coordination with the City of Portland, will improve sidewalks and crosswalks and install bike lanes along a portion of Northeast 82nd Avenue between Northeast Alderwood Road and Northeast Air Cargo Road.
Sounds great to me. Now, which ambitious bikey entrepreneur will start a pedal-powered airport shuttle service!
Two tempting events tonight. First, the BTA is hosting bike lawyer Ray Thomas at their downtown office for a legal clinic. Or, if you’d rather get muddy on your mountain bike, join the Portland United Mountain Pedalers (AKA PUMP) for a spirited jaunt through Forest Park. Details below…
BTA’S LEGAL CLINIC
Tonight at 6pm, BTA office, 717 SW 12th Ave
Join BTA staff and Portland bike lawyer Ray Thomas for an evening of delving into Oregon law as it applies to cyclists. With more than 20 years of experience working with cyclists in sticky situations, Ray’s knowledge about the ins and outs of the law will help you to understand your rights, responsibilities and resources as a cyclist.
Please RSVP to: info@bta4bikes.org or 503.226.0676 x10.
PUMP RIDE IN FOREST PARK
Meet at the Thurman Gate, 5:30 sharp. All skill levels welcome, no one gets left behind!
This summer, why not use your legs to make some money out on the streets…(get your mind out of the gutter!) I’m talking good, clean, wholesome bike fun commerce. How about a bicycle ice cream cart seen recently for sale on Craigslist?
Or how about this bicycle powered blender? Don’t laugh, I saw these guys at the recent Sea Otter Bike Festival and people loved it…they were making some serious cash.
While attending Tuesday’s meeting of the Portland Bicycle Advisory Committee I learned that ODOT has decided to give the St. Johns Bridge 2 lanes in each direction instead of a bike-friendly alternative suggested by traffic-flow consultants and local bicycle planners. With 2 lanes in each direction, there is not adequate room for bicycles.
At issue is whether or not accommodating bicycle traffic would hurt the freight capacity of the bridge. This issue was explored in a comprehensive study that showed putting 4 lanes on the bridge would not increase freight capacity. However, despite the findings of the study, it seems ODOT has made a decision that shows a complete disregard for cyclists and will make crossing the St. Johns Bridge by bike much more dangerous.
When will truckers realize that if more people were on bikes they could move their freight around much more quickly?!
Now, all that’s left is to fight for making the sidewalk (which is not going to be wide enough for bikes either) and the traffic lane as safe as possible for bikes.
I guess we’ll have to be satisfied with a bit of paint in the lane and a sign…gee, I feel safer already.
Two great sites to help find your way…
Just came across this site with 5 classic rides in and around Portland; Sauvie Island, Springwater Corridor/Eastbank Esplanade, Mount Tabor & Rocky Butte, Blue Lake, and West Hills. Here’s the link:
Experience Oregon – Five Great Bike Rides in Portland [from Kathy Belge, Oregon.com]
This next site is new and pretty exciting…it’s the Ride Oregon Wiki.
What’s a wiki? (good question). A wiki is a website that anyone can edit and add to. This means the Ride Oregon Wiki is constantly growing as riders add their favorite rides and add comments to existing routes. Also, if you’re savvy to RSS you can even subscribe to the feed and have new routes automatically sent to your reader. Very cool.
Nice ride with the family yesterday…went down the Esplanade to the Goodwill in SE. While checking out the books I saw an issue of VeloNews with a boyish Lance Armstrong on the cover smiling after his 2nd Tour de France win…probably should have bought it, but I didn’t.
From the Goodwill we cruised over to quite possibly the nicest bike shop in the world…River City. Walking among the overwhelming assortment of luxurious bike stuff and enticing espresso aroma, I realized what business experts mean when they talk about a “retail environment.”
From the glitz and glam of River City (were those Herman Miller desk chairs in their offices?) to the greasy underbellly of CityBikes, this town has a bike shop to suit every rider and every budget. [Check more shops on my links page]