14th Street Corridor Draft Environmental Impact Statement
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As many of you may know, DOT, DDOT, VDOT, NPS and a bunch of other people are exploring redoing the 14th Street Bridge Corridor and have released a draft environmental impact statement for comment.
I have not been involved in this process and I have never responded to an EIS before. But as a SW biker, this corridor is very important to my commute.
I have drafted a response to the EIS. Feel free to steal from it, copy it, submit it yourself…. whatever.
As you may see, one of my major concerns is the east end of the bridge where bikes get “dumped” into the Jefferson Memorial and must attempt to cross Maine Ave. Let’s just say, its an area that could use improvement.
I have spent 3 hours on this and cant really afford to spend more. Sorry for typos or muffles. Again, please feel free to take it and improve it.
14th Street Bridge Corridor Draft EIS
Comments Due March 5
http://www.14thstreetbridgecorridoreis.com/deis.html
jack.j.vandop@fhwa.dot.gov
14thStreetinfo@kci.comThank you for the opportunity to comment on this EIS for the 14th Street Corridor.
Bicycle commuting is a growing means of transportation in the Washington D.C. area. Washington D.C., Arlington, VA, and Alexandria, VA have been identified as Bike Friendly Communities, and many of the businesses and federal agencies in the area have been identified as Bike Friendly Businesses. Bicycles crossing the 14th Street bridge come from Washington D.C., Arlington, Alexandria, Falls Church, Vienna, and Fairfax.
Executive Order 13514, Federal Leadership in Environmental, Energy, and Economic Performance (Oct. 5, 2009), calls on all federal agencies to reduce their greenhouse emissions by 28 percent. Pursuant to this EO, the Interagency Task Force on Bicycling and Active Transportation issued its report Implementing a Successful Bicycle and Active Commuting Program in the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area. The task force continues to promote cycling and active commuting.
In the mean time, Arlington County, Washington, D.C. and other jurisdictions have established the Capital Bikeshare program, a wildly successful short term bike rental program that has dramatically increased bicycle traffic in the area. http://www.capitalbikeshare.com/system-data
In short, bicycle traffic is an important part of our transportation system, and it is growing significantly.Bicycle traffic has a positive environmental impact. Bicycle traffic gets cars off the road, reduces green house gases, reduces petroleum debris that is dropped from motor vehicles, requires less infrastructure per transportation vehicle, and requires less upkeep expenses of that infrastructure over time (bikes do less damage to the transportation vehicle than far heavier cars, trucks, and buses).
For bicycle commuting to be effective, it must be safe and bicycle routes must be efficient. Cyclists are their own vehicle engines; while a car can easily go out of its way without taxing the human occupant, requiring cyclists to go out of their way do to poor route planning is demanding on the human engine, and greatly reduces the incentive to bike. Properly designed infrastructure is vital to successfully supporting bicycle commuting.
Likewise, while cars and trucks have elaborate safety features including large frames and airbags, cyclists are exposed. The risk of dangerous infrastructure is experience on cyclists immediately, through damage to their body. Since cyclists are so exposed to risk, safe cycling infrastructure is highly important to a successful bicycle transportation system.Current cycling infrastructure is becoming congested. During off peak, this past winter, cycling traffic was steady and regular. During peak season, bike paths become highly congested, with bicycle cues at intersections exceeding the car cues at the same intersection. Overcongested bicycle routes become dangerous as cycling traffic struggles to navigate overloaded routes.
We greatly applaud and support the consideration of bicycle infrastructure as an important part of the solution. Below are a number of suggestions supporting the goals of this EIS. These suggestions will help reduce congestion, enhance safety, and improve traffic operations in the Corridor. Improvements in the bicycle infrastructure can dramatically increase bicycle traffic over these routes.
There appears to be three final bicycle options under consideration. We support all of these options.
AA-1 Improve bicycle and pedestrian access to the Mason Bridge by making improvements at each end of the bridge
AA-2 Construct separated bicycle/pedestrian crossing of the Potomac River and add a grade-separated bicycle crossing of George Washington Memorial Parkway as proposed by Arlington County
AA-3 Create integrated (DC-VA-NPS) bicycle system, including signing for commuters and other destination bikersAA-1 Improve bicycle and pedestrian access to the Mason Bridge by making improvements at each end of the bridge.
Currently both ends of the bridge present problems and dangers to bicycle traffic.
Crossing the bridge East Side,
• Bicycles come to the end of the bridge and must navigate a very narrow path with a highway sign pole immediately in front of them. The pole is a danger and the path is too narrow to support two way traffic. The ground at the sign pole demonstrates that pedestrians and cycle traffic have taken to going over the ground, creating a dirt path, in order to avoid collisions on the narrow paved path.
• After the sign pole, the path continues to be narrow paved path, dumping into East Basin Dr on difficult 90 degree turns
• The curb cut into East Basin Dr is granite, which is slippery to bicycle traffic when went
• Bicycle traffic is now on East Basin Drive east bound, going the wrong way on a one way road (there is no alternative).
• After this one block, bicycle traffic goes up another problematic granite curb cut onto the sidewalk – placing cycling traffic in immediate and dangerous proximity to tourists.
• Currently bicycle traffic passes the Jefferson Memorial on this sidewalk, and reaches a constructions zone, which forces them back into the road. This is at the intersection of Ohio Dr. The curb cut here is granite which is slippery when wet.
• When bicycle traffic reaches Maine Ave, bicycle traffic confronts an almost impossible traffic situation.
• In the NW corner of the intersection, over Ohio Dr, there is no traffic signal at all. Traffic comes continuously from the north. Cyclists must simply jump gaps in rush hour traffic in the hope of not getting hit.
• To cross Maine Ave east bound, there is no pedestrian triggered light. Cycle traffic must simply wait for some car to trigger the light cycle.
• In the NE corner of the intersection is a ramp that goes under the US Financial Management Services. There is no pedestrian trigger for the cross walk. Pedestrians and cyclists can sit here for very long times waiting for the light to cycle; generally pedestrians and cyclists get frustrated and jump the light. When the light does turn to red, because of the odd and confusing placement of the light, car traffic on the ramp does not stop.
In sum, from the edge of the 14th street bridge to a successful crossing of Maine Ave is a gauntlet of poorly designed and dangerous traffic situations. To the experienced rider, this is dangerous. To the novice rider, this is confusing, frequently resulting is cyclist ending up in dangerous locations such as up on the 14th car traffic lanes.
In order to improve bicycle traffic at this end of the bridge, bicycles need to be provided a safe route all the way across Maine Ave, one that does not run them through tourist traffic.
Ideally bicycle traffic could follow the bridge infrastructure and reach the east side of Maine Ave without crossing roads or going through tourists. Just like Arlington’s recommendation for crossing the GW, the Maine Street crossing for bicycles should not be at grade.
We note that near Maine Ave and Ohio Drive currently is an old abandoned train bridge. While the train bridge has been reclaimed as a pedestrian traffic, it is all but unused because both sides of the bridge are problematic. One is a steep set of stairs (with a weak attempt at ADA compliance through an elevator thing). The other end, instead of placing you down on Maine Ave East side, deposits you up near the front door of the Mandarin Hotel. The bridge goes almost entirely unused and is wasted.
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