DOT Adds Delivery Zones to Tackle Church Avenue Double Parking
The fight for scarce street space is always fierce in New York City, and as DOT's efforts to install bike and bus lanes across the city have revealed, the most contested zone of all is probably the curbside. On commercial streets, drivers can't get enough of the underpriced on-street parking while businesses want curbside access to load and unload deliveries. The result is rampant double-parking, cruising, and ultimately congestion -- slowing down buses and creating more dangerous conditions for pedestrians and cyclists. In some cases, local displeasure about curbside dysfunction manifests itself as opposition to seemingly unrelated livable streets improvements, like the Fifth Avenue bike lane in Park Slope.
December 16, 2010
The Evolution of PlaNYC: Transit, Tight Budgets, and the Sheridan
Last week Streetsblog sat down with David Bragdon, the new head of the city's Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability, to talk about next year's update of PlaNYC. A new version of the city's sustainability plan is set to be released on Earth Day, 2011 (that's April 22), revising the 2007 roadmap for a city that prioritizes transit, biking, and walking.
December 15, 2010
The Evolution of PlaNYC: Q&A With NYC Sustainability Chief David Bragdon
Back in August, Mayor Bloomberg appointed David Bragdon to succeed Rohit Aggarwala as head of the city's Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability. At the time, Bragdon was the elected leader of Portland's regional government, Metro, and an influential decision maker in that region's famously progressive planning. Sustainable transportation advocates on both coasts said New York was lucky to get him.
December 14, 2010
NYC Bike Count Continues Upward Trend in 2010 With 13 Percent Growth
Another year, another double-digit increase in the city's cyclist count. DOT estimates that the number of cyclists riding into the center of the city jumped up 13 percent in 2010, continuing a three-year pattern of rapid growth [PDF].
December 10, 2010
City Council Jacks Riverside Center Parking Supply Back Up to 1,500 Spaces
Council Member Gale Brewer has struck a deal on the Riverside Center mega-development, sending the 2,500-apartment project through two City Council committees and on a track to final approval. The deal increases the number of parking spaces allowed at Riverside Center to 1,500, far more than the community board or even the City Planning Commission had approved.
December 9, 2010
New PPW Results: More New Yorkers Use It, Without Clogging the Street
On the heels of Brad Lander's survey showing that a whopping 78 percent of interested Brooklyn residents want to keep the traffic calming Prospect Park West bike lane, DOT has released still more data [PDF] showing that the new street design keeps New Yorkers safer and helps them get where they're going.
December 8, 2010