Category Archives: LUCE

Meeting Tonight: Bicycle Action Plan presentation

Tonight: Monday 6:00 – 8:30pm
Lucy, Francie and Michelle will present the final draft of
the Bicycle Action Plan!

click image for full BAP .pdf document (large file)

You are invited to join us this evening, Deputy director Lucy Dyke, Francie Stefan and Michelle Glickert will join us to give a presentation of the Santa Monica Bicycle Action Plan - Final Draft, the schedule, implementation and opportunities for comments and input.

Presentation should start around 7:00pm

Please come ask your questions and give your input!

Plenty of bike parking in the courtyard – street parking, and city structures for autos

light refreshments served

 

Date: Monday, August 8th
Time: 
6:00pm
Location: 502 Colorado,
corner of 5th and Colorado, Santa Monica

Meeting, Monday Aug 8, Get a first look at the Bicycle Action Plan!

Santa Monica Deputy Director Lucy Dyke will join us as we get a first hand look at the proposed Bicycle Action Plan.

When:    Monday, August 8th
Time:      6:00 – 8:30pm
Where:   Colorado Community Room, 502 Colorado Blvd
corner of 5th and Colorado

Screen shot 2011 08 02 at 2 20 35 PM

Community Forum, Bring Bike Sharing to Santa Monica

Bike Share, A System for Santa Monica?
Community Forum co-hosted by Global Green and the Santa Monica Transportation Department

When:     Wednesday, July 20th
Where:    Santa Monica Civic, 1855 Main Street
Time:       6:00pm – 8:00pm
RSVP:      Carolyn Gibson at cgibson@globalgreen.org

 

Santa Monica has long defined itself as an environmental leader, in terms of biking, some feel the city is falling behind.  Cities around the world are prioritizing bicycling as a solution to alleviate traffic and gridlock, reduce carbon emissions and foster a healthier population: we want Santa Monica to be doing the same. A bike share program is a highly visible, all-inclusive way to spread awareness and interest in bicycling and to help Santa Monica reach its bicycle goals.

Bike sharing is a system in which numbers of bicycles are made available for shared use.  (A system the city already has in use for its employees)  As a non-profit environmental organization headquartered in Santa Monica, Global Green USA has worked with the city on various environmental endeavors that fits into its organizational goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions worldwide and foster sustainability in urban environments.  Following in that tradition, Global Green and the Santa Monica Transportation Department will co-host a community forum on July 20th to give the community a chance to learn about bike sharing, test out some of the latest models, and give input on how bike sharing could be right for Santa Monica.

Bicycle Action Plan Community Meeting

The next important step in the process to formulate Santa Monica’s Bicycle Action Plan is Monday, May 16th when the city will host a workshop for community input. Community input is essential for creating a Bicycle Acton Plan that will be effective and useful for residents and visitors to Santa Monica.

Free Bike Valet will be provided by the city.

Please spread the word, we look forward to seeing you there!

When:    May 16th
Time:      6:30pm to 8:30pm
Where:   Santa Monica Civic (east wing), 1855 Main Street

Ride your bike – bike valet will be provided.
The Civic Center is accessible by Big Blue Bus lines 2, 3, Rapid 3, 4, 7, 8, and 9.

Update: the meeting time has been corrected and will begin at 6:30pm



 

Important City Council Meeting Tonight

At tonight’s meeting they will discuss the projects in and around Downtown, including road diets and bike lanes. We need to show our support. It would be great if you can attend, or email your support to council@smgov.net

 

City Council Meeting Tonight:

When:     Tuesday , April 12, 2011 at 6:30pm
Where:   Santa Monica City Hall, 1685 Main Street,
City Council Chambers, Rm 213

We need to show support for the plans that will bring new business to the downtown on bikes if the infrastructure is provided.  See the plans here and the agenda here.

Executive Summary

The success of the Downtown and Civic Center relies on the strength and connectivity of pedestrian, vehicle, bicycle and transit networks. Significant improvements are underway with the Expo Light Rail, Palisades Garden Walk, the Village, recently-completed Santa Monica Place and other major private and public projects. The increased desirability of the Downtown and Civic Center will bring residents and visitors alike to the area for recreation, shopping, cultural events or work. The Expo terminus itself will serve thousands of daily light-rail passengers and become a center of activity that alters circulation patterns. The ability to successfully adapt and provide strong access to and around the Downtown/Civic Center on foot, bicycle, transit and in a vehicle is necessary to support this as a center of activity and primary business destination, and to advance the key LUCE principle of “No Net New Peak PM Trips.” Achieving this vision will guarantee that the Downtown continues to produce high economic benefit with comparatively low traffic impacts relative to other similar destinations in Southern California.

The following recommended bicycle facilities and intersection improvements have been defined under the RDA Expo Green Streets category.

  • 2nd Street: Create continuous bike lanes on 2nd Street from Colorado to Montana, to connect with the Main Street bike lane at Colorado. This would create a long-distance north-south connection, and alternative to Ocean Avenue which some bicyclists feel is too busy with motor vehicles and buses. These bike lanes would be provided in Downtown by implementing by reducing through lanes from 4 to 2, with left turn lanes at most locations. Capacity exists on Ocean Avenue if this results in some shift of vehicles from 2nd to Ocean.
  • 6th and 7th Streets: Create new 6 foot bicycle lanes with a 3 foot buffer zone on 6th Street while maintaining parking on both sides and a vehicle travel lane in each direction, and create a continuous bicycle lane through intersections on 7th Street accommodated by eliminating left turn lanes at intersections.
  • 4th Court Connection from Expo Station to Broadway: Install wayfinding signs and shared lane markings to direct bicyclists from Colorado to Broadway using the alley between 4th and 5th Street. This completes a gap in the network, and will be critical as a link from the Esplanade and Expo Station to Broadway, which provides connectivity to much of the rest of the city.
  • Broadway: Upgrade bike access along and connections to Broadway, which will become a primary bicycle connection to the Expo Regional bike path terminating at 17th Street. In Downtown, reinforce the shared use of the transit lanes in the westbound direction, reconfigure existing lanes to provide an eastbound bicycle lane, and the improve intersection treatments adjacent to the bicycle transit center.