Showing posts with label Recreation and Parks Dept.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recreation and Parks Dept.. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2010

JFK Drive West-End to Feature Traffic-Calming Stripe


JFK Drive west-end striping will follow this model but without as much width

Solid stripe narrows and presumably slows vehicle traffic while giving space to cyclists

The now-smooth west end of JFK Drive from Crossover Drive to the Great Highway in Golden Gate Park will offer yet another benefit to bicyclists and motorists: a traffic-calming solid stripe that will narrow the traffic lane and, in some areas, create a de facto bike lane. The striping will be similar to the treatment on the east end of JFK, from Crossover to Stanyan, but with a much narrower roadway. In addition, the center line has been shifted to widen the lane in downhill portions of JFK to give cyclists more room and a better chance to avoid dooring. No parking will be removed as part of these enhancements. An extra benefit: as a traffic calming feature, the striping is not affected by the bicycle injunction.

According to Rick Thall, Project Manager for the Recreation and Parks Department, the east-bound lane of JFK from the Great Highway to Crossover will have a solid stripe outside the parking lane. This section of the roadway is narrower and does not permit similar treatment on both sides of the drive without removing the parking lane. Andy Thornley, SFBC Project Director, likened the treatment to a "floating bike lane" that permits safer bike passage where the road widens and when long stretches of the parking lane are unoccupied as often happens in the west end of the park.

The narrower traffic lane is intended to slow traffic through the park. That's an important feature since motorists might be tempted to drive faster on the newly-repaved surface. Last Wednesday a member of the Esquivel Construction crew that was completing the resurfacing of JFK suggested the park road "might become a freeway" once drivers no longer have to dodge suspension-wrecking potholes. Rec and Park hopes the new striping will keep that from happening.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

No Curb Party for JFK Drive West

JFK Drive west, one part of the contract is complete...

Dec. 30, 2009 JFK Drive and Transverse

Dec. 30, 2009 JFK Drive and Transverse

We like new curbs and pedestrian-friendly curb cuts and new corner sidewalks, but we're not going to stage a party along John F. Kennedy Drive west of Transverse until the job is done. We want the repaving curb-to- curb the full length of JFK Drive out to the Great Highway. The most recent deadline for work completion was December 31st. The re-surfacing has yet to begin.
What's the problem? Weather for one thing. Rick Thall, Project Manager for the Recreation and Park Department (RPD) explained in an email Dec. 23 that for a project of this scope the contractor needs six to seven days of dry weather to grind and pave: four days of dry weather before starting and then two to three days of no rain to remove the current pitted, rugged, much-cursed asphalt and then lay a new smooth, safe layer for about 1/2 mile in both east and west directions. If it doesn't rain from Dec. 31 through Jan. 4th with no rain on that day, then the repaving can begin. Hopefully.
Cheer the rain to help end the drought or bemoan the downpours for stalling the repaving? What are good bicylists, pedestrians, and motorists to do? Should a major repaving project that requires six days of dry weather to even start be scheduled for December?
We've posted so many times about the imminent resurfacing of JFK Drive West that we're not going to recount the story here (but, if you'd like, check these posts (Dec. 11th, Nov. 12th, Oct. 21st) for the delay in state funding, the unexplained down times, the implied contract issues, etc.
The resurfacing will happen, JFK will become safer, there will be a party. (repeat)