Bike lanes were requested on Hammersley by the Orchard Ridge Neighborhood
Association in October of 2010.  

 

The goal was to connect the bike lanes on Hammersley west of Whitney Way to
the SW Bike Trail.  Hammersley is 36-feet wide and cars were using the road
as a 4-lane roadway.  Furthermore, morning and evening commuters were
catching the sun which further increased random vehicle lateral movement
across the pavement width.  There was very little parking on Hammersley, in
part because residents considered it a bit risky, and in part because the
houses are on large lots with a 50 foot setbacks.

 

The Neighborhood Association shared the plans with its members on numerous
occasions and TE notified property owners before installation.

 

Because of the width, a parking lane was retained on west-bound side
(north-side) and a bike lane was placed on the east - bound side
(south-side).  We believe that biking numbers have increased since the
installation.  

 

I traveled Hammersley this afternoon.  The recent wind and rain events have
dropped leaves, branches, some limbs and nuts onto the street.  There are
several locations, particularly in the section from Whitney to Gilbert where
black walnuts litter the bike lanes.  (Black walnuts are not a standard
street tree.)  

I have copied Al Schumacher, Street Superintendent and request that the curb
lines be swept.  

 

 

Larry D. Nelson, P.E.

 

1506 Cameron Drive

Madison, WI  53711

608 630 6532 (C)

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of India Viola
Sent: Friday, September 30, 2011 2:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bikies] bike lanes on Hammersley Road

 

I would assume that the lanes were added because intuitively (but apparently
not always empirically) bike lanes would appear to be a beneficial addition
for any busy street that doesn't already have them.  Now we see that that
ain't necessarily so.  This is a really good example of getting extremely
helpful feedback from the end-user (Eric White) and having a flexible
protocol so that we don't throw the bike lanes out with the bath water.
Sounds like if bike lanes are to be functional on Hammersely they need to be
buffered, or else there needs to be adequate signage and education that lets
drivers know that bikes can and should take the non-bike traffic lane on any
shared street when it's the safest thing to do.

-India

 

On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 1:47 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

That's a shame to hear. I used to bike a couple times a week on that section
and never had any issues with cars. I'd love to hear the reasoning behind
why the lanes were added. Is the city anticipating an increase in auto
traffic?

 

Kathryn Kingsbury

www.kathrynkingsbury.com <http://kathrynkingsbury.wordpress.com> 
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/kathrynkingsbury
Skype: kathryn.kingsbury

 

 

  _____  

From: Eric White <[email protected]>
To: bikies <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, September 30, 2011 12:33:59 PM
Subject: [Bikies] bike lanes on Hammersley Road


Every day I ride into work I'm happy to be pedaling down the SW path
and I'm thrilled with the amount of riding I can do on paths both in
the city and surrounding area.  That said, one new bike lane where
previously there was none has actually made my commute worse, and, I
believe, more dangerous.

Painted bike lanes were recently added to Hammersley Road south of the
beltline between the bike/ped overpass and Gilbert Road.  The
westbound lane isn't bad. It's a separate lane several feet out from
the curb.  The eastbound lane is a different story.  The bike lane,
such as it is, is really just the space between the stripe indicating
the right edge of the auto lane and the curb.

The problem here is that even in the best conditions where the gutters
are completely free of debris, I'm not sure there's a full three feet
of clearance available between a car (much less a city bus) and my
left side.  In reality, where this part of the road is covered in
debris, as it has been for the last several weeks, I need to ride a
couple of feet out from the curb and this puts my near or in the new
"car lane."  Now that these stripes exist cars and buses seem to think
they need to stay in their lane and bikes need to stay in theirs.
I've had buses blow past me just inches to my left.  I've ridden this
stretch of road almost daily for several years and haven't been honked
at until these stripes were laid.  I'm assuming I'm getting honked at
because drivers no believe I'm out in "their" lane when I'm avoiding
debris in the "bike lane."

Arthur, can you or anyone else comment on this design?  Has anyone
else had any trouble here?  I no longer ride east-bound here and
instead travel on other neighborhood streets down to Reetz and then go
north to Hammersley and the bridge to the SW path.

Thanks,

Eric White
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