Green Lake and Wallingford paving projects are a chance to make major bike network improvements
A series of planned paving projects in Green Lake and Wallingford are a big chance to make significant improvements to the North Seattle bike network. And of course, the city could save a lot of money by making these improvements at the same time the streets are being torn-up for paving, anyway.
The collection of paving projects represents a new approach the city is taking for handing paving work. Instead of making each streets its own project (with its own public outreach and contract bids), SDOT is grouping nearby projects together and beginning outreach on the group of projects earlier.
SDOT is hosting an open house 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m. Wednesday at Green Lake Elementary. They will also host a drop-in session 10 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. June 10 at Billings Middle School. An online open house will go live Wednesday (so stay tuned for that link).
While these streets won't actually be paved until 2019 or so, you have a chance to be heard early to make sure safe streets and key bike network connections are included from the start. This should be a much better process than the old way, where people would learn late in the design process that a paving project had neglected bike lanes. This happened on Roosevelt Way, for example, and it took a huge popular push and a lot of re-design work to add the bike lane to the project before work began.
Planned projects in this group include:
- N 40th St: Stone Way N to Latona Ave NE
- N 50th St: Phinney Ave N to Roosevelt Way NE
- Stone Way N: N 45th St to N 50th St
- E Green Lake Way N/E Green Lake Dr N: N 50th to Densmore Ave N
- Green Lake Dr N: Densmore Ave N to Aurora Ave N
- N 80th St: Aurora Ave N to I-5 overpass
This may also be a chance to finally make serious improvements to the terrible intersection of 50th/Stone/Green Lake Way. Today, it doesn't work for anyone. A radical solution might be needed"
For reference, here's the relevant section of the Bike Master Plan. As you can see, most the planned paving projects are slated for bike network improvements:
Blue=Protected bike lane. Green=Neighborhood Greenway. Orange=Painted or buffered bike lane. Red=Trail.