Author Archives: Daniel I. Patterson

About Daniel I. Patterson

Spatial Analyst, Transport Planner, Cyclist, Data Guy, MS Urban Transport from the University of Glasgow

City’s Request for Proposal to Refurbish Madison Avenue

The president of the Albany Bicycle Coalition (ABC), Lorenz Worden, sent me an email the other day which states,

Cyclists,

Word has it that there were responses to the city on the RFP [request for proposal] for the traffic study for “traffic calming” on Madison.  One more successful step . . .

Traffic Calming, Madison Ave, responses to the city, RFP… WTF?

I quickly jumped to the phone to ask Worden questions.  He told me that there is a committee of people called the Madison Avenue Traffic Calming Committee (MATCC), which he is a part of. MATCC is calling on the City of Albany to refurbish Madison Ave between Lark St and S. Allen St onto Western Ave until Manning Blvd.

The committee asks the city to reduce the number of lanes from four to two, install a third (middle) lane which may be used as a turning lane or emergency lane for quick response teams, an overhaul of the Madison and Western split at S. Allen, and amenities for cycling (bike lanes – yes please!) according to Virginia Hammer the ADHOC Chair of the MATCC.

MATCC lane removal request.

The project description from the City of Albany’s RFP states that the project, “is to determine the most effective multi-modal lane configuration for the Madison Avenue corridor between Lark Street and S. Allen Street as well as Western Avenue between S. Allen Street and Manning Boulevard.”

The city’s RFP asks bidding firms to be able to produce three traffic calming options.  “[The chosen firm] shall identify and evaluate a minimum of three (3) alternatives and recommend the best lane striping, signage and traffic signal treatments for this corridor.  The study must be based upon sound data and information on peak hourly/daily traffic distribution, street geometry, traffic signal operation, transit, pedestrian, and bicycle travel for Madison Avenue and its intersecting roadways.” This means that if traffic calming measures are installed- they may be separate from what the MATCC currently asks.

The city is clearly listening.

The RTP says, “All alternatives shall include and use potential options for traffic including but not limited to lane reduction or reassignment, improving motor vehicle safety, improving pedestrian access and safety, and improving/adding bicycle amenities on this corridor.”

Hammer says the projected cost of the study is near one hundred thousand dollars, funded by both the city of Albany and MATCC. MATCC procured approximately thirty thousand dollars from various entities. Worden says some of MATCC’s funds for the project have come from St. Rose College and Price Chopper.  The remaining seventy thousand from the city.

Possible redevelopment of split between Madison Ave and Western Ave.

Worden says that Madison Ave, “is a well known disaster zone,” “…with more  accidents in lower volume, compared to less accidents in more volume of Western Ave.”

The following firms have submitted proposals in response to the City’s RFP for Engineering Services – Madison Avenue Traffic Study/Road Diet Feasibility Study according to Hammer.

    • Greenman-Pedersen, Inc.
    • CHA Companies
    • Creighton Manning Engineering
    • Laberge Group
    • WSP – Sells
    • Barton & Loguidice P.C

    The initiative to redevelop the stretch between Lark and Manning is spear headed by the Madison Avenue Traffic Calming Committee, which is chaired by Virginia Hammer of the Pine Hill Neighborhood Association.

    The City of Albany’s Request for Proposal.

    The Pine Hills Neighborhood Association’s Powerpoint on Refurbishing Madison Ave.

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    Filed under Activism, Article, City Review

    Martin Luther King Day!

    I saw this post of my faceb.. stories feed (not news right?). I liked it because it’s a great tribute to Martin Luther King, cyclist style!

    NONVIOLENT TRANSPORTATION

    By: Ted Johnson

    Today is Martin Luther King Jr. Day. And I’m at work.

    (No, it’s not because I live in Arizona. We actually do have this holiday here — although you may remember that our state was notoriously reluctant to observe the holiday. Rather, it’s because of FedEx. I work for an online retailer, so if FedEx doesn’t have the day off neither do we.)

    With all my advanced Googling skills, I was unable to find a photo or quote that shed light on what Martin Luther King may have thought of bicycles. Perhaps he viewed them, as many people still do, as symbols of poverty, and inequality.

    Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. DenverMartin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Denver, Colo.

    But I’m thinking that somewhere in the complex mix of motivations I have for cycling rather than driving a car, is the belief that cycling is a relatively nonviolent form of transportation.

    As I am writing this, there is a customer in the showroom who is sharing his homicidal fantasies toward the person who stole his bike recently. So, obviously, not every cyclist is necessarily a believer in, or a practitioner of nonviolence.

    But, to state what should be obvious, when you bike, you are responsible for less environmental destruction than you would be were you in a car. When you bike you are less of a participant in the politics and economics of petroleum and their violent foreign policy implications.

    And then there’s the mere lethality of motor vehicles. I’m certainly glad that the homicidal customer currently in the shop will leave here on a bike — and not driving a one ton weapon.

    I get to bike home now.

    Happy Monday!

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    Filed under Article

    What is Spinning?

    I’m going to go ahead and dub winter season as spinning season in the Capital Region. There are lots of us who ride outside but many of us are spending our time indoors on a stationary bike. Today I spent two hours Spinning; grinding my teeth, slicing my legs like on a meat slicer, and sweating absolutely all over the bike (feeling bad for the person after me). This is Spinning – sometimes easy and sometimes hard. After I got out of the gym I took a look on the Times Union Bike Blog and came across a description of Spinning by Jay Holick.

    Jay writes,

    My daughter invited me to spin with her one night after work at the Spin Revolution, Clifton Park. While I was waiting for the class to begin and while I was stretching, I thought it would be interesting to Google “Spinning” on my smartphone and here is what I found…

    As I looked around, I discovered Spinning can actually be a very motivating workout for cyclists of all levels.

    The birth of Spinning.

    In 1991 John Baudhuin, President and CEO of Mad Dogg Athletics, teamed up with John G, who had spent time training for a cross-country cycling race. He was a new dad at the time and found it hard being away from his family to train. That experience sparked the idea for the Spinner bike and the Spinning program.

    Spinning could provide a safe place—away from roads and overly aggressive group riders—to build strength and stamina on the bike.

    Now the Spinning program is the global leader in indoor cycling training, education and equipment.

    What should you expect at a Spinning class?

    Both the equipment and the program are standardized, so you take expect the same format whether you take a class in New York or California. Workouts are 40 minutes long and all classes incorporate music to help motivate and inspire riders.

    Basic movements—from seated flats to standing climbs—are used to mimic outdoor riding positions, and instructors use universal cues to prompt their classes for changes in movement and hand position.

    Why Spin?

    Away from external distractions, Spinning classes allow the rider to focus on the workout, making it a great place to build endurance and confidence on the bike. Spinning® is also an incredibly efficient cycling workout, especially when you’re crunched for time. Who wouldn’t want to…?

    • Burn more calories in less time
    • Squeeze in a high quality workout in under an hour

    So, how do you get started?

    “Showing up is half the battle,” Anderson says. “Just go through the doors and let the endorphins kick in. The instructors empower you but, as with any good workouts, the real power comes from within. It’s a safe environment, so that allows you to turn up the intensity a bit and challenge yourself.”

    The only downside might be the addictive nature of the classes. “Once you start seeing results, that’s what will keep you coming back for more,” Anderson says.

    What about those intimidating instructors?

    “You are in complete control of your workout,” Anderson says. “The resistance is up to you so it will only be as challenging as you make it.”

    If you need to back off, Anderson suggests lowering the resistance to an easier cadence. She compares it to yoga where practitioners are encouraged to rest in child’s pose if they need a break.

    The instructors’ function is to direct and motivate you. So if you’re uncomfortable in a class or feel the pace is not one you care for, you should find a Spinnning class and instructor that suit your individual needs.

    Afterward, I discovered Spinning is not my cup of tea but I did see a lot of people really getting into it. So to them I say…Cycle On!”

    He’s right, Cycle On!  

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    Filed under Winter Cycling

    Video Tuesday! Why Bikes Rule

    Bike Rule

    Portland’s Bike Boulevards Become Neighborhood Greenways from Streetfilms on Vimeo.

    Why Bikes Rule:

    Race Day from ergon on Vimeo.

    Taco Tuesday :: Photography Ride from Kenny Ong on Vimeo.

    BIKE POLO TOURNAMENT – CPCV09 from Renaud Skyronka on Vimeo.

    Bike Polo Happens In Troy

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    Filed under Videos

    Video Tuesday!

    From the Bike Blog NYC, I’ve picked up this idea to post totally kick butt videos every Tuesday, (they post on Fridays). The idea of Video Tuesday is to take an otherwise regular, beginning of the week day, and make it totally amazing – by providing bike entertainment!

    So, on my search to find the most innovative, entertaining, mind blowing, and soul captivating videos – and being that it’s the start of 2012, I’ve decided to post videos of shear greatness from a year just passed.

    [2011 – VDLS 8] – Danny MacAskill – Way Back Home from Saturne on Vimeo.

    Vienna Air King 2011 – 2nd Day from Peak on Vimeo.

    Project Aura: Bicycle Safety Lighting System from Project AURA on Vimeo.

    GoPro HD: Kokanee Crankworx 2011- Red Bull Joyride from GoPro on Vimeo.

    Halloween ride in ChangSha city from Epique Magazine on Vimeo.

    ZOOBOMB (trailer) from SAMKLEPAV DIFERENT on Vimeo.

    Balance Bike JoJo takes on Toddler No-Pedal Racing from Balance Bike JoJo on Vimeo.


    …wow

    See you next Tuesday!

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    Filed under Videos