Archive for the 'Walkability' Category

Go Metro! But Don’t Step in Anything!

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Hollywood/Western Bus Stop

Written by Stephen Box, Hollywood Resident and Bike Activist http://SoapBoxLA.blogspot.com

One of the simplest things we can do to support mass transit in our community is to make sure that transit stops are comfortable, clean, safe and aesthetically pleasing. it seems like a no-brainer that if we want people to become transportation solutions by getting out of their cars we’ve got to make the choice attractive and at least competitive in terms of convenience and comfort.

Unfortunately, we’re far off the mark.

The Metro has its focus on getting people from point A to point B. As for the transit stop amenities, the “no-man’s land” approach from the Metro and the local authorities leaves the average mass transit patron feeling like a second class citizen.

The Metro holds that the City is responsible for the streets, the sidewalks and the amenities along the way. The City looks at the wear and tear on the transit heavy streets and asks the Metro for maintenance money and the standoff starts. Meanwhile, transit patrons throughout the City of Los Angeles stand on narrow, filthy sidewalks, looking for little respect.

The Metro holds that the sidewalks are not their responsibility and that the City is responsible for street furniture. The City turns and contracts out with CBSDecaux who then installs bus shelters with advertising, paying the City for the privilege. The money is split so that our City Councilmembers all end up controlling some of this revenue, ideally to be spent within the respective Council District.

CBSDecaux provides everything from the traditional bus shelter shown above to the automated public toilets (APTs) such as the one located at the Santa Monica and Vermont Red Line station. Along the way they put up advertising, on the bus shelters and on two and three sided sidewalk-sized kiosks and billboards.

Missing from this relationship is a simple commitment to supporting mass transit with an overall plan for streetscape beautification, a plan that would improve the aesthetic of the neighborhood, complement the local architecture and streetlife and encourage pedestrians and transit patrons.

The picture above is of a bus shelter on Hollywood Boulevard at Western. It sits on a narrow sidewalk, forcing pedestrians to squeeze past. The sidewalk is sticky, the area smells and the solid wall of the shelter hides the activities on the other side. It’s evident here that the standards for architectural security are non-existent, that the placement of transit stops is not part of a larger commitment to mass transit and that maintenance is low priority.

The sidewalk just beyond this shelter is sinking, leaving two plates that don’t line up. A simple misstep results in a tumble as pedestrians squeeze past the shelter and passengers who are jockeying for their bus.

On the west side of Western, the sidewalk is not just uneven and patched with asphalt, it has a meter hole covered with plywood.

At least mass transit passengers suffer no delusions of equality. It’s painfully apparent that in the grand scheme of things, mass transit is for people who have no choice. It’s evident that it’s a bare-bones service for those who can’t afford a car. A comfortable, walkable environment that is safe and pleasant is not something to be wasted on a public street.

It’s a sad commentary on our community that the most popular streetscapes are fake, created by developers who study Great Streets and then imitate them, drawing people in cars to the Grove, Americana and CityWalk, all so people can walk on faux boulevards. enjoying something they should be able to find in their own neighborhoods; walkable streets.

As for our neighborhood, it’ll change when we work together and demand big sidewalks, clean sidewalks, street furniture and a commitment to making our streets pedestrian oriented.

“See you on the Streets!”

“I’m walking here! I’m walking here!”

Monday, January 5th, 2009

Hollywood Farmers Market

Written by Stephen Box, Hollywood Resident and Bike Activist http://SoapBoxLA.blogspot.com

A writer friend once told me that the simplest cure for writer’s block was to simply “Go for a walk!” I’ve tried  it and it works, especially here in Hollywood. Within a few steps one is guaranteed to find adventure, sometimes good, sometimes bad, but always exciting.

Yesterday was no different as I set out on foot to the Hollywood Farmers’ Market. It was a beautiful day, I ran into old friends, and I discovered the Coffee Cellar which specializes in organic, shade grown, and fair trade certified coffees. I love this neighborhood!

I also took some time to wander around and to ask the simple question “What would make this a more walkable neighborhood?” The streets were full of people walking, riding their bikes, shopping, waiting for the bus, hanging out, parking cars, parking more cars and circling the block looking for parking so they could also park their cars. There were great moments of hope but then there were moments when I was confronted by  one of the “traffic moats” that separate the casual walkers from the committed.

As I stood at Hollywood & Vine and looked up at the W Hotel project I thought back to all of the community planning meetings when the CRA, the LADOT, the Planning Department, the Council office staff and lots of consultants and experts from the Developer’s team presented the plans for the project, a fairly significant and ambitious project!

I remember lots of discussions of traffic mitigation, auto parking, street widening, intersection engineering, signal timing and capacity for motor vehicles. But try as I might, I could not remember any discussion of evaluating the project in terms of walkability.

It’s too bad because the City’s Planning Department has a great tool called the “Walkability Checklist” that helps the community and the developers evaluate a project in terms of its impact on the “walkability” of the immediate neighborhood. I think we should be using it.

Rick Cole, the City Manager of Ventura and one of America’s leading new Urbanists, shook up developers and residents alike when he drew a big circle around Ventura’s downtown and declared it the “walkable zone.” First and foremost, people can walk safely and efficiently within that zone. Other modes are then incorporated but never at the expense of the safety and efficacy of walking as a mode of transportation.

Quoting Greek Essayist Plutarch, Ventura’s General Plan now declares “A city, like a living thing, is a united and continuous whole.”

As for Hollywood, I think we could benefit from that kind of re-orienting or recommitment to the simplest and most basic mode of transportation, walking.

This is not to suggest that other modes aren’t important and essential to a thriving and vital community, In fact, they are, it’s simply a matter of repositioning human powered mobility as the starting point. It’s a commitment to a solution that isn’t based on the typical “either/or” proposals but instead holds for a higher standard that includes all modes as vital and viable and defines a sustainable community as one that works for everybody.

For too long, our City’s leaders have offered us choices based on false dichotomies. Recently during the budget discussions the uproar was over “Would you like to close the libraries or cut back on police?” This was followed by the “loss of access to our parks or reduced fire department” and through it all the LADOT is notorius for offering communities the “Would you like to move cars or would you like to move people?”

As I finished my walk, I was resolute. I want it all! Either/or options are for mediocre communities and I want Los Angeles to be a Great City!

I want streets that work for mass transit, for private autos, for cyclists and yes…even in LA…for pedestrians. I want Great Streets! I want streets that are clean, graffiti free, interesting and vital, filled with wide sidewalks and bike racks, street furniture and trees. I want to be able to cross those streets without having to fear for my life and I want to see lots of wide-eyed, sun-burned tourists carrying dog-eared guide books, all walking up and down the streets of Hollywood and I want to smile, acknowledging their conformation that the streets of Hollywood are truly walkable.

I don’t think this is too much to ask for, after all, this is Hollywood and we are surrounded by the most creative and talented people in the world. All that’s missing is vision and commitment.

Who’s in?

p.s. If you’d like to look at the Walkability Checklist from the City Planning Department, you can download it here.