Chicago Sun-Times

CDOT outlines transporta­tion upgrades on Goose Island

- BY JESSICA MA, STAFF REPORTER jma@suntimes.com | @JessicaGra­ceMa

The city plans to overhaul a milelong section of Division Street over Goose Island with new bridges, protected bike lanes and more leftturn lanes. But bikers expressed concerns about how some of the proposals would affect their safety.

The project, expected to last over the next two years, aims to address the deteriorat­ion of two bridges — one on Division Street and the other on Chicago Avenue. The project will improve vehicular and pedestrian access, while providing bicycle accommodat­ions.

“Now would be the time to develop a structure that meets Complete Streets standards and is kind of the gold standard of what a bikeable bridge in this case can be,” said Dave Simmons, the executive director of Ride Illinois.

According to the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, Complete Streets are streets designed and operated to enable safe use and support mobility for all users. Those include people of all ages and abilities, regardless of whether they are driving, walking, cycling, or using public transporta­tion.

The Chicago Department of Transporta­tion previously outlined plans to improve bikeabilit­y by adding 150 miles of new and upgraded bikeways. Of Chicago’s 4,000 miles of streets, one-tenth have protected bike lanes, neighborho­od greenways, off-street trails or other on-street bikeways, the agency said.

The city proposes adding concrete-protected bike lanes along the section of Division Street that currently does not have any. These lanes would connect to the existing bike network on Clybourn Avenue, Halsted Street and Elston Avenue, CDOT said.

“The project includes many improvemen­ts to enhance safety for people using modes of transporta­tion, including pedestrian refuge islands, traffic signal modernizat­ion, wider sidewalks, new bike lanes, improved lighting and more,” CDOT said in a statement.

Paths along the new bridges will have buffered bike lanes. Alex Perez, a representa­tive of Active Transporta­tion Alliance, said that without concrete barriers, safety remains a concern.

Perez suggested guardrails as an alternativ­e, which he said offer better physical protection from vehicles steering into the bike lane.

There will also be pavement markings with symbols and arrows to delineate bike lanes across intersecti­ons. Pavement markings will be green to reinforce biker priority, according to a CDOT presentati­on from a community meeting.

“Visibility does help,” Perez said. “It makes it clear for drivers where the bike lane is.”

Biking advocates also raised concerns about potential collisions with proposed traffic lanes. Kyle Lucas, a representa­tive of Better Streets Chicago, said the transition lane from Division Street to Elston Avenue is “unacceptab­le” because drivers take a “wide, sweeping turn,” instead of a tighter one.

“It honestly feels like deja vu,” Lucas said. “We just had to have some very similar conversati­ons like this around the Chicago and Halsted intersecti­on.”

To offer input on the project, Chicagoans can email the CDOT by April 26.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Aerial view looking northeast across Goose Island along Ogden Avenue. Two older bridges on the island will be replaced and new bike lanes added.
SUN-TIMES FILE Aerial view looking northeast across Goose Island along Ogden Avenue. Two older bridges on the island will be replaced and new bike lanes added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States