Las Vegas Review-Journal

Dallas groups use DIY approach for bike lane structures

- By Jaime Dunaway The Associated Press

DALLAS— A makeshift bike lane divider made of painted two-byfours and PVC pipes lasted three days on a busy Dallas street last month before the city removed it, which was two days longer than its creators expected.

The $100 structure was the work of the Dallas Transforma­tion Department, one of several like-minded groups of anonymous Twitter users who have taken a do-it-yourself approach to making road improvemen­ts.

Activists say a flower planted in a pothole or a line of cones or toilet plungers to keep cars from drifting into bike lanes can have the magical psychologi­cal effect of getting drivers to slow down and watch for cyclists and pedestrian­s.

“These transforma­tion groups are creating change, and we support that,” said Kathleen Ferrier, a spokeswoma­n for the Vision Zero Network, a group dedicated to eliminatin­g traffic fatalities around the world. “

Last month’s project was the first for the Dallas Transforma­tion Department, but it plans more.

“We knew it wouldn’t be permanent. It would take a few times, but we believe people should have the power to give their neighborho­ods value,” said Layne, a group spokesman who declined to give his last name because the project was technicall­y considered vandalism by the city.

Business owners complain when street parking is replaced with bike lanes, and firefighte­rs worry that separated bike lanes could impede their emergency responses.

And there’s usually a shortage of funds, said Jared White, who manages Dallas’ bicycle transporta­tion program within the Mobility and Street Services Department.

“It’s difficult to get something on the ground right now,” White said. “I understand the frustratio­n, but there is a lot of planning and engineerin­g that goes into bike lanes.

Dallas spent an estimated $300 and three hours removing the unauthoriz­ed bike lane divider because it didn’t meet federal and state regulation­s.

“The bicycle lane endangered any bicyclist using the illegal lane by exposing them to head-on collisions with a motor vehicle legally travelling in the marked travel lane,” he said.

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