Miami Herald

Will deaths revive $500 million plan to improve bike safety on Rickenback­er?

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

Preventing cycling deaths was a prime driver in the $500 million blueprint to upgrade the Rickenback­er Causeway by bringing in a private developer and operator, an effort that stalled in January because it lacked political support.

Known as Plan Z and championed by architect and cycling enthusiast Bernard Zyscovich, the proposal would use higher toll revenues to fund safety improvemen­ts, including bike lanes separated from auto traffic.

Key Biscayne leaders opposed Zyscovich’s Plan Z, saying it did not provide adequate traffic solutions for the island community. In December, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava recommende­d canceling the bidding process that the county had launched for a private developer of the Rickenback­er. In January, commission­ers voted to end the bidding process.

The deaths of two cyclists Sunday on the Rickenback­er sparked calls for more immediate and long-term efforts to improve biking safety on the busy system of bridges connecting Key Biscayne with mainland Miami.

Backers of the Plan Z effort see the fatalities as more evidence that something significan­t must be done on the Rickenback­er for it to ever be safe for people riding bikes.

“This is exactly what

Plan Z was trying to address,” Frankie Ruiz, a longtime fitness organizer who serves as the city of Miami’s chief wellness officer, said. “They would have been in the protected bike lane.”

Along with a new Bear Cut Bridge and roadway redesigns, the proposed upgrades on the countycont­rolled causeway included widening the William Powell Bridge to allow for bike lanes separated from other traffic and new non-auto overpasses for the county’s most popular cycling route.

Bike lanes are painted green, as a visible separation from the auto lanes, and have rumble strips, designed to jar distracted drivers if they drift into a bike lane.

In a memo to Levine Cava released Monday, Miami-Dade Commission­er Raquel Regalado, who has represente­d Key Biscayne since 2020, noted

past calls for Rickenback­er safety upgrades. “Some measures were taken,” Regalado wrote, “but here we are again.”

She asked Levine Cava for a report on the most dangerous spots on the causeway for cyclists and a list of short-term solutions. “We know that major longterm

fixes such as protected bike lanes are expensive,” Regalado wrote. “We should not wait for tragedy to strike again to do what we can to make the Rickenback­er Causeway safe for bicyclists and pedestrian­s.”

Preventing cycling deaths was part of the original pitch from the Plan Z group, which wanted to raise tolls on the Rickenback­er and take over operations to fund both the upgrades and profit for the consortium’s investors.

On Monday, Zyscovich said the spot where Sunday’s fatalities occurred would have been transforme­d into a separated 30-foot wide biking and pedestrian path. “There would be no need for a bicycle to ever be in the same place as a car,” he said.

The architect said he was devastated by the deaths.

“I tried to do everything I could possibly do to at least put a plan in place to prevent terrible things from happening,” he said. “I don’t feel like we’re any closer, because there is no plan.”

The Plan Z effort could return if Miami-Dade starts over with a new bidding process for a private developer for the Rickenback­er. But Zyscovich said he sees little possibilit­y of that happening, given how the first try was blocked by Key Biscayne opposition. “As far as I’m concerned, Plan Z is dead,” he said.

Mike Davey, Key Biscayne’s mayor, said Monday he wants Miami-Dade to pursue a Rickenback­er plan that considers bike infrastruc­ture as well as larger congestion and safety issues, such as backedup lines of vehicles towing boats while waiting for openings at county-owned boat ramps.

“We want to do everything possible to ensure the safety of people using the causeway,” he said. “One of the things we’d like to see is a Rickenback­er Causeway master plan.”

In January, Levine Cava said the county would focus on how to rebuild the Bear Cut Bridge while pursuing a broader improvemen­t plan that might end up less expensive. On Tuesday, Miami-Dade commission­ers will consider a Levine Cava report estimating a new Bear Cut Bridge will cost $90 million.

Plan Z involved rebuilding parts of the causeway to create wider park space along Biscayne Bay, an observatio­n tower on the William Powell Bridge and other recreation­al amenities.

“Depending on public input, the project might cost a lot less money,” Levine Cava said after the Jan. 19 vote to end the Plan Z bidding process. The Rickenback­er “is already a great amenity. We know we have had fatalities that are not acceptable. We need to improve things to protect people who are using the causeway.”

 ?? Plan Z ?? A rendering of the Plan Z proposal for the Rickenback­er Causeway shows separated bike and pedestrian lanes, the kind of safeguards that advocates of cycling safety say are needed after Sunday’s deaths of two bicyclists on the causeway after a car collision.
Plan Z A rendering of the Plan Z proposal for the Rickenback­er Causeway shows separated bike and pedestrian lanes, the kind of safeguards that advocates of cycling safety say are needed after Sunday’s deaths of two bicyclists on the causeway after a car collision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States