The Bike Alliance of Northwest Arkansas (BikeNWA) hosted the second of
two public meetings Tuesday (Sept. 18) on a proposed protected bicycle lane for
Meadow and Maple avenues and Holcomb Street in Springdale, and some residents
were related about safety issues and ambulance traffic Along the planned route.
Ryan Hale, the founder of Bentonville consulting and planning company
Laneshift, explained bicycle lanes are good for the economy and increase the
attractiveness for individuals who might be looking to move to the area from
larger urban areas.
Springdale, with a population of 79,599, is one of three Northwest Arkansas
cities involved in a one-year pilot project that is supported by a $150,000
grant from the Walton Family Foundation. The plan is to install temporary
protected bicycle lanes in Springdale and Fayetteville and a temporary
neighborhood greenway in Siloam Springs.
Neighborhood greenways are installed on streets too narrow for protected
bicycle lanes and include features that are expected to "calm
traffic," such as curb extensions and chicanes, said Paxton Roberts,
executive director of BikeNWA. The protected bicycle lanes would include small
barriers and bollards Dividing the four-to six-foot-wide lanes from the street,
and the temporary lanes would be installed on existing roads without the need
for new asphalt.
Some property owners in downtown Springdale were against the project as
they believed it would narrow the streets and make them less safe. Downtown
resident Sam Mason said the narrower streets will make it more difficult to
drive downtown. He also said he doesn't see much Bicycle traffic on the streets
that are planned for the new bicycle lanes and sees more on Johnson Avenue,
which is north of Meadow Avenue.
Resident Margarita Solorzano was concerned for the safety of the cyclists
and that the roads wouldn't be wide enough for emergency traffic. Glenda
Hollis, who owns property on Maple Avenue, said she wanted the area to remain
residential and not become a thoroughfare. Her Hm, Tim, also concerned about
safety with the nearby Northwest Medical Center on Maple Avenue and the
frequent ambulance traffic going to and from the hospital.
Bicycle lanes will be included on either side of the streets for the
majority of the project, and 700 reinforced plastic barriers with reflective
strips, or Zebra Cycle Lane Separators, will protect cyclists from vehicle
traffic.
Work to install the lanes and greenway is expected to start in October
and should be completed by Nov. 30. They will run along more than one mile of
streets in each city. In Fayetteville, the lanes will installed on Rolling
Hills Drive and Appleby Road. Dennis Blind, of Active Planning and Design in
Bentonville, is leading the project for Fayetteville. It will largely run along
existing bicycle trails on the streets. Reinforced plastic wheel stops with reflective
tapes will installed as barriers between the
street and bicycle lanes.
In Siloam Springs, the neighborhood greenway will installed on Harvard
Street. The grant, which BikeNWA received in August, is paying for a consultant
and the installation materials. The cost of permanent lanes and greenway would
cost about the same price as all three temporary Projects.
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