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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
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News article from The (Portland) Oregonian - August 14, 2007 Officially, it's called the Providence Bridge Pedal. But the annual bike ride over Portland's bridges earned a new name Sunday -- Providence Bridge Ped-debacle. Bottlenecks not only forced cyclists to walk their bikes along parts of the course, but also meant as many as 1,500 of the estimated record 19,000 cyclists in the event were unable to complete the ride. Organizers barred them from crossing the Fremont Bridge and other spans as authorities sought to reopen them to vehicle traffic. Other cyclists, frustrated, left the course on their own. While event officials said they will consider capping the number of cyclists in future years, some riders said they won't be back. "I don't think anyone in my group will ever do it again," said Terri Taylor, who biked the Bridge Pedal, of which The Oregonian is a sponsor, for the first time with four friends. "It really was not fun." Cyclists were queued up, waiting and walking their bikes to cross the Ross Island Bridge and other spans. "There was an overall level of annoyance. It just turned into a bad vibe," she said. In its 12th year, the Bridge Pedal has had overcrowding problems in the past, said Rick Bauman, the event director. But organizers had never pulled 1,000 to 1,500 riders off the course. Event sponsors aren't planning to refund the $25 preregistration fees to those who were not allowed to complete the ride, he said. Proceeds from the fees go to expenses -- including $2,300 to Portland to help defray its estimated $25,000 in police overtime costs; and $26,000 to cover the Oregon Department of Transportation's overtime costs -- and then to the Bicycle Transportation Alliance and Providence Heart and Vascular Institute. Bauman didn't have an estimate Monday on total proceeds from the event. One of the biggest glitches resulted from restricting cyclists to one lane on the Ross Island Bridge. Although the ride usually reserves only one of the four lanes, Bauman said, in past years cyclists have dodged the traffic cones and commandeered the second lane. To satisfy safety concerns of TriMet, ODOT and police, race organizers this year put up yellow tape along the lane, restricting cyclists to a single lane, he said. One lane wasn't enough, Bauman conceded, which organizers hadn't considered. "I just didn't see that coming," he said. Worse, it appeared that riders from all three routes -- the 10-bridge, eight-bridge and six-bridge options -- converged at the bridge around the same time, said Karla Keller, a maintenance manager for ODOT. Riders noted that the tape tore off in parts, fluttering into the lane and narrowing access even more. The result? Waits that some riders said lasted as long as an hour to move just several blocks. "It was kind of like being in rush hour traffic," said Jennifer Jones, who considered the congestion at this year's Bridge Pedal the worst of the 10 times she has participated. "That's why you ride a bike -- to avoid it." The long delay meant that Michael Comfort of Dundee, who was riding the route for the fourth time, and his 14-year-old and 20-year-old could not reach the highlight of their ride -- the Fremont Bridge -- before the 11:30 a.m. cutoff. Even at other bridges, "by the time we went through everyone was pretty much closing up, nothing was going on up there," he said. "It was just disappointing." Police opened a second lane on the Ross Island Bridge around 10:15 a.m., said Bauman, but it was too late for hundreds of riders to finish the course. "Was it unfortunate? Yes. But it's like a traffic jam on a freeway," Bauman said. "Once it starts, it's very hard to fix it." Police wanted a hard deadline to reopen bridge traffic, Bauman said, another reason organizers had to clear the course. Riders also reported a lack of portable toilets in convenient locations and long lines. Bauman said he heard no complaints and that the ride had the same number of toilets as always. He added that there were three accidents that he knew of, and that the event was a safety success. It drew more than 20,000 participants, including about 1,000 people who walked a two-bridge course, up from 18,000 last year. Bauman said organizers and state and local authorities will meet to discuss ways to improve the event, and may consider a cap on participants. Bauman is personally against the idea, saying that he thinks it would create an "exclusiveness" that he doesn't like. And Jones, despite her annoyance that she was unable to complete the 10-bridge ride she signed up for, agreed that the ride should not be limited -- just better organized. "I was frustrated as anybody, but I think that there's ways to just make that better," she said. "Portland's such a bike-friendly city, I would hate to see that happen." ~ |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
On Tue, 14 Aug 2007 15:48:42 GMT, "steve" wrote:
On 14-Aug-2007, smacked up and reeling, (Paul Berg) blindly formulated the following incoherence: Bottlenecks not only forced cyclists to walk their bikes along parts of the course, but also meant as many as 1,500 of the estimated record 19,000 cyclists in the event were unable to complete the ride. Organizers barred them from crossing the Fremont Bridge and other spans as authorities sought to reopen them to vehicle traffic. Other cyclists, frustrated, left the course on their own. What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. Just for the sheer fun of doing it, apparently. My Datsun club does the same thing when it does a cruise or a tour. |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
"steve" wrote...
What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. I did a mass start for a century in Bellingham a week ago and I've never been around a squirellier bunch of riders. |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
On Aug 14, 10:57 am, (Paul Berg) wrote:
~ News article from The (Portland) Oregonian - August 14, 2007 Officially, it's called the Providence Bridge Pedal. But the annual bike ride over Portland's bridges earned a new name Sunday -- Providence Bridge Ped-debacle. Portland should to take lessons in ride management from the 5 Borough bike ride in NYC. Roadways and bridges traversed in early sections of the NYC ride are closed off to automobile traffic. It's only later in the ride when the line stretches out that bikes and cars share the same road. The only significant delay was getting that very long snake of 30,000 riders going. One steep bridge did have a slowdown as out of shape riders walked over. Done properly it can be fun riding with 30,000 of my closest cycling buddies. The NYC event is well organized throughout, with several well spaced break areas and sag wagons. |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
"steve" wrote in message ... What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. It's a fund-raiser. I have a friend who trains for it and then flies out from Virginia every year just for the ride. -c |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
On Tue, 14 Aug 2007 09:54:07 -0700, "Gattman"
wrote: "steve" wrote in message .. . What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. It's a fund-raiser. I have a friend who trains for it and then flies out from Virginia every year just for the ride. Careful there, Chris. If you mention that you "have a friend" folks like the Three Monkeys will determine that you do not. |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
Don Homuth dhomuthoneatcomcast.net wrote:
On Tue, 14 Aug 2007 15:48:42 GMT, "steve" wrote: On 14-Aug-2007, smacked up and reeling, (Paul Berg) blindly formulated the following incoherence: Bottlenecks not only forced cyclists to walk their bikes along parts of the course, but also meant as many as 1,500 of the estimated record 19,000 cyclists in the event were unable to complete the ride. Organizers barred them from crossing the Fremont Bridge and other spans as authorities sought to reopen them to vehicle traffic. Other cyclists, frustrated, left the course on their own. What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. Just for the sheer fun of doing it, apparently. My Datsun club does the same thing when it does a cruise or a tour. They disrupt regular traffic? |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
Don Homuth dhomuthoneatcomcast.net wrote:
On Tue, 14 Aug 2007 09:54:07 -0700, "Gattman" wrote: "steve" wrote in message . .. What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. It's a fund-raiser. I have a friend who trains for it and then flies out from Virginia every year just for the ride. Careful there, Chris. If you mention that you "have a friend" folks like the Three Monkeys will determine that you do not. Notice that his friend was not a Transportation Expert who knew how to clean up the traffic jam? Didja? |
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Portland's Bridge Pedal Debacle
On Tue, 14 Aug 2007 18:57:05 GMT, Lobby Dosser
wrote: Don Homuth dhomuthoneatcomcast.net wrote: On Tue, 14 Aug 2007 15:48:42 GMT, "steve" wrote: On 14-Aug-2007, smacked up and reeling, (Paul Berg) blindly formulated the following incoherence: Bottlenecks not only forced cyclists to walk their bikes along parts of the course, but also meant as many as 1,500 of the estimated record 19,000 cyclists in the event were unable to complete the ride. Organizers barred them from crossing the Fremont Bridge and other spans as authorities sought to reopen them to vehicle traffic. Other cyclists, frustrated, left the course on their own. What is the point of these mass rides, anyway? It cant be good riding, and it obviously screws up traffic. Just for the sheer fun of doing it, apparently. My Datsun club does the same thing when it does a cruise or a tour. They disrupt regular traffic? Sometimes they have done exactly that, so I hear. A long column of a couple dozen Datsuns of various vintages can be pretty noticeable. Mine has been in the restoration shop long enough that I haven't gone on one of those, since I only actually Joined the club several months back. But if you check, you can even see pictures of the car pre-restoration. |
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