Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The Easter Present Movie Night










Thanks to the fine folks in Parkdale 'The Easter Present' has been selected for the 

Date: Saturday June 27, 2009
Time: 9PM | PWYC
Where: Fuller Parkette | Outdoor screening. Bring a blanket and share this magical night 
with someone special.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Urban Repair Squad Goes To Nueva York
















The URS film 'Le Depart - The Beginning' will be screened at the Bicycle Film Festival in New York on Sunday June 21 (Program 12, 5PM)

Highwheel Bike Tag


Highwheel Bike Tag
Cargado originalmente por catamount99

From Lexington Kentucky

Thursday, June 11, 2009

De-paving in Greece


Community activists de-pave an abandoned parking lot and plant a garden. Via Urbanites (CH)

Music = Traffic Calming (A Break)

Monday, June 8, 2009

"The war on the car, as seen from the bicycle seat"


Article in the National Post with a brief profile of URS.

(snip)
On May 31, Bells on Bloor held its annual ride from High Park to Queen’s Park in support of the stalled bike lane. The group has been organizing Bloor rides since September, 2007, while fellow cycling group Urban Repair Squad resorts to more direct forms of protest.

URS uses grassroots, guerrilla-style tactics and paints de facto bike lanes all over the city (especially on Bloor) to garner public attention. The lanes are usually removed by city staff, but one URS symbol — a bike stencil under two “sharrows” — painted over a year ago near Ossington Avenue and Dupont Street remains untouched.

“There are a lot of people involved who have been at it for 10 or 15 years, advocating for change. And they keep getting told no... we beg to differ” said Martin Reis, URS photographer and web site organizer.
“We can say yes, it can be done. It can be done for next to nothing.”

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Bicycling Magazine July 2009























The Illegal but highly effective DIY Bike Lane


Included in this issue is a fabulous feature article by Dan Koeppel plus a write-up by Laura Kiniry about all things Urban Repair worldwide. A must read.

Wanna read it? I suggest you buy the Magazine. I did. Besides it's an inexpensive publication so worth supporting and the article is not online.

(Hint. You can also read the issue at your local library ...)

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

This Just In ... LA Bike Lanes Story

A follow-up to LA's Department of DIY bike lane installation in 2008, see photos below, which Dan Koeppel wrote about in the current issue of Bicycling (July 2009). Available at your local library.

"Here's an update, both from my perspective and from my contacts at the Department of DIY, a week after the story came out...


The DIY lanes piece appeared a week after the Department of Transportation proposed cutting all bike funding from its budget. The move was a bit of a bluff, of course - the two-wheeled denizens of Los Angeles were suddenly turned into human shields - but we were released and sent home with a clear message: The City of Los Angeles now owns a guillotine. 

The lane painters at the Department of DIY were as dismayed and outraged by funding fiasco as the rest of the cycling community, but they also felt vindicated. As writer/witness/comrade to the lane painters, I also experienced a feeling of somewhat gratuitous serendipity at the timing of the story. If the actions taken on the Fletcher Bridge weren't' defensible last July, when they actually occurred, they almost certainly became so now. 

This week, even that slight "almost" appears to have vanished. On Friday - again, all of this has occurred within a ten day frame surrounding the story's publication - an equally significant event in the annals of Los Angeles cycling occurred.  That same Department of Transportation (finally) released its long-awaited draft of a new citywide bike master plan. http://www.labikeplan.org/bikeway_maps
See "Central/Westside" version.

Putting aside any comment on whether the budget event and the release of the draft were somehow related to each other - in a bizarre and clumsy attempt to manage expectations and public reaction - I'll limit my comments on the plan to items specifically related to bridges and our story. I'll also assume DOT has learned from its track record of non-implementation, and knows that this plan must  happen, though it is certainly not unexpected or unreasonable that many members of our cycling community see no reason to comment on the merits of the plan at all, since they believe the entire system, at this point, is made of applesauce. 

On to the bridges.

First: None of the most dangerous bridges - which means the longest, southernmost ones - will see any genuine bike accommodations. Nor will any that lead directly into downtown Los Angeles. The plan marks these bridges with grey dots, which puts them into DOT's "proposed, but currently infeasible" category, "brought forward" from the old, unimplemented plans, which date back to 1996 or before. (Other proposed, but currently infeasible, ideas floating around in the our cultural ether include time travel, universal health care, and a half-wit governor from Alaska becoming president of the United States. A hundred bucks says at least one of these things happens before the Olympic Boulevard bridge gets a bike lane.) 

Second come bridges -  a couple of them -  marked with purple dots. My understanding (and please, if you know better, please correct me) is that this indicates separate-from-cars bike paths underneath and perpendicular to the bridges. These facilities won't actually traverse the spans. Instead, they will be along the river itself, for recreational use, like the current  (and wonderful) L.A. River bike path.  The exception to this, from my reading, is what appears to be a dedicated bike path running over the North Broadway bridge. If this is the case, it is good news - even though it would mean that the first genuine bike-friendly crossing of the river for cyclists would be the eighth in the south-to-north sequence of twelve bridges, and a full two miles north of downtown.

From a political and implementation standpoint, I'd also note that if there is to be such a Broadway crossing, and if it is going to be part of a great recreational build-out, then it may not represent acknowledgement of what I see - and this is just my personal point of view - as the greater need, which is commuter access from the east side of the river. I'd want to know whether the creation of such a crossing would be viewed with the appropriate level of urgency, and whether it would be built speedily. Given that it would serve a dual purpose, the charge should be pretty simple: BUILD IT FIRST, and BUILD IT FAST. This is something the community must press for. 

Third,  and most important, when it comes to the Fletcher Drive project - and I apologize for both myself and on behalf the Department of the DIY if this sounds just a little bit like gloating, but hell, let's just call it what it is  -  there's just one other accommodation for bikes that can be seen as even remotely possible in the DOT plan. The most implementable pathways proposed in the new plan are those that fall into the green dot category. They aren't just  run-of-the-mill, painted bike lanes. They're super-cheap run-of-the-mill, painted bike-lanes, specifically defined by the DOT as locations "where a new bike lane can be added without widening the roadway or removing travel lanes or parking."

In other words, they are stripes. Just plain stripes.

There is only one Los Angeles River bridge that gets the green dots. Only one bridge that the brand new Los Angeles bicycle master plan says is perfectly suited for bikes with a simple stripe, with no other modifications, where bikes and cars could co-exist, basically as-is - just a bucket of paint away. 

I won't keep you in this phony suspense any longer. It is Fletcher Drive, of course. 

What the new plan proposes is exactly what the Department of DIY created - and exactly what the  Department of No Department of Transportation said was impossible."




Department of DIY installation in July 2008.



Monday, June 1, 2009

Cordoba, Spain


A Spanish Urban Repair Squad in Cordoba paints up a fresh bike lane.
More photos

Seen in Gijon, Spain


Source

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