Bike Valet – What is it & how you can use it

Bike Valet ID TicketOn any given day in the North Penn area, especially in the summer, there are local events ranging from festivals, to music and farmers markets. At these events car parking is often a challenge and some number of residents choose to walk or ride their bikes. Events in Lansdale, thanks to the completed sections of the Liberty Bell Trail, are very easy to walk/ride to from the southeast corner of the borough.

However, to make biking to these events truly convenient, people need to have some place to leave their bike, rather than walk around with it and probably bashing their bike pedals into the ankles of other attendees. The problem is there rarely a good place to lock up bikes which is both convenient and does not expose to the bike to possible theft.

After some thinking about this, Bike North Penn members Dom and Rena Frascella took it upon themselves to organize a FREE bike valet service, for both the Lansdale First Friday events in downtown and the Tuesday night Whites Rd. Park music programs. So you are asking, “what is bike valet?”

In this case it is a fenced in area near the event, with simple bike racks. The area is staffed with at least two volunteers who receive bikes from in-bound riders and fetch the bikes when riders are ready to head out. Each rider is given a ticket with an ID number when dropping off their bike, This ticket is required to collect their bike when they are ready to go.

And it is as simple as that. All they ask is that bikes are collected by their owners no later than the end of the main program times for these events. For Lansdale First Friday’s, that’s 9 PM and for the Whites Rd. music programs, usually about 8:30 or when the music stops.

Again, this is a free service, it is done with support from Doylestown Bike Works (where Dom and Rena work bicycle magic) and by The Partnership TMA Montgomery County as part of their Bike More / Drive Less program. 

We are interested to see how bike ridership may increase at these events as awareness of the bike valet service rises. This is a volunteer-heavy activity. If you have an interest in helping out any upcoming events or helping expand this service to other events, stop by and talk to us about it.

Doylestown Pop-Up Bicycle Lane coming in September

Reading now from the latest email from the Bicycle Coalition of Philadelphia (nothing to link to yet), it is noted TMA Bucks, is partnering with Doylestown Borough and the DVRPC for a pop-up pedestrian/bicycle lane on Doyle Street on the borough in the month of September.

This is outside of North Penn, but I am going to suggest we organize a ride to check it out, since Bike North Penn has discussed attempting something like this in our area. We should  document how this Doylestown lane is executed and then connect with some of the stakeholders about how this came about.

Also, by going for a ride there, we will be showing support not only for the pop-up lane but for establishing a permanent lane in the future.

On online survey in advance of the pop-up lane is available. You don’t need to be a Doylestown or Bucks County resident to participate in this survey: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdyI0nRH99SU5pO6xhbHTUruMl1Ogm3qY7luwVM8Dckc3_RYg/viewform?fbzx=4006472730289679244

 

Bike North Penn at Lansdale First Fridays

Friday, July 4 was the third monthly appearance for Bike North Penn at Lansdale First Fridays. These have been fantastic opportunities to engage with attendees. Not only have we been able to promote our community rides and explain our efforts for infrastructure improvements, like bike lanes on Broad Street, but we have also been able to hear the ideas and concerns from a broad spectrum of the community.

Here are some of our understandings coming from these engagements:

  • There is broad support for bike lanes on Broad Street and an interest in making the North Penn area generally safer for biking. We collected about another 30 additional signatures at the August First Friday from Lansdale Borough residents and could have collected another 30 from people from other municipalities (current petition is for Lansdale Borough residents only)
  • We did also talk to a very small number of people who were against bike lanes. We gave these folks time to explain their positions and provide some counter arguments. Most of them boiled down to the opinion that it is not save for bikers to add bike lanes – but of course, their are already people riding South Broad and other major roads without even a defined space that a simple bike lane would provide. I don’t know that we changed any minds, but it is always good to engage on these issues.
  • Our community rides, with typical distances of 6-8 miles and casual speeds appeals to many people who are not regular bikers. People also like to idea of getting out and riding in larger groups for safety and confidence. So we will continue to program these types of community rides and try to increase their frequency when we can.
  • There is a lot of interest and confusion about the local trails for biking – where they are, when they will be built out and connected and where they can take you. We will try to do a better job of posting this info in the Bike North Penn web site and making sure local governments are aware of this interest so trails can be prioritized in context of other local infrastructure projects.

See you at Lansdale’s June First Friday Event

Bike North Penn will have a tent tonight at Lansdale Borough’s June First Friday event!

Bike North Penn tear flagWe will be promoting our “Bikes On Broad” campaign and the Critical Mass ride we are doing on July 19 to encourge bike lanes be added to South Broad St. We will also be collection signatures from Lansdale borough residents on a petition for the bike lanes. If you have not yet signed this please do so.

We will be collecting feedback from residents for a Lansdale Borough bike safety/street survey.

We will have information on the Bike North Penn organization, upcoming group rides and upcoming meetings.

This is your opportunity to meet and speak with some of our key volunteers. Please to stop by.

Also – Next to our booth (near the Santa house by the train station) will be a Bike Valet space! We are encouraging everyone to ride their bikes to this First Friday event and when you arrive, check our bike in at the staffed Bike Valet space. When you are ready to head back home, just pick up your bike from the valet, and be on your way.

Mother’s Day Lunchtime Group Bike Ride – Lansdale Borough to North Wales Borough

This will be a relaxing ride from downtown Lansdale to downtown North Wales Borough, where we will pause for lunch before riding back.
Either bring some lunch money to dine at one or the North Wales Restaurants or pack a lunch.
Bike Helmets Are REQUIRED.
This bike ride will be about 8 miles total (about 4 miles each way) with a lunch break in the middle. This ride will be a mix of riding in streets and on parts of the Liberty Bell Trail.
Dress for the weather, and be sure to bring a bottle of water.
Be sure your bike is in good working order in advance of this ride.
All riders are responsible for their own safety on this ride.
Anyone under the Age of 18 must be accompanied by an adult.
Bad weather will cancel this event.
Safety is always our first consideration.
Bike Helmets Are REQUIRED.

Bike North Penn May Organizational Meeting

Bike North Penn monthly organizational meeting: 7 PM, Lansdale Public Library.
Come out and raise your voice to make the North Penn area a safer and vibrant place to get around on a bicycle!
We will be discussing our upcoming group rides (next up this Sunday – 11AM ride from downtown Lansdale to downtown North Wales).
Also on the agenda, among other things, will be the next steps in our efforts to get bike lanes installed on South Broad Street – from Garfield Rd in Upper Gwynedd to Hancock St. on North Wales Borough.

North Penn locals, come out for an easy-going, evening group bike ride through Upper Gwynedd Township, Wednesday, April 19 at 7 PM. We start riding no later than 7:15. The ride will take between 45-min and an hour.
Meet at the Pizza Time Saloon on West Point Pike, in West Point Village. We will be riding the streets of the village, through the “Apollo” neighborhood as well as the quiet streets west of South Broad Streets.
Helmets are required.

Taking Manhattan Via Bike Lane

Last Thursday I ventured up to New York City for an afternoon of cycling the streets south of Central Park and to attend an event at the Brompton store to promote the new book by Brompton CEO Will Butler-Adams. In the sections of Manhattan I traversed, there were bike lanes on many of the main avenues and cross streets. Because most of the streets were one-way, the bike lanes typically existed on one side of the street and flowed in the direction of auto traffic.

I rode from Penn Station at 38th Street up 8th Avenue to Cental Park, then took 2nd Avenue all the way down to Chinatown, which generally did not have bike lanes on its neighborhood streets

There was a certain amount of semi-organized chaos in the bike lanes, where I was often a pedaling minority in contrast to ebike delivery riders – who were not even trying to pretend to pedal, motorized scooters, skateboarders, walkers who (I guess) found the sidewalks too crowded, and runners exercising. Thank god – no rollerbladers.

As I was often the slowest person in the lane I tried to stay to the right, but when ebike delivery riders were coming at me head-on, which happened more than once on, what should have been, one-way lanes, other ebikers would zip around me on my right. Oh – and I was also in the minority as a person wearing a helmet – but don’t get me started…

Pedestrians and bike lane dwellers got along reasonably well. Though New Yorkers are still competitive jaywalkers, they paused for on-coming ebike delivery riders who made it clear they were NOT going to stop. Conversely everyone had to watch out for locals crossing the street with their eyes lost in their phones.

One ebike rider came at me, going the wrong way, riding side saddle with one hand on his bars and the other holding his phone up to his face. Sign that dude up for Cirque du Soleil. On cross streets, where restaurants still had covid-era outdoor seating enclosures positioned in parking spaces, the bike lanes ran narrowly between the sidewalk and these structures – with signs, almost always ignored, encouraging those in the bike lanes to slow down.

Through the afternoon and evening, I saw no traffic enforcement against elicit activities going on in the bike lanes. It was a total atonomous zone; almost like cops said, “this is what you wanted – good luck with it…” But for the most part, everyone in the lanes kind of worked it all out while in motion. I witnessed no accidents, no “lane rage” – really not even any close calls. Interestingly the car and truck drivers seem to honor the dedicated bike lane lights and lane street patterns more than than those in the lanes.

Later in the evening, when auto traffic was jammed up in SoHo and cars blocked intersection boxes and bike lanes, those of us on bikes became like minnows zipping between bloated SUVs and sedans, laughing and whooping at our mobility as drivers expressed their frustrations with horns and hollering. I have to admit most of my day of riding in NYC was a thrill.

What I experienced Manhattan may be a preview of the future for every city and town considering the addition of bike lanes to the mixture of traffic design. Without some expectations of rules, and police oversight, no doubt some amount of mayhem will emerge. But how to frame expectations in the lanes without clamping down too hard?

In the Brompton discussion that night with Will Butler-Adams, he noted that London was ahead of New York with bike infrastructure, but could tell that now it was installed in this big American city, no one was going to let them take it away.

March Organizational Meeting – Thursday, March 9 – 7 PM

Reminder – The March organizational meeting for Bike North Penn is Thursday, March 9 at 7 PM at the Lansdale Public Library.
If you are interested in helping organize one of our upcoming group rides, promoting safe biking options or advocating for local bike infrastructure, please come out and join us!
Meetings are the second Thursday of every month. if you cannot make it to the meeting in person, please checkout the link for Microsoft Teams like to participate remotely.
Meeting info on Facebook: https://fb.me/e/fIG6nh8Qd
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Groups Call on Governor Shapiro to Prioritize PA’s Active Transportation Infrastructure

In a letter addressed to the governor, the groups cite that trail and active transportation networks are “essential infrastructure for equitably addressing the most pressing issues facing Pennsylvania—economic development, climate resiliency, mobility, and bicyclist and pedestrian safety.”  According to the organizations leading the effort, the pace of active transportation infrastructure development in Pennsylvania is slow and not prioritized by any state agency, regardless of significant consequences for pedestrians and bicyclists who are disproportionately killed and severely injured in traffic crashes each year.

https://bicyclecoalition.org/groups-call-on-governor-shapiro-to-prioritize-pas-active-transportation-infrastructure/