darwink
Senior Member
4th St will have how many different bike configurations in 10 blocks? CMLC should be ashamed. It is already really bad.
It's their land from 12th to the river, so probable some power I'm sure.What is the actual power that the Stampede has in this process?
Street parking can be useful in certain retail/main street contexts - but that's not what this street is now or likely will be in the future, despite all the words used to sell this corridor on the public. It is and will likely remain a major facility/event street - a probable 20,000-seat arena, a million+ sqft convention centre and a few other similar facilities will dictate traffic flows and needs.I'm assuming that the Stampede is opposing protected bike lanes on Stampede Trail because of the fear that it'll get in the way of the on street parking.
We need big, beautiful and lush trees. That's all I'll say.Design team announced for Stephen Avenue redesign
https://calgary.ctvnews.ca/design-team-announced-for-stephen-avenue-redesign-1.5958677
Street parking can be useful in certain retail/main street contexts - but that's not what this street is now or likely will be in the future, despite all the words used to sell this corridor on the public. It is and will likely remain a major facility/event street - a probable 20,000-seat arena, a million+ sqft convention centre and a few other similar facilities will dictate traffic flows and needs.
To that end, whatever amount of supply of street parking - and vehicle access to Stampede grounds in general - will all be totally overwhelmed when the designers of this street think they need it regardless of how much of it they build. The math just doesn't work for a concentrated 20,000 person events and cars.
Because the stakeholders that influenced this design outcome want lay-bys anyways, the trade for the capacity of a few dozen parked cars is the connectivity of cycling entirely plus restricting the sidewalk width (sidewalks being the main tool you have to relieve congestion in these high volume event situations). Note the driveway access ramps are designed to remain sloped too. So the pedestrians aren't even prioritized in their own domain.
Every move since the arena debacle kicked off a few years back keeps reinforcing my hypothesis that the Stampede, CMLC and CSEC combo really can't or won't imagine the grounds as anything other than it is. Probably bits and pieces of blame to go around the table, but the outcome inches ever forward to a bias towards the status quo and the continued failure to consider non-automotive travel in any meaningfully different way in the area. All the more unfortunate because cycling and walking are the actual solutions they are looking for; prioritizing them meaningfully means you no longer have any space constraints caused by major events. They should be the last part of the street to trade-off, not the first.
In the end, all these bits and pieces of CMLC news are slowly ending us back where we started - a shiny, modern version of a 1980s sports/event cluster replacing what we have, not improving it materially.
That would be my guess as well. Plus I'm sure the crusty old men on the board hate cycling and bike lanes in general! lol
They only fulfill the mandate they are given. They are not an advocate. For this project the city is not the proponent. The Stampede is the client. They're supposed to overrule their client?I imagine there isn’t a single member who’s ever been on a bicycle.
What happened with CMLC? They were killing it for a good period of time. Seems since Michael Brown stepped down as CEO the groundwork laid by Chris Ollenberger and team has been eroded.
Great comment, my only critique is there is it is not a probable 20,000 person event centre. It is an existing 20,000 person event centre there already, called the Saddledome..Street parking can be useful in certain retail/main street contexts - but that's not what this street is now or likely will be in the future, despite all the words used to sell this corridor on the public. It is and will likely remain a major facility/event street - a probable 20,000-seat arena, a million+ sqft convention centre and a few other similar facilities will dictate traffic flows and needs.
To that end, whatever amount of supply of street parking - and vehicle access to Stampede grounds in general - will all be totally overwhelmed when the designers of this street think they need it regardless of how much of it they build. The math just doesn't work for a concentrated 20,000 person events and cars.
Because the stakeholders that influenced this design outcome want lay-bys anyways, the trade for the capacity of a few dozen parked cars is the connectivity of cycling entirely plus restricting the sidewalk width (sidewalks being the main tool you have to relieve congestion in these high volume event situations). Note the driveway access ramps are designed to remain sloped too. So the pedestrians aren't even prioritized in their own domain.
Every move since the arena debacle kicked off a few years back keeps reinforcing my hypothesis that the Stampede, CMLC and CSEC combo really can't or won't imagine the grounds as anything other than it is. Probably bits and pieces of blame to go around the table, but the outcome inches ever forward to a bias towards the status quo and the continued failure to consider non-automotive travel in any meaningfully different way in the area. All the more unfortunate because cycling and walking are the actual solutions they are looking for; prioritizing them meaningfully means you no longer have any space constraints caused by major events. They should be the last part of the street to trade-off, not the first.
In the end, all these bits and pieces of CMLC news are slowly ending us back where we started - a shiny, modern version of a 1980s sports/event cluster replacing what we have, not improving it materially.
The city signed off without plans. The Stampede is the client. If the City wants the Stampede to do something else, it is the city's job to tell the stampede to do something else. CMLC is not a city department.When it is CRL funded yes.