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General Road and Highway Discussion
Yesterday, I remembered having seen similar speed cushions installed on Lake Louise Blvd in Waterloo. And they are constructed similarly across the bike lane. Just to point out that the work on Glasgow is not an isolated incident.
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(11-29-2017, 11:48 AM)timc Wrote: Yesterday, I remembered having seen similar speed cushions installed on Lake Louise Blvd in Waterloo. And they are constructed similarly across the bike lane. Just to point out that the work on Glasgow is not an isolated incident.

Doon South Dr in Kitchener just got two like this last week, plus a third built as a centre island with bump outs.  I'm surprised, I'd have thought that Doon Mills Dr between Tilt and Doon South needed it more.
...K
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King St. in UpTown looked moments away from opening about an hour ago. Max from CTV was set up waiting to film, with lots of Aecon folks standing around watching.

They were tamping the dirt that is where the bike paths will be - a real shame they couldn't get that done.
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(12-01-2017, 03:06 PM)Canard Wrote: King St. in UpTown looked moments away from opening about an hour ago.  Max from CTV was set up waiting to film, with lots of Aecon folks standing around watching.

They were tamping the dirt that is where the bike paths will be - a real shame they couldn't get that done.

Nobody bikes in winter anyway.

Tongue
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I was disappointed that the other day, the owner of Truth Beauty, who was part of one of the media anti-construction events, wasn't there this week when I biked up to buy ~$100 of her product...
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(12-01-2017, 03:36 PM)Viewfromthe42 Wrote: I was disappointed that the other day, the owner of Truth Beauty, who was part of one of the media anti-construction events, wasn't there this week when I biked up to buy ~$100 of her product...

I had a run-in with her online a couple months ago. Her personal Facebook wall is full of angry rants about the pace of construction and the construction workers themselves. She's apparently notorious enough people have even written about her on Reddit.

Quote:The owner of Truth Beauty stands outside and yells at people going about their business to get them angry. She goes into other businesses to make complaints because those businesses aren't yelling as loudly as She is. She's had the cops called on her for harassing the workers trying to get the job done. She's a nutcase. When there's no construction (even over winter) no one is in her shop anyway while other businesses are busy. She's just a shitty store owner. Not everyone needs organic eye cream. Some businesses are failing and that's sad. But not all are. If you care about local businesses closing down, shop there. They're failing because consumers are boycotting the construction and purposefully not supporting these businesses to make a statement.
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Is she available for weddings and children's parties?
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Good bye Road Closed! Hello beautiful <a href="https://twitter.com/UpTownWaterloo?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@UpTownWaterloo</a> <a href="https://t.co/oMlq4NMRWR">pic.twitter.com/oMlq4NMRWR</a></p>&mdash; Dave Jaworsky (@DaveJaworsky) <a href="https://twitter.com/DaveJaworsky/status/936715713053626368?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 1, 2017</a></blockquote>
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"The Region of Waterloo is owed nearly $35 million in defaulted fines, the majority from driver tickets."

"The bulk of the outstanding fines owed to the region — worth just shy of $19 million — are related to Highway Traffic Act offences."


That could pay for a lot of infrastructure!
Everyone move to the back of the bus and we all get home faster.
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Shame they can't call them in at once.
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Some of the Facebook comments are pretty hilarious. One lady had over $400 in fines at one point and is complaining about getting a parking ticket for letting the meter expire by 20 minutes while she went to lunch and paid a previous parking ticket. At some point most people would figure out they should probably stop parking illegally.
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I noticed the final design for Weber, Northfield to Blythwood is in the planning and works agenda.

It is recommending 2.4m MUT on both sides of the bridge between Albert and Parkside which is different from before is it not?

I wish that they would add a recommendation to lower the speed limit to 50 along that stretch.
Everyone move to the back of the bus and we all get home faster.
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(12-02-2017, 05:23 PM)Bob_McBob Wrote: Some of the Facebook comments are pretty hilarious. One lady had over $400 in fines at one point and is complaining about getting a parking ticket for letting the meter expire by 20 minutes while she went to lunch and paid a previous parking ticket. At some point most people would figure out they should probably stop parking illegally.

Even though her parking tickets are not collected by the Region, and has no relevance to the article.  Darwin will get her one day.... Wink

Coke
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(12-04-2017, 03:11 PM)Coke6pk Wrote:
(12-02-2017, 05:23 PM)Bob_McBob Wrote: Some of the Facebook comments are pretty hilarious. One lady had over $400 in fines at one point and is complaining about getting a parking ticket for letting the meter expire by 20 minutes while she went to lunch and paid a previous parking ticket. At some point most people would figure out they should probably stop parking illegally.

Even though her parking tickets are not collected by the Region, and has no relevance to the article.  Darwin will get her one day.... Wink

Coke

This sounds like the responses I get of everyone parking in bike lanes.
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I was going to add this to the GRT thread, but because what started out as an exercise to see if a GRT bus stop island could have actually fit between the Ion right-of-way and the street at King and William quickly turned into an exercise of, “what else could have been different, and hopefully improved, for all modes?” I thought it fit better in the general discussion.

   
(larger georeference PDF in attached zip file)

I tried to stick to regional standard lane widths (minimum, standard, maximum, etc.) as well as trying to keep to the original plans and/or what was actually built as much as possible.
 
I recognize that not every little detail conforms to what was planned, or what was even actually built or already existed, and that I have no idea what constitutes good or bad turning radius or good or bad cycling lane geometry, but hopefully shows what could have been with a little more thought and prioritization (not to mention professional knowledge, skill, and tools!).
 
Hopefully this type of exercise, re-thinking, and learning from these lessons will help when the time comes to build the Cambridge segment.
 
Highlights:
Added 2.5m GRT bus stop island
  • Provides for a bus stop between Allen and Waterloo Public Square Ion stops right on King St.
  • Avoids lengthy, awkward, and potentially less safe detour down William/Regina/Willis.
  • Improves bus safety by reducing Ion track crossings by two.
  • Improves bus route schedule adherence (fewer turns, fewer potential Ion delays), and shortens the length of the trip allowing for greater frequency of trips.
  • Similar in size to one at King and Victoria.
 
Improves connectivity of pedestrian and cycling network
  • Added protected lanes and cross-rides for people who cycle.
  • Added more direct pedestrian connection from Willis Way Ion station to King St.
  • Larger city block broken in to smaller blocks improves connectivity and improve the scale of place.
  • Added potential extension of Iron Horse Trail to connect with new protected cycling lanes.
 
Enhanced safety features
  • Tighter turning radii force vehicles to slow.
  • Set back stop lines and bumped out curbs improve sight-lines.
  • More frequent pedestrian crossings, both marked and unmarked, provide predictable places and refuge for pedestrians to safely cross.
  • Separates all modes, LRT, motor vehicles, pedestrians, and people who cycle.
 
Most changes fit within the existing right-of-way
  • Only a few additional slivers of land would be required in some areas, and much of those are already public land.
Additional parking spaces created by reducing length of parking spots from 6.50m to 5.75m and planning placement of fire hydrants more carefully.
 
 
How to fit more into the same space?
  • south of William travel lane widths on King St were reduced from 3.50m to 3.35m (15cm narrower; regional minimum is 3.25m)
  • south of William turning lane turning lane width narrowed from 3.50m to 3.00m (50cm narrower; regional minimum is 3.00m)
  • north of William turning lane turning lane width narrowed from 3.35m to 3.00m (35cm narrower; regional minimum is 3.00m)
  • where necessary curb widths were reduced from 0.50m to 0.20m (30cm narrower; regional minimum is 0.20m);
  • parking spots were narrowed 2.50m to 2.00m (2.00m space + 0.50m flat curb/door zone on one side).
  • an additional 2.50m was needed on the west side of King near William and additional 0.25 of land was needed on the east side of King at William, both of which are already public.
  • reduced sidewalk width to 3.50m in some areas relative to what was built (6.0m), but still wider than what existed previously (2.5m-3.0m) or what was proposed (3.0m) and is a dedicated pedestrian space buffered from cars and bikes
  • north of William travel lanes on King St remain the same size (3.35m)
  • Willis Way (EB) travel lane width increased from 3.00m to 3.35m.
  • Willis Way (WB) travel lane width increased from 3.25m to 3.35m.
  • Willis Way left turning lanes width reduced from 3.50m to 3.00m.
 
Unfortunately the line fills and points are not exporting/rendering/supported in the KML format (see attached zip file), but it give a rough idea of what it might look like at King and William:
   
   
   
 
Now I can get back to finishing a similar re-do of Erb and Bridgeport/Caroline between Father-David Bauer and the expressway.


Attached Files
.zip   Archive.zip (Size: 474.36 KB / Downloads: 211)
Everyone move to the back of the bus and we all get home faster.
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