QuoteDALLAS — A makeshift bike lane divider made of painted two-by-fours and PVC pipes lasted three days on a busy Dallas street last month before the city removed it, which was two days longer than its creators expected.
The $100 structure was the work of the Dallas Transformation Department, one of several like-minded groups of anonymous Twitter users who have taken a do-it-yourself approach to making road improvements in cities stretching from New York and Boston to San Francisco.
Activists say a flower planted in a pothole or a line of cones or toilet plungers to keep cars from drifting into bike lanes can have the magical psychological effect of getting drivers to slow down and watch for cyclists and pedestrians. Although the measures are meant to be temporary, they can show the public what could be and spur cities to make permanent improvements.
"These transformation groups are creating change, and we support that," said Kathleen Ferrier, a spokeswoman for the Vision Zero Network, a group dedicated to eliminating traffic fatalities around the world. "What's happening with guerrilla tactics is that they are creating more urgency. It's helping people imagine and experience what change could be like."
Full article: http://jacksonville.com/news/national/2017-07-23/groups-make-diy-bike-lanes-show-us-cities-what-could-be
These tactics are probably also very effective at showing cities that these projects can be done very inexpensively. What this group did for $100 would undoubtedly cost a city a half-million.
Quote from: JBTripper on July 25, 2017, 02:20:12 PM
These tactics are probably also very effective at showing cities that these projects can be done very inexpensively. What this group did for $100 would undoubtedly cost a city a half-million.
From what I've gathered off of this forum, half a million would only cover the feasibility study here in Jax! ;)
Quote from: JBTripper on July 25, 2017, 02:20:12 PM
These tactics are probably also very effective at showing cities that these projects can be done very inexpensively. What this group did for $100 would undoubtedly cost a city a half-million.
http://www.today.com/news/toronto-park-stairs-estimate-65k-man-builds-them-550-t114154
Seems to be a normal thing, huh?