The city of Downey held its first open streets festival yesterday. From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Downey Ride & Stride dedicated 5.5 miles of city streets to walking, bicycling, skating, wheelchairs, and plenty of other car-free activities.
Overall it was a great event. My daughter and I and her grandparents had a really good time riding and walking the route.
More than any other open streets event I have attended, the route included a number of small- to medium-sized residential streets. For participants, these streets work fine, but I hope that the advance communications were thorough and that the folks whose driveways were blocked knew what was coming.
Plenty of cyclists enjoyed the event. There were also lots of families just out walking in the middle of the car-free street.
The event included a lot of programming. There were hundreds of booths, fire trucks, bounce houses, food trucks, face painting, DJs, bands, and much more. It felt like half the groups in Downey - from churches to investment firms to school clubs to beauty pageant ensembles - were represented along the route. We enjoyed interacting with lots of folks, but in a way it felt almost too programmed; I think it is important to trust that people moving around a city on bike or on foot will enjoy interacting with other participants, and with businesses along the route.
Compared to CicLAvia events in Central Los Angeles, the attendance felt somewhat sparse. It felt perhaps like a party where food and drink were ordered for a 30 people, but only 20 people show up. Fun for the attendees, and there were plenty, but apparently not quite as populous as anticipated. Maybe if a few of occupants of the booths had moved through through the streets, it would have been better, but maybe I've been spoiled by the huge crowds that CicLAvias draw, and I am just expecting too much.
The time flew by because we were enjoying ourselves. I hope the city of Downey will host similar events in the future.
How about you, readers? Who attended Downey Ride & Stride? What did you think?
There are seven L.A. County Reconnecting Communities grants totaling $162 million - about 90% of that goes to Metro's Removing Barriers project, which includes new bus lanes, first/last mile walk/bike facilities, bike-share, and more.
New bus lanes are coming to Broadway, Colorado Blvd., Crenshaw Blvd, Lincoln Blvd., Los Feliz Blvd., Santa Monica Blvd., Valley Blvd., Vermont Avenue, Westwood Blvd., Whittier Blvd. and many more city streets!