NELA
Streetsblog LA
City Council Poised to Approve Four More Parklets
(Note: Details on all three City Council hearings on the resolution authorizing four parklets to be built can be found at the end of this story.)
August 21, 2012
Divide and Conquer on the 710 Big Dig
Last week, Metro finished its most recent public meetings outlining twelve proposals to fill the so-called 4.5 mile "gap" on the I-710 between Alhambra and Pasadena at the I-210. The public response to the twelve alternatives presented was near-uniformly negative. Anger was particularly high at new proposals to connect the I-710 to the I-210 including, a tunnel connecting the 10 Freeway to the 134 Freeway, a surface route that would widen Avenue 64 and a highway route along Huntington Drive, Fair Oaks Avenue and Pasadena Avenue.
August 20, 2012
Huizar, Living Streets, Unveil Parklet Designs for El Sereno Street, York Blvd.
Move over Sunset Triangle Plaza, a pair of street reclamation projects on the Eastside are threatening to steal your thunder as the most progressive street reclamation project in Los Angeles. Living Streets L.A.and Councilman Jose Huizar unveiled new designs for a "street porch" on York Boulevard in Highland Park and a "street plaza" on Huntington Drive in El Sereno. Both designs are completely unique as they arrived as a result of an extensive community process that started with a simple question, "How would you like to improve your street?" Nearly a dozen sessions later, each community devised surprisingly similar plans. "Ryan [Living Streets' Ryan Lehman] and I were pleasantly surprised that when given the option to choose any street improvement, the project both people chose were in one case a street porch and another case a street plaza," explains Steve Rassmussen Cancian, the architect for the project. Rasmussen Cancian prefers to avoid the term "parklets" which confuses people by leaving the impression that the city is planning something bigger, such as a soccer field, for the middle of the street. He prefers the more descriptive "street porch" for the above pictured design for York Boulevard which is actually resembles an urban porch. For El Sereno, pictured below, he prefers the term "street plaza."
May 3, 2012
Middle School Students to Reyes: Build Those Bike Lanes! (Update: Read LADOT Comment Below…)
May 2, 2012
Nightingale Middle School Students Ask for Safer Streets for Bikes
Dream It. Design It. Do It.
April 16, 2012
Do I Look Suspicious to You? Livable Streets Starts with Equal Access to Streets
Mikey, Jonathan, and George were waiting for a friend just a few feet from the corner of Ave. 50 and York Blvd. in Highland Park when a police car pulled up. Two cops got out and told them to turn around, spread their legs, and put their hands behind their backs.
March 29, 2012
Rethinking Streets in Northeast Los Angeles; An new Comprehensive Approach to Transportation Planning
Nowhere else in LA area are individual street routes as important than in the Northeast. Because of the area’s hills there is no grid. Streets wind their way up hills and cut through valleys creating public space and connecting the community to places beyond.
December 2, 2011
Making Change on North Figueroa Street
Earlier this year, when the designs for South Figueroa's My Figueroa project were released, Josef Bray-Ali wasn't happy. While many advocates celebrated designs that would, if implemented, result in segregated bike paths, transit-only lanes, pedestrian plazas (at a minimum), Bray-Ali saw another major investment in the Downtown and area around L.A. Live. Meanwhile, the portion of Figueroa where he worked and that he loved remained a traffic sewer, with five lanes of concrete and curbside parking blighting the area.
August 25, 2011
Los Angeles Dedicates its First Bike Corral
This morning, a crowd of over a hundred people assembled to celebrate the opening of the city of Los Angeles' first bike corral. The event took place at the corner of York Boulevard and Avenue 50, in Highland Park - in front of Cafe de Leche and directly across from Bicycle Doctor.
February 18, 2011
In NELA, D.I.Y. Sharrows Remain, But L.A. Is Moving On
Yesterday, Carter Rubin and I were in Northeast L.A. on our way to a meeting at Occidental College and we had a chance to stop in and visit with Josef Bray-Ali st the Flying Pigeon Bike Shop (see ad on the right). I commented that the "D.I.Y. Sharrows" that appeared along some local streets connecting the Gold Line Station with Figueroa street were finally taken up. LADOT had promised to remove the road markings when they were put up, one year and a couple of days ago, but Bray-Ali pointed out I was wrong. "They're still there, they're just faded."
December 9, 2010