Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
Streetsblog USA

Cities Are Reinventing Transportation Planning for the Age of the Public Beta

A three-day test of a protected bike lane on SW 3rd Avenue in Portland, Oregon. Photo: Greg Raisman
pfb logo 100x22
false

Michael Andersen blogs for The Green Lane Project, a PeopleForBikes program that helps U.S. cities build better bike lanes to create low-stress streets.

As protected bike lanes and other new-to-North-America designs have spread, they've created an exciting new era for American traffic engineers, who are once again getting the chance to solve new and interesting problems on our streets.

But they're also creating a new golden age for another important but unsung civil servant: the public outreach specialist.

Here's the latest evidence, from Delaware: Next week, a team of city workers in the university town of Newark are going to test a protected bike lane concept by installing it for exactly one hour and getting volunteers to try it out.

It's a simple, practical idea. But if you've been watching closely, you'll also recognize this as part of a big change that's sweeping through the profession of transportation planning.

If you were into computer software, you might say we're now in the age of the public beta.

Urban planning as we now know it emerged from a very different era, when renderings of our most important infrastructure projects looked more like this:

The never-built I-95/695 interchange in Roxbury, Massachusetts. Via Hyperreal Cartography

And less like this:

The soon-to-be-finished Hampline in Memphis. Via Alta Planning + Design

When you're building freeways, adding turn lanes and bulldozing neighborhoods, all the planning has to happen first. You can't beta-test a freeway.

In the modern age of bike and pedestrian infrastructure, that's changed completely. On-street testing can be built right into the public process.

Here are a few other examples we've seen recently:

In an earlier era, it'd be unthinkable to plan a city by knocking down houses first and asking questions later. But when you're doing biking and walking projects, doing work on the street early in your process isn't a way to avoid public engagement. It's a way to dramatically improve it.

You can follow The Green Lane Project on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook or sign up for its weekly news digest about protected bike lanes.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

CalBike Summit Roundup

Too many sessions and conversations to cover!

April 26, 2024

Metro Board Funds Free Student Transit Pass Program through July 2025

Metro student free passes funded another year - plus other updates from today's Metro board meeting

April 26, 2024

Friday’s Headlines

Inspiration from the Bike Summit; OakDOT proposes standards for temporary safety upgrades; San Diego transforms a fast road in Balboa Park; Stockton transit funding is under threat; More

April 26, 2024

Active Transportation Program Calls for Volunteer Evaluators

Apply to be a volunteer ATP application evaluator by May 10.

April 25, 2024
See all posts