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More 'protected' bike lanes being installed along North and Prospect avenues on Milwaukee's east side

According to Alderman Brostoff, the bike lanes will be against the curb on both sides of the street.
North Avenue
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MILWAUKEE — Crews are installing 'protected' bike lanes along North Avenue between the east end of the bridge over the Milwaukee River and Prospect Avenue, on Milwaukee's east side.

Alderman Jonathan Brostoff, who represents the 3rd district, said in a statement Thursday that crews will start with that stretch along North Avenue. More protected bike lanes will be installed along Prospect between North and Maryland. Department of Public Works crews are scheduled to start work on Friday, Aug. 4.

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E. North Ave. between the east end of the bridge and N. Prospect Ave.

According to Brostoff, the bike lanes will be against the curb on both sides of the street. They will have a painted buffer that includes plastic posts, called flexible delineators, between the bike lanes and cars.

The alderman says parking will be removed along the south side of the street and moved to a stretch between the buffer and the automobile travel lane on the north side of the street. That's in order to narrow the crossing distance for people walking; calm traffic; and provide increased safety for people biking. Brostoff adds that one driving lane in each direction will remain, similar to how it is today.

Alderman Brostoff said in the statement:

“Traffic safety has been an increasingly difficult and tragic problem in Milwaukee, which is why I supported these projects and why I’m so happy to see them get started. These new protected bike lanes mark the beginning not the end of improvements to the streets and not only will they will calm traffic, make the pedestrian experience better, and improve bike safety, but they’ll also reduce accidents both in volume and in severity."

Read the full announcement below:

Protected bike lanes coming to busy east side locations

Alderman Jonathan Brostoff announced today that installation of protected bike lanes will begin in the 3rd Aldermanic District, starting with E. North Ave. between the east end of the bridge over the Milwaukee River and N. Prospect Ave.

Alderman Brostoff said that additional protected bike lanes will also be installed on N. Prospect Ave. between E. North and N. Maryland Avenues. Department of Public Works crews are expected to get the installation work underway (weather permitting) tomorrow – Friday, August 4.

The new bike lanes on E. North Ave. will be against the curb on both sides of the street, with a painted buffer that includes plastic posts (called “flexible delineators) between the bike lanes and cars. To narrow the crossing distance for people walking, calm traffic, and provide increased safety for people biking, parking will be removed along the south side of the street, and parking will be located between the buffer and the automobile travel lane on the north side of the street. One driving lane in each direction will remain, similar to today.

Alderman Brostoff, a longtime proponent of traffic safety measures, has expressed his enthusiasm for the new protected bike lanes.

“Traffic safety has been an increasingly difficult and tragic problem in Milwaukee, which is why I supported these projects and why I’m so happy to see them get started,” Alderman Brostoff said. “These new protected bike lanes mark the beginning not the end of improvements to the streets and not only will they will calm traffic, make the pedestrian experience better, and improve bike safety, but they’ll also reduce accidents both in volume and in severity .”



Study finds painted 'sharrows' not the path to bike safety

TMJ4 News reported on similar lanes earlier this summer. Watch and read that reporting below:

Study finds painted 'sharrows' not the path to bike safety

By Steve Chamraz, Jun 22, 2023

MILWAUKEE — If you are serious about biking in Milwaukee, you have to love what the city has done on the south side.

Raised and separated bike lanes on Becher Street are the city's latest attempt to encourage cycling.
      
Jake Newborn from the Wisconsin Bike Federation says doing that starts with making safe connections all across the city.

"This is definitely a trucking route from the harbor getting on to I-94, but it's also a connection street from one side of the freeway to the other," Newborn said.

Newborn has been pushing for infrastructure like that for years.
      
Over the last two decades, Milwaukee and cities across the country tried a little bit of everything to make biking safer and easier. Including painted markings on the pavement called "sharrows."

The name is a mash-up of the words sharing and arrows.

About 15 years ago, sharrows were the hot new way to be bike-friendly without breaking the bank.
      
Now, we are learning sharrows may not be the way to go.

"There were people who thought this was something we could do easily and cheaply and quickly to help make it safer," Newborn said.

"It gave the illusion of safety and I think that can sometimes make it even more dangerous."

That was also the conclusion of a 13-year study of a bunch of different bike infrastructure strategies.

Protected bike lanes -- like the ones on Becher Street? They make the streets safer for everybody.
      
A painted bike lane? No difference, one way or another.
      
When it comes to sharrows, the study found it's actually safer to not have them.

Robert Schneider is a professor of urban planning at UW Milwaukee. He has seen that study, too, including the part that said sharrows are dangerous because they give cyclists "a sense of false security."

"In the neighborhoods where they were put the cyclist crashes actually went up slightly," Schneider said.

Part of the problem is that sharrows communicate a message of safety to cyclists but not to the drivers of cars who need to share the road.
      
"Especially if that motorist is traveling at a high rate of speed, they may not see the marking the same way a bicyclist does," Schneider said.

So, are sharrows all bad?
      
Maybe not.
      
Schneider points to the intersection of Fratney and Wright streets in Riverwest.

"It's an environment where cars can be traveling at a bicyclist's speed and that feels comfortable to everybody," he said.

Fratney and Wright are in the middle of what the city calls a "bike boulevard" with speed bumps and signage and sharrows.
      
Here, sharrows work in concert and context with everything else.

"They can work in certain types of locations, most likely. But they may not be appropriate for major arterial streets," Schneider said.

Jake Newborn wants cyclists to know sharrows really don't do much more than point the way.

"I think they're okay for wayfinding if you're making a connection from a trail to another trail, but they don't offer any real protection," he said.

Newborn hopes cities like Milwaukee build more proven solutions like these bike lanes and leave the sharrows in the rear-view mirror.

Something that appears to be coming down the road ahead.

Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson has promised to add 20 more miles of protected bike lanes across the city.


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