SANDAG Celebrates Opening of 2.3-Mile Pershing Bikeway Through Balboa Park

From TimesofSanDiego.com

by Keller Brown

SANDAG on Saturday opened the long-awaited Pershing Bikeway through Balboa Park, with City Council President Sean Elo-Rivera, other lawmakers and bike enthusiasts in attendance.

The new 2.3-mile bikeway includes a two-way separated bikeway and a pedestrian path. The bikeway starts at Utah Street and Landis Street in North Park, continues through Balboa Park along Pershing Drive, and ends at C Street in downtown San Diego.

The bikeway has a set of road improvements, including a diagonal crossing at B Street and 19th Street. Another feature is a 75-foot bridge, allowing people to cross over Florida Canyon creek.

 

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Griffith Park road work will reduce traffic lanes

From TheEastsiderLA.com

Griffith Park: Those driving through Griffith Park should get ready for a major change: Vehicle lanes along a stretch of Crystal Springs Drive will be reduced from two to one in each direction as the city adds biking and pedestrian paths as well as a buffer separating those areas from traffic.

Construction is tentatively set to begin by the second week of August and should last about a month and a half, according to Stella Stahl, a spokesperson for City Councilmember Nithya Raman, whose District 4 includes the park.

Photo by Gustavo Tiffer on Unsplash

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How The Tour De France Is Filmed (It’s A Technical Masterpiece!)

Ever wondered how the Tour de France is filmed? Alex goes into all the complexities that happen on the ground, in the air, and even to who pays and has the rights to broadcast the big bicycle race!

 

Paris Is Becoming a Cycling City, for Better or Worse

From CNTraveler.com

On a sunny afternoon this spring, I rode a bike from Saint-Germain-des-Prés in the sixth arrondissement to Châtelet in the first to meet a friend. The feeling of sliding along the Seine was incredible—wind against my skin, the fresh feeling that comes with breezing past a body of water—until I reached my destination, where I stumbled upon the usual scene: four cyclists struggling to return their rides to a completely full bike rental station. Another biker and I spent 15 minutes finding another station with free spots—and another 15 to walk back to the first station, near where we had to be. We complained, but simply had to laugh. How typical this had become, just another Sunday for the cyclists of Paris.

Short or big, rusty or brand-new, sometimes with a ringing bell that alerts and annoys, bicycles are inescapable in the capital. This epitome of Frenchness, often associated with rather stereotyped Parisian accessories—up there with the baguette, the béret, and the Marinière shirt (that striped pattern, you know the one)—has become indispensable in the City of Light. As the city has been increasing its investment to make Paris more bike-friendly, the use of bikes by Parisians (about 11% of commutes) surpassed the use of cars (about 4%) for the first time in 2023, according to the Institut Paris Région, a research center for urban development in the the Île-de-France region.

Photo by JOHN TOWNER on Unsplash

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Nearly $10 Million Grant For East Los Angeles Pedestrian Crossing Announced

From MyNewsLA.com

A nearly $10 million federal grant will help build a pedestrian and bicycle crossing over the Long Beach (710) Freeway, officials announced Friday.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg joined Rep. Jimmy Gomez, D-Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis and other local officials at Humphreys Avenue Elementary School to celebrate the funding, which they say will “reconnect this section of East Los Angeles that was divided by the construction of I-710.”

Photo by Owen Lystrup on Unsplash

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