- Don’t forget: bike to work day is this Friday (CART)
- Cycling can bring a deeper community feeling than cars (Presta vs Shrader)
- Another installment of ‘Hal grades your bike locking’ (StreetFilms)
- No one will ever know this electric motor is helping you bike up that hill (TreeHugger)
Destroyed Portland Church To Be Rebuilt
The Portland Avenue Presbyterian Church was destroyed by fire in January, but now the congregation is drawing up plans to rebuild on the original site. After the fire was extinguished, the frigid January air turned the charred remains into an eerie icy scene. All but the steeple has been torn down, but the brick and stone from the original structure has been saved and will be used in the reconstruction (one of the massive original window frames was saved on site, too). Rev. Willa Fae Williams, pastor at Portland Avenue Presbyterian, says the church is too important to the congregation and the historic neighborhood to just abandon. The congregation has been growing recently and already is involved in outreach to the neighborhood.
Floyds Fork Greenway Plan Wins National Award
The American Society of Landscape Architects has presented the Floyds Fork Greenway Master Plan a 2009 Honor Award. Nearly 600 entries were considered for awards and the Floyds Fork plan was one of only 49 projects to receive recognition in several categories.
Snapshot: Republic Bank Gets A Coat Of Blue Paint
It seems now that the Republic Plaza building on Seventh & Market Streets is complete, the Republic Bank building on Sixth & Market is due for a little facelift as well. Scaffolding has been up for a couple days now, but today we noticed blue paint showing at the top of the building. Crews were rolling either a clear or grey coat onto the lower floors, so we’re unsure if the entire building is going blue or just the top. According to city building permits, a sixth floor renovation is also in the works.
Video: Imagine Driving The Speed Limit
What if you couldn’t speed? If you had to go the speed limit; not 5 over, but nothing above the posted limit? A new prototype car in London is equipped with an “Intelligent Speed Adaptation” system (a high-tech governor) that can tell the local speed limit and won’t let the car speed beyond it. The test-driver notices how slow the actual posted limits are and realizes he has been speeding in his regular car without noticing.
Author Tom Vanderbilt notes inadvertent illegal speeding is probably happening with many drivers:
Someone recently asked me, “why do people speed?” There’s no short answer to that question (I’ve got 250-page reports tackling the question), but one possibility that must be considered, in light of the above sentences, is that: They actually don’t know how fast they are going. Any number of studies have shown how drivers, particularly when the feedback is noisy—i.e., they’re sitting high up from the road, the car cabin is ultra quiet (or the radio loud), the road is very wide—routinely underestimate their speed.
Another blogger, Newton Streets and Sidewalks, finds that going the speed limit doesn’t really affect driving time:
For the last year or so, when I drive, I have been consciously driving at the speed limit on Newton roads. Not at the assumed safe-from-a-speeding-ticket speed limit plus 10 mph, but right smack dab at the speed limit. So far, it does not seem to have a meaningful effect on trip time within the city. And, when I go the speed limit, everyone else behind me goes the speed limit.
They suggest a government sponsored moratorium on speeding in their town for official vehicles and school buses. The London example expects abiding by the speed limit to create for relaxed drivers. There’s nothing like rolling up to the next stop light only to meet up with the speed-demon who just couldn’t wait to “get ahead” in city traffic. [ via How We Drive and StreetsBlog. ]
Art Car Friday: Wind-Up Smart Car
A tipster sent in this photo of one of the simplest art cars we’ve ever seen. It’s a wind-up Smart Car. The car is already one of the tiniest four-wheeled vehicles to be found on the road; it’s nice to see the playful modification fit so well. Broken Sidewalk couldn’t work without the vigilant eyes of our tipsters. Keep sending in your info and photos of happenings around town to tips@brokensidewalk.com.