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City's Bike Lanes Are Going Green - Literally

By ANNIE KARNI, Staff Reporter of the Sun | July 13, 2007

Residents of a Brooklyn Heights street opened the doors of their elegant brownstones this week to see what many described as a green blemish smeared across their tree-lined avenue.

Click Image to Enlarge

Heuichul Kim

A green-painted bike lane on Henry Street in Brooklyn Heights. Some residents find the color unsightly.

A fresh coat of nuclear-green paint had appeared, unannounced, on a bicycle lane on Henry Street between Amity and Clark streets — the first phase of a new city initiative to discourage vehicles from encroaching on lanes reserved for cyclists.

"It's fairly ugly, considering the neighborhood," a graphic designer who lives in Brooklyn, Claire Benson, said of the pigmented lane. Most of the city's bike lanes are delineated by more understated white stripes and symbols of cyclists, but the city is planning to "green" roughly five miles of curbside bike lanes where vehicles and bicycles are most likely to clash. Painting the lanes green costs the city about $100,000 a square mile, a spokesman for the transportation department said. While residents of the street raised their eyebrows at what they felt was an abrasive hue, cyclists lauded the more visible lane as a triumph in their ongoing clash with motorists over limited street space.

"It makes it impossible for drivers to ignore bike lanes and it creates a more protected space for cyclists only," a spokeswoman for Transportation Alternatives, Caroline Samponaro, said.

Motorists can be fined up to $115 for parking or driving in a bicycle lane.

Ms. Samponaro said the advocacy group would ideally like to see all of the city's 200-miles of bicycle lanes separated from automobile traffic flow by physical barriers, but that colored lanes have proved successful at making urban cycling safer in cities such as Philadelphia.

Six years ago, the city experimented with a blue bike lane on Henry Street as a part of a project to relieve traffic in downtown Brooklyn. With a growing number of New Yorkers traveling on bicycles, the city is now moving forward with brighter, greener lanes, a spokesman said, noting that contractors now have to maintain the colored lanes when they slice open the streets for construction projects.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

The greening of NYC's bike lanes is an outstanding idea!

Now, how does one explain to the DHL driver in the... [MORE]

Dirk VonVandenburglar 

Jul 13, 2007 10:01

so is the DOT going to TICKET and CHARGE the DHL (and probably UPS) trucks that will park in these... [MORE]

Barbara 

Jul 14, 2007 13:48

Parking violations are not enforced by DOT but rather by NYPD. In the schitzophrenic world of NY politics, the DOT... [MORE]

Ian Turner 

Jul 15, 2007 17:41

So folks in Brooklyn Heights are upset about the green paint used to mark the bike lane? Give me a... [MORE]

John Kraft 

Jul 13, 2007 12:24

ever ride over painted roads in the rain? those lanes are gonna be green and blood red.

[MORE]

Billy Simmons 

Jul 13, 2007 22:53

Many people at brooklynheightsblog have found this color to be very unsightly. Bicyclists seem to like it.

[MORE]

Homer Fink 

Jul 14, 2007 11:54

The color was changed from blue to green to comply with the new nationwide DOT's nationwide standard for colored bike... [MORE]

Ian Turner 

Jul 15, 2007 17:12

Well there are standards that must be followed and painting that lane is certainly not one of it at this... [MORE]

Mellisa Khemraj 

Jul 16, 2007 11:59

Being a bicycle advocate , the visibility is good....
but this paint wont look so good in a few months... I... [MORE]

corri 

Jul 16, 2007 16:36

I commute by bike and take Henry Street going home. I feel much safer with the green bike lanes. It... [MORE]

Jackie 

Jul 20, 2007 14:25

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