Public Comment

The Answer for the West Bay Bridge Bike Path
(originally posted, 11.8.12)

Hank Chapot
Friday November 14, 2014 - 12:15:00 PM

Every few weeks the local papers publish another weepy story about the Bay Bridge bike lane, its costs and delays. But the answer for the west side bike path is right under our noses, or rather, right under the road bed. Bridge authorities feed the media estimates approaching half a billion dollars, a price tag that guarantees it won't be built in my lifetime. 

Yet, I will ride to San Francisco from my home in Oakland someday, and unless the motoring public gives up a lane, the only good answer is to hang the bike path underneath the roadbed in an industrial sized catwalk, like a theater flyloft, built from high tech lightweight modular materials. Though my first choice would be a ribbon pathway high above the upper deck flying through the towers, I've decided the under the roadbed is the only real answer. 

Besides being economical and fast, this design has other advantages; no exhaust fumes in your face like the east side, protection from the rain and wind, the pathway deck could be perforated steel so you could see the water below, and the whole thing could be wrapped in artistic cyclone fencing to prevent littering and suicide. The need for wind fairings or deck replacement disappear. 

They'll argue that the shipping channel would be obstructed, but there is plenty of room in he superstructure and unless the Port of Oakland buys more monster cranes from China, finding ten feet of headroom would be easy. Even a boxy tube attached alongside the lower deck on the north side is better than any current design. 

I must address a few side issues; coupling bikes with service vehicles is a very, very bad idea, anyone who endorses the cantilevered design is agreeing to have the path closed any time the bridge district needs it closed. That local bike coalitions agreed to roadbed replacement as part of the project is a huge fail, it justifies the half billion dollar price scare. Plus, the "cantilevered" plan will not hold crowds during major events like the Blue Angels or America's Cup. 

My idea is the cheapest, the easiest to build and would overcome Bridge authority and bike-hater intransigence. Instead of ten years for a faulty cantilevered path, we could have this one in two. 

(I would also like to point out that my plan does not harm the architectural beauty of this great bridge).