Policy & Regulations

What’s Next For Seattle’s Downtown Bike Network?

The City Council and SDOT are establishing a new timeline. Here's the latest.

By Kevin Schofield July 19, 2018

Seattle, USA - August 18, 2015: A man on a bike in front of the famous Pike Place Public Market sign at sunset on Pine street.

This story originally ran on SCC Insight.

Its been a frustrating couple of years for downtown bike commuters. After the city adopted the Center City Bike Network plan in 2016 with a goal of having the network implemented downtown by 2020, later that year it put the plan on hold while it worked on the One Center City plan.

Then the One Center City plan came out last year, including a recommendation for a two-way protected bike lane along 4th Avenue to be implemented this year. But in April SDOT announced that the 4th Avenue bike lane would be postponed until 2021, after the period of maximum constraint.

In response to outcry from the bicycle community, Council member Mike OBrien has been negotiating with SDOT a resolution laying out a timeline for implementation of pieces of the center city bike network over the next few years. Today that resolution passed out of committee, and is headed for approval by the full Council on July 30th.

The resolution attempts to be prescriptive in committing the city to meet design and buildout milestones by specific dates. It identifies eight specific routes:

1. From the Westlake Cycle Track through downtown to the intersection of 2nd Avenue South and South Main Street, to be completed no later than December 31, 2019. This involves filling in several missing pieces.

2. From the intersection of South Main Street and the 2nd Avenue Extension to Dearborn Avenue South, also to be completed by December 31, 2019.

3. Connecting the Second Avenue protected bike lane to the Broadway Avenue protected bike lane. SDOT must complete its outreach and conceptual design by December 31, 2018, then the build-out completed by December 31, 2019. It will include one-way protected bike lanes on some combination of Pike and Pine, with an interim facility to route around the Convention Center during construction.

4. Making temporary connections when downtown construction projects limit the ability to build permanent ones.

5. A two-way protected bike lane on Fourth Avenue between South Main Street and Vine Street. Design work must be 100 percent complete by May 31, 2019, though there is no specific commitment for build-out.

6. A two-way protected bike lane on Bell Street from Denny to 2nd Avenue, to be at 100 percent design by December 31, 2019.

7. A neighborhood greenway from 5th Avenue South to 12th Avenue South, to be completed no later than December 31, 2019.

8. A connection between Yesler Way and King Street along 12th Avenue South, by no later than December 31, 2019.

The resolution specifies that the bike facilities should be for all ages and abilities, rather than just for confident, experienced cyclists. It also requests that SDOT update its Traffic Control Manual for On-Street-Work by September 1 to ensure that when street work encroaches on a bike lane, an alternate route that is accessible, safe and clearly defined will be provided. And it requests quarterly updates to the Council on progress toward hitting these milestones.

OBrien, along with bicycle advocates including Seattle Neighborhood Greenways and Cascade Bicycle Club, celebrated the resolutions passing out of committee this afternoon.

There are, however, a couple of caveats worth noting. First, in the meeting today SDOTs Darby Watson expressed concerns with the departments ability to hit all of these milestones though she declined to specify those concerns, preferring instead to communicate them in private to OBrien at a later date. Second, this is only a resolution and is nonbinding; if SDOT misses deadlines, nothing happens. The City Council could instead place provisos on parts of SDOTs budget that would limit spending on other projects unless the bike network milestones are met, but at least at this point it has chosen not to do so. Well see if OBrien chooses to propose budget provisos to that end in this falls 2019-2020 budget development process.

Neither the resolution nor the discussion today touched on costs for building out the bicycle network, despite that being one of the stated reasons for the recent delays in building it out.

The resolution will come before the full Council on July 30th for final approval; OBrien allowed an extra week so that other amendments could be explored and circulated before the final vote. After that, the first quarterly report will be due on September 1.

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