-->





Ridazz Roulette!




Recent gallery...

Something Else The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time #84 - All City Toy Ride V Fry-Day NIGHT #33 - Swarm the Pier Hot Box Parties Bela Speed Star Bela Speed Star Bela Speed Star Taco Tuesdays data center Handicapped Canines #27 - Safety Ride The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time The Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time Fixie Goons Fixie Goons Fixie Goons Fixie Goons CRANK MOB . X . The Memorial CRANK MOB . X . The Memorial CRANK MOB . X . The Memorial CRANK MOB . X . The Memorial


The Days of Our Ridazz.


NOTE: All timestamps are in the future because WE are in the future. The care takers of Midnight Ridazz.com reserves the right to remove, edit, move or delete anything for any reason. None of the opinions expressed on these boards represent the Midnight Ridazz nor can anyone purport to speak on behalf of Midnight Ridazz.



Topic Box:
 
   2751 - 3000 of 19045 Topics

Thank you roadblock!   7
tour of flanders!   7
Drag Race?   21
WTF HAPPEN?   4
Vatos Borfos!   2
JACKASS 3   5
Bicycle Swapmeet Thi...   0
Room Avl in Bike Dis...   0
FREE BIKES   3
Lost Ipod @ Casa de ...   3
bamboo clothing   1
Just so you all know...   2
wtf? not cool   2
DEALING WITH COPS   11
ANIMAL HATS FOR SALE...   1
DIRECTORS CUT   6
Look what Salton Sea...   2
HIPSTER MANIFESTO   7
ROCKY HORROR RIDE   29
Bikes VS Cars   3
Ride to Santa Cruz t...   0
562, 323 area codes:   7
Monsters   2
=/ STOLEN BIKE!!   19
Doggystyle   1
LACM Has not changed   5
HREY BOFO!!   10
LA TIMES + FMLY RIDE   2
Dumpster Ride   71
History of Biking in...   13
3RD STREET HOOLIGANS...   2
Ride In Peace Mitch   3
IN THE NEWS   5
Touring Bike   6
Kushtown's 2nd Year ...   20
TONY'S DARTS AWAY KI...   85
Vietnam Biking   13
LAPD LOOKING FOR WIT...   26
Bikes on a plane   35
3RD STREET HOOLIGANS...   2
Help with a Day Trip...   7
I.e riders??   5
South Bay Area Rider...   0
the new Portland is ...   8
Tsunami vs Old lady   4
how to buy the cheap...   4
Mini Penny   10
Label Fail   2
Reseda to the Sea 20...   29
Yo FMLY   42
Bicycle Lanes on Res...   1
NARCZ ON PARADE   6
Medical Training Wor...   2
SKYWALKER   0
KS Critical Mass   1
TACO TUESDAY ???   0
Kansas   2
CARPOOLS? - LA Marat...   15
WTF! The Ride! ALL N...   8
R.I.P Nate Dogg   11
Athena Cycles...   2
st patttys day party...   5
pillow talk   0
Salton Sea 4   889
Rider Killed this Sa...   62
ATTN Lackflag   4
TSUNAMI WARNING   19
SKYWALKER   0
a nice cheap cycling...   10
LAPD Bicycle Awarene...   4
iWe lost Rolling wit...   5
All City Team Race 3...   9
BRIDES OF MARCH! - ...   130
B.O.B. ?   68
La Bike Marathon   2
Bike Speaker   1
BIKE AND HIKE FUNNES...   30
M.R. MARCH 2011?   43
Legend of Zelda   2
WHISKEY WINE WEDNESD...   0
Minibike HELP   5
Drunk & Texting moto...   0
Ridazz at IronBruin ...   2
Crutches   0
burbank wunderboyz   13
Bike rentals (ideall...   13
Ummmmmm....   4
Song HELP!   28
Ride around the Down...   7
Six flags ride   2
I will featured be o...   7
LA ridin easy   6
Sheenstep   22
WORLD PROTESTS   84
Projection bias, hig...   1
Box gets the finger   20
Cycling iphone Apps   27
Woah   11
BEACH DAY! ! ! ! !   2
Wanna live in downto...   7
VOTE! BOX!   9
EAST HOLLYWOOD ART C...   2
NAKED PEOPLE ON BIKE...   5
Fixed Gear Month...   17
"Busted for Biking "   3
Cyclist in need of P...   0
SS4 TEASER   5
City Council Vote!! ...   15
Midnight Ridazz: Hav...   3
FMLY RIDE IS BACK!   10
MoM RidAzZ Tuesday   148
wolfpaq license plat...   3
"Spin to win, Crush ...   5
Stephen Box is in my...   28
Cyclist killed in Ve...   0
Tour de Box   3
WE ALL KNOW THIS PER...   3
Attn: Dedicated818   54
Warehouse Rental?   0
NELA BIKE POLO   49
World Naked Bike Rid...   1
Fargo Street Hill cl...   34
Sooo... The F Ride ....   20
Salton SARS   12
Coe coe NEEDS HW HEL...   7
SS4- Lost and Found   25
Pupusa Bicycle Ride   33
Blind Cyclists   1
NoHo Ridazz - Box4CC   2
Mardi Gras Ride   0
SS4 from a PDX point...   8
attn: hipsters   5
Solo freak in San di...   3
El Sabroso Facts   67
wrench and drink   14
How to post YouTube ...   6
Downhill fun in Chil...   1
SMC BIKE CLUB   3
CicLAvia - Boyle Hei...   2
car runs over bikers...   2
FREE Scarf!   9
Cell Phone?   4
CAN YOU GIVE OUR KIT...   0
Bike Talks show name...   5
Hanami Ride '11   2
FMLY RIDE 2011   0
7TH AND MAIN   14
FORTUNE 700   0
HAPPY BDAY GEARS   1
SKYWALKER!!!!!!!!   0
Critical mass   12
Denver riders???   5
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TOMAT...   8
Revolution Ridazz Pa...   0
OH EM GEE!   9
Nate on TALL BIKES   0
cyclist killed!   28
THANK YOU   1
Bike Recalls!   1
Salton SEA VIDEO   0
HELP!   2
blk/grn bike stolen ...   2
kung foo biking   4
Unicycle-fixie frien...   14
Bike Infrastructure ...   2
CO-OPerNATION   0
NEW RECORD FARGO STR...   12
LAteCM   6
Burning Whispers   0
MR Nostalgia   42
favorite hood?   27
Found: after NYE.SFC...   6
Swap Meet   0
free stuff @ Encino ...   1
Flying Bike   8
BARCHOPZZ this month...   6
st pattys day music ...   0
WTS SS$ Tix   5
Riding in the rain   34
**SS4 FOOTAGE**   5
desert vortex   2
CRANKMOB   38
selling my bike!!!   4
Fuck Bruce.   2
Looking For A Sound ...   0
should i fight bike ...   8
Feel My Legs, I'm a ...   43
818 Polo   29
COACHELLA   16
LA's First Mutha Fuc...   2
SKIDMARCUS IS LEAVIN...   19
RIDE ARC   7
Need music for my ri...   1
Professional tattoo ...   0
Dark Century IX   125
Race Across AMerica ...   16
Bikes in Drive Thrus...   4
Alter-Ego Ride 2.17....   4
BIKE TALK w/KittyKat...   29
Pizza!! At the Salto...   38
Whats a good way to ...   4
Chicken Leather has ...   4
Tomatoes Megaphone T...   12
-=DMSR=- ٩(...   12
Stolen bike at Holly...   4
Bicycle Clothing   116
Talladega Tuesday Ni...   6
Mauritius Holidays   0
KITT   3
ARCADE FIRE   2
FACEBOOK is DOWN! :(   9
just saying hi   12
Culver City cops   20
Bike theft in O.C., ...   1
Bikes on Buses   7
Velodrome in LA??   28
Muppet Movie Ride   1
BATMAN!'s Birthday!   7
818 NightstalkerS   10
Fizik Arione Saddle   1
MAN/BIKE vs BLUE LIN...   2
CopLuvFest II   13
Box in LA Weekly   4
Hurry Up And Wait   0
Inglewood Riders   24
Riverside rides   4
SALTON SEA DISCLAIME...   10
Selling My PK Ripper   5
No Mo LB Bike Licens...   2
out of Jewel City La   0
Bike Town Beta / Cic...   1
ATTN: FuzzBeast   44
The Video That Spark...   0
Wednesday Night Fix   0
DON'T RIDE   6
Members Only 818   9
TANDEM 4 $ELL   1
cargo bike ticket in...   13
STOLEN BOB JACKSON P...   0
Inpromptu ride & smo...   11
Borfo's Got (natural...   13
GREENBAY 54 PITSBURG...   10
TRACK WHEELS 4 $ELL   2
WTF!!!!!!!!!BILL MUR...   6
music festivals and ...   0
Danish Dub Step Bike   9
Year of the Rabbit C...   0
PLEASE REMOVE SFVCM ...   11
Bicykillers   296
-WTF!-THE-RIDE!-   59



Thread Box:
Bikeway or the Highway
Thread started by User1 at 02.25.08 - 4:02 pm

Bikeway or the Highway
Southern California set the nation on the path to bicycling bliss, then detoured. But smogville could still become a velotopia.
By Robert Gottlieb
March/April 2008

SIRENS WAILED. RED LIGHTS FLASHED. Police chased some alleged bad guys, and traffic on the Pasadena Freeway came to a dead stop. Typical Los Angeles. What happened next wasn't.

With all those cars going nowhere, drivers turned off their engines and got out to stretch. The members of a mariachi band started strumming and singing. Ice-cream vendors pushed their jingling carts through a hole in a chain-link fence. Then passing bicyclists rolled their vehicles of choice onto the freeway turned parking lot to join the spontaneous celebration, reclaiming a route their kind had once ruled.

As it happens, this 2004 event was the second time in as many years that bikes had taken over this stretch of freeway. I had helped orchestrate the first.

IN 1900, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIANS CREATED a futuristic traffic structure catering to the mechanical marvel of the day--the bicycle. It opened along a corridor known as the Arroyo Seco, named for the seasonal stream that flows from the San Gabriel Mountains and enters the Los Angeles River just north of downtown Los Angeles.

It was part of a grand plan to connect Los Angeles to Pasadena through an eight-mile "great transit artery." A Pasadena mayor, Horace Dobbins, provided the start-up funds to create an elevated, multilane, wooden "cycleway," complete with streetlights and gazebo turnouts.

When the first leg opened, swarms of bicyclists handed over the 15-cent toll. A Los Angeles Times commentator gushed that the countryside it passed through "is the loveliest in Southern California, the route having been chosen with an eye to scenic beauty as well as to practical needs."

The Los Angeles region, with its mild Mediterranean climate and relatively flat terrain, was in fact considered an ideal home for the bicycle, with more than 20 percent of the population biking for pleasure or to work when the cycleway was proposed.

"There is no part of the world where cycling is in greater favor than in Southern California, and nowhere on the American continent are conditions so favorable the year round for wheeling," one 1897 newspaper article commented. The bicycle use complemented the city's streetcars.

Soon the automobile gained popularity, however, and the elegant bicycling structure was eventually dismantled. Early discussion of car routes, meanwhile, highlighted the concept of a "parkway" as part of a mixed-transit system, built along scenic corridors with adjacent parkland.

Designers incorporated some of these features into the Arroyo Seco Parkway--the first freeway of the West, as it came to be called. It roughly followed the route of the old bikeway.

By the 1940s, Los Angeles, like other regions, had begun to reorient its transportation planning to exclusively favor the car, and the parkway officially became the Pasadena Freeway in 1954. With the passage of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 and its dedicated Highway Trust Fund, the car and the utilitarian freeway triumphed.

"America lives on wheels," Treasury Secretary George Humphrey proclaimed in 1955, "and we have to provide the highways to keep America living on wheels and keep the kind and form of life we want."

For the next several decades, transportation policy in Los Angeles and nationwide focused almost exclusively on where and how to build and expand the freeway system. Highway construction molded and shaped the land-use patterns, commercial and industrial activities, and spatial identities of cities and the countryside.

By the 1980s and '90s, however, the economic, political, legal, and environmental costs of such massive construction projects were causing officials to doubt their continued viability. Planners shifted their focus from system expansion to system management, as hours-long commutes began to stir public outrage.

Nowhere was this more painfully conspicuous than on the once scenic Arroyo Seco Parkway. This hybrid--part parkway, part modern freeway--had become the symbol of dysfunctional motoring. Cars routinely overshot hairpin exits and entrances designed to be approached at five miles per hour. Its curves, pleasant at 40 mph, often sent vehicles traveling at freeway speeds careening into the cement-lined Arroyo Seco, and a light rain invariably caused an unsightly ballet of pirouetting SUVs.

Community and environmental groups had for years mobilized around the freeway's problems. As a professor at nearby Occidental College and the director of its Urban and Environmental Policy Institute, I began strategizing with these organizations and other academic institutions. Particularly appealing was a subversive idea: Why not reclaim the freeway from automobiles, if only for a morning?

It took years of discussion to articulate the full-blown plan for ArroyoFest, an event we hoped would, among other goals, help Angelenos imagine bikes once again playing an important role in moving people around the city.

The project unfolded like a community-organizing thriller. The first question at any meeting: "Do you really think Caltrans is going to allow this to happen?" It seemed unlikely. Yet one by one, an array of organizations overcame the obstacles: securing liability insurance, finding ways to divert freeway traffic, and obtaining permits from various jurisdictions through which the route passed.

At a meeting just days before the event, Caltrans staffers announced that they had issued a permit to close the freeway. This astonished other agencies including the California Highway Patrol, which had assumed the state's transportation authority would simply say no. Momentum now shifted improbably but inexorably to yes.

A HEAVY FOG SETTLED OVER the Arroyo corridor in the early hours of June 15, 2003, muffling the voices of more than 3,000 cyclists who came peddling in on mountain bikes, racing bikes, tandems, trikes, unicycles, and recumbents to line up at the beginning of the freeway.

It was Father's Day, and a familial mood settled over the multigenerational, multiethnic crowd. Local schools had produced almost 100 murals and draped them from fences and overpasses. Community groups set up dozens of booths and passed out literature under the sycamores in a park along the route. It was a festival to celebrate a freeway taken back from the car, and with the sounding of a horn at 7:30 A.M., whooping bikers and pedestrians streamed onto forbidden turf.

"I could feel the cool air coming out of the tree-covered parks," one participant said. "I always knew the parkway was built to be beautiful, but seeing it at the appropriate speed clarified my vision."

Today, just a few years after the takeover of the Pasadena Freeway, a diverse bicycle movement is flourishing in L.A. It includes neighborhood and ethnic-based cycling clubs, policy advocates, ride-to-work and bike-along-the-river events, and several gatherings at which hundreds of riders take to the streets each month. Many of the groups are less than a year or two old.

The Bike Oven, for example, started as a free repair and do-it-yourself bicycle maintenance shop, but the garage where it operates has now become a social space and meeting center where neighborhood rides are launched, monthly art shows are held, and "bike-in" movies are screened. And while policymakers still largely ignore the bike's potential as one alternative to the car, L.A. cyclists have begun to coalesce into a force that promises to become more formidable in the months and years to come, as the congestion, pollution, and cost of driving become the movement's most effective recruiting tool.

On the morning of ArroyoFest, however, reclaiming a major route from automobiles seemed like an impossibility overcome. Sure, Los Angeles had shut off streets to cars for marathons and bikeathons. But this was a freeway, the internal combustion engine's sacrosanct realm. Now riders chatted and flirted. Others peddled hard, reporting that bicycling the 8.5-mile stretch of open freeway took far less time than when they commuted along the same route by car.

Gone with all those engines was the freeway's roar. Riders and spectators said they relished the relative silence. One nearby resident noted how disorienting and exhilarating it was to "open my window in the morning and hear birds and the wind and breathe the air in a way I had never experienced before."

Some say the event was like turning back time. I prefer to think of it as a glimpse of the future, an opportunity to be seized.

Robert Gottlieb is director of the Urban and Environmental Policy Institute at Occidental College. This article is adapted from his book Reinventing Los Angeles: Nature and Community in the Global City (MIT Press).

reply


Wow. Nice! Was the Arroyo Fest only organized two years in a row? We should get it done again!



Ms. Stephanie
02.25.08 - 4:48 pm

reply


I believe it was only a one time event. In support of my other wheeled brethren, I'd like to mention that there were folks on in-line and roller skates taking advantage of those wide open lanes well as well. Although this all happened before I knew about the cycling community or the skating crew, so alas I did not get to participate in this glorious occasion.



GarySe7en
02.25.08 - 5:10 pm

reply


Arroyo Fest

Check out the website to find out more about it.

Here is a You Tube clip of some of the event. To those who think of skaters as only people who move slowly and block your way on the bike path, notice the skate crew in this video is passing bikes far more often then being passed.







GarySe7en
02.25.08 - 5:25 pm

reply


Man, we need to find a way to do this again.



markedge
02.25.08 - 5:49 pm

reply


HELLLLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO


IS ANYBODY THEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEE






onethirtynine
02.25.08 - 6:10 pm

reply

Reply


Who's been here recently...




Upcoming Ridezz...

[ View all Rides ]