
The Great Rivers Greenway District and the Metro East Park and Recreation District will jointly celebrate the grand opening of the McKinley Bridge Bikeway and Trestle at Branch Street on Saturday, June 7, from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m.
The McKinley Bridge Bikeway is a 2,600-ft. long by 14-ft. wide cantilevered lane separated from vehicular traffic lanes on the McKinley Bridge. Offering dramatic views of the Mississippi River and downtown St. Louis, the bikeway is a unique and distinctive feature of the reconstructed bridge that was reopened for vehicular traffic last November.
Also new on the Missouri side is the Trestle at Branch Street, a 2,400-ft. long by 24-ft. wide paved path that rises from street level at Branch Street to the height of the McKinley Bridge Bikeway. The trestle provides a direct connection to the popular 11-mile Riverfront Trail.
Eventually, an additional extension on the Missouri side will connect the Trestle at Branch Street, an adjacent historic elevated steel trestle that continues to downtown St. Louis. The trestle, which was a former rail corridor, will distinguish St. Louis as only the third city in the world, after the High Line in New York City and the Promenade Plantée in Paris, to convert an historic elevated railroad viaduct into a linear urban recreation area.
In a press release for the event, Madison County Board Chairman Alan Dunstan highlighted another important aspect of the project. “Thanks to the vision and hard work of the Madison County Transit District (MCT), we have a world-class bikeway system featuring over 100 miles of interconnected trails in Madison County. The opening of this landmark project by MEPRD and Great Rivers Greenway brings us another step closer to providing Missouri residents with enhanced access to those trails.”
While there are existing on-road connections to both the Confluence Trail and Schoolhouse Trail, MEPRD and MCT are in the planning stages for a trail connection that will link the McKinley Bridge Bikeway directly into the one of those existing MCT trails.
No bicycle riding will be allowed on the McKinley Bridge during the event, but participants will be able to walk or take a shuttle bus to take advantage of bands, food and other activities in St. Louis and across the Mississippi River in Venice, Ill. There's an early bird ride from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. from North Riverfront Park in St. Louis down to the bridge. The bikeway will be officially dedicated at noon.
Columbia, Ill.-based Helmets First will giving away bicycle helmets to the first 100 children.Labels: bicycling, Illinois, McKinley Bridge, Missouri, St. Louis, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 10:39 PM![]()
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Longtime reader Jack Painter asked me to spread the word about less-than-suitable conditions on the bicycle trail in Forest Park, St. Louis' largest city park.
"Forest Park is the jewel of St Louis as you probably know," Jack says. "The bike path there is highly used by cyclists, joggers, pedestrians, dog walkers and parents pushing their children in carts. Riding on it again yesterday (Wednesday), the path in this area still has mud and the grass alongside is a mess."
The problem area, Jack says, is a 70 to 100-yard section of the trail along Lindell Boulevard near the Missouri History Museum. As of Wednesday, he says the path still is covered with mud but it is not thick and mostly dry.
Jack also noted that the Riverfront Times STLOG blog picked up on the story. A picture that accompanies that blog shows the aftermath of the St. Louis Brewers Heritage Festival, held in Forest Park over the weekend. "Try pedaling through that and staying clean for that Monday-morning meeting," the author noted.
Jack says the trucks tore up the soil (as can be seen in the picture) on both sides of the path. The soil is very wet because of the record rainfall the St. Louis area has had in the first 4 1/2 months of 2008. Jack also contends there are many other places in the park to hold the festival which would allow trucks to delver the beer without using a bike path and that the path was not built to handle the weight of trucks and was just repaved in the last two years.
Other problems persist on the path in Forest Park, Jack contends: "On weekends when the lots that charge for parking fill up along with the free parking spaces, vehicles are parked on the bike paths even behind the Art Museum. I spoke with one of the security guards in the parking lot. He said that this occurs every busy weekend and the police have been informed. In biking around for one hour, I was unable to find an officer even though they have an equestrian station located in the park.
"Bike paths are great for recreational cyclists but in this case are also useful for commuters as the path parallels Lindell Blvd. and extends the full length of the park on the north side. But the message is clear, bike paths are given too little consideration. Local advocates favor (vehiclular cycling) and therefore bike paths, especially bike lanes, are also given minimal consideration."
Jack hopes, and I do as well, that the path is cleaned up by Friday morning, which a CBS News crew will be covering St. Louis' Bike to Work Day celebration. The last thing Trailnet and other organizers need is images of bicyclists trying to navigate a paved bike trail covered with mud.
Given the soil conditions, I can understand why beer festival organizers believed they needed to use the trail to set up booths. But as an event organizer myself, I am a firm believer that you need to leave the facilities in as good shape -- if not better -- than you found them. The mud on the trail creates an unsafe condition for cyclists and creates an inconvenience for other trail users.
Roger 1 comments links to this post 12:07 PM![]()
Monday, May 05, 2008
Just in time for National Bike to Work Week, May 12-16, the Great Rivers Greenway District is announcing the opening of 57 miles of additional on-street Bike St. Louis routes through St. Louis County and St. Louis City.
With the expansion, the Bike St. Louis system will today 77 miles of dedicated bike lanes and shared traffic lanes.
The dedication of the expansion will take place Thursday at three locations:Here's a brief excerpt from the press release (Word document) Bike St. Louis has published about the expansion:
- 10 a.m. in Maplewood, Mo., in front of Schlafly Bottleworks, 7260 Southwest Avenue
- 11 a.m. in Clayton, Mo., at the MetroLink station at Central and Shaw Park Drive
- 12:30 p.m. in St. Louis at the intersection of St. Louis Avenue and Blair Avenue
(a half-block block west of Crown Candy Kitchen)The new routes are the first major expansion of the Bike St. Louis network since 2005, when the first 20 miles of continuous on-street bicycle routes were dedicated and connected downtown St. Louis to surrounding neighborhoods. Nearly 50 miles of the expanded Bike St. Louis routes are located in the City of St. Louis, providing connections from downtown to neighborhoods, business districts, educational, cultural and recreation amenities in North and South St. Louis. The new routes also provide on-street connections to the North Riverfront Trail and the McKinley Bridge Bikeway along the Mississippi River in North St. Louis, as well as the River des Peres Greenway and Christy Greenway in South St. Louis.All Bike St. Louis routes feature highly visible customized designation signs, standard federal bicycle route signs and on-street pavement markings. In addition, Bike St. Louis maps are available online at www.bikestlouis.org and at many convenient area locations throughout the region. The maps provide information to assist riders plan their routes and feature safety tips and other pertinent resource information.
“In just a few short years, I have seen an important change in residents’ attitudes about bicycle trails and lanes,” said St. Louis Mayor Francis G. Slay. “What was suspicion and resistance five years ago is now enthusiastic support. A nearby trail is viewed – and, more importantly for our physical fitness, used – as an important amenity for city neighborhoods."
And if that wasn't enough, the Great Rivers Greenway District will hold the grand opening of the McKinley Bridge Bikeway and Trestle on June 7. After a major renovation, the bridge reopened to vehicle traffic late last year, and now the McKinley Bridge will link the Bike St. Louis system to the Madison County Transit Confluence Trail in Illinois.
Once the bridge is open, St. Louis cyclists will have four safe ways to cross the Mississippi River between the two states. The existing crossings are the Eads Bridge, Old Chain of Rocks Bridge and the Clark Bridge, which connects St. Charles County, Mo., and Alton, Ill.
Not surprisingly, I applaud the efforts to make the St. Louis area more bicycle friendly, and I hope the trend continues.Labels: commuting, cycling, Missouri, St. Louis, trails
Roger 2 comments links to this post 12:10 AM![]()
Friday, March 07, 2008
In case you didn't read about it in today's Belleville News-Democrat, the city of Belleville, Ill., is planning to build a new bicycle trail.
The West Belleville Bikeway would connect Citizens Park with Dapron Drive near Memorial Hospital. By my calculations, that's only about a mile and a half, but the city hopes the trail eventually extends north and south to allow people to ride their bikes from one side of town to the other.
The News-Democrat also reported that the neighboring community Swansea also applied for a state grant for the second phase of its bike trail, extending the trail from Centennial Park to the MetroLink Trail and East Belleville Bikeway in Belleville. Village leaders had put the phase on hold last year while they waited for Metro, the St. Louis mass transit agency that operates the MetroLink light-rail system, to complete plans for a second phase of its trail so the two could connect.Angela Fletcher, a spokeswoman for Metro, stated in an e-mail to the News-Democrat that the next phase of Metro's trail is planned to run three miles from North End Park, where it connects with the East Belleville Bikeway, to the Memorial Hospital MetroLink station.
Even with the proposed trails, we have a long ways to go. Our neighbors to the north, Madison County, has about 100 miles of trails. St. Clair County only has about 15 miles.
The News-Democrat article also includes a quote from Jim Klenn, the co-producer and director of the documentary "Tour de Donut: Gluttons for Punishment." Not surprisingly, Jim is in favor of extending the Belleville area's trail system.Labels: Belleville, St. Clair County, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 1:43 PM![]()
Monday, March 03, 2008
I know the hardy souls who are able to ride their bicycles all year long won't be impressed, but I got around to getting in my first 14 outdoor cycling miles of 2008 on Sunday.
Even with the strong, steady winds that usually go along with unseasonably warm days in Midwest -- we were up in the 70s -- I had to get out Sunday. I rode from my house to lunch at the St. Louis Bread Co. restaurant in downtown Belleville, then I rode the MetroLink Trail to Southwestern Illinois College.
There were a lot of families and kids on the trail, which I think it is a good thing. It's good to see people using what few trails we have here in St. Clair County, and I hope someday officials in this county will learn something from our neighbors to the north, Madison County, and build more trails here.
Dave Luecking, who writes the 10 Speed blog for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, also hit the trails Sunday, and he offers a few tips in trail etiquette in Part 1 of his Bicycling Survival Guide. I agree with Dave with the points he makes about cyclists, but my experience on trails also is that a few non-cycling users of trails also can be less than courteous.
I blew a few chances this winter to get some decent miles in because of work on the Tour de Stooges and The Gerry Frierdich Road to Recovery Ride. I tried being a winter cyclist years ago, but my lungs get too sore, no matter what I did, because of residual effects from my childhood asthma.
It looks like it may be a while before I get back outside on the bike. We're expecting about 7 inches of snow tonight and Tuesday and cold temperatures the rest of week.Labels: Belleville, cycling, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 11:33 AM![]()
Thursday, February 28, 2008
The other day while I driving up to Gillespie, Ill., for an organizational meeting for the 2008 Tour de Coal, I noticed an encouraging sign.
Madison County Transit has started work on a 5.5-mile trail between Staunton and Worden. Work still is in the very early stages, but barricades have been placed on where the trail will intersect roads between Staunton and Worden.
MCT has received state grants for that trail as a well as a trail between Hamel and Staunton. When those are completed, cyclists will be able to ride on a trail or bike lane from the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge to the Macoupin County line.
Once in Staunton, the home of the original Tour de Donut bicycle "race," the ITS Trail Committee is still working on plans to build a trail that will link Staunton with an existing trail between Benld and Gillespie. As mentioned here before, the long-term goal is to build bicycle trails that will link St. Louis and Springfield.
Below is a video shot for the public access cable TV channel in Staunton. It's an interview with Dr. Poonam Jain, president of the ITS Trail Committee's board, and Jarid Ott, the committee's executive director:
It appears the movement to build more bicycle trails in Southwestern Illinois is gaining momentum.
My friends at GEARS, also known as the Greenville Eating and Riding Club, and the Kingsbury Park District, which covers much of Bond County, are looking into the possibility of building bicycle trails in that rural county.
For those of you unfamiliar with Southwestern Illinois geography, Bond County is the county immediately east of Madison County roughly bisected by Interstate 70. Many Bond County residents are familiar with the MCT trail system.
Dr. Tracy Hall, who created the GEARS group and is a longtime member of the Belleville Area Bicycling and Eating Society, reports many members of her group attended a park district meeting Monday night to express their support of trails in the Greenville area.
GEARS and the park district have a lot of homework to do before trails become reality in that county, but at least they have good resources nearby to get information on how to get money for trails.
Roger 0 comments links to this post 1:05 PM![]()
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
For the second time in a week, a suspect has been arrested in an attack on a bike trail in the metro-east, the Illinois counties of the St. Louis Metropolitan Area.
Jimmy Joe Huston, 25, was charged in Madison County Circuit Court with unlawful restraint after he allegedly pushed a female jogger off the Madison County Transit Nature Trail near Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and down a ravine last May 20. She resisted and was able to break free with only minor injuries.
Last week, Edwardsville police learned that Huston was in Wakulla County, Fla. Police contacted U.S. marshals, who, on Feb. 7, arrested Jimmy Joe Huston where he had been staying. Huston, 26, was taken to the Wakulla County Jail. He did not resist arrest, according to a news release from Edwardsville police.
Metro-east law enforcement officials should be commended for the new arrest, along with the arrest last week of a suspect in a 2006 attack on the MetroLink Bicycle Trail in Belleville and the felony charges filed in the August 2007 accident that injured recumbent cyclist Gerry Frierdich.
It's encouraging for all residents of the metro-east, not just cyclists and joggers, that authorities are following through with these type of cases.
Roger 0 comments links to this post 12:40 PM![]()
Friday, February 08, 2008
The Belleville News-Democrat reported today that a man has been charged in the 2006 attack of a woman on the MetroLink Bike Trail in Belleville, Ill.
The attack prompted organizers of the Tour de Belleville, a nighttime ride held in July, to use proceeds from the 2007 ride to help purchase emergency call towers for the trail.Michael W. White, formerly of Cahokia, Ill., was charged Feb. 1 with aggravated criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery and criminal sexual abuse. His bond has been set at $200,000.
The woman was jogging on the trail near McKinley Avenue the night of the attack when the suspect knocked her to the ground, got on top of her, covered her mouth with his hand and grabbed her breast, police said. He let go after she managed to kick him in the groin.
This year's Tour de Belleville is slated for Friday, July 11. Phil Elmore, the chief organizer for the event, says proceeds from this year's ride will be used to install flashing signals on the bike trail at busy intersections within the city's jurisdiction.Labels: Belleville, Tour de Belleville, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 11:58 AM![]()
Sunday, February 03, 2008
I somehow missed this Dear Abby column that appeared in the Belleville News-Democrat and other newspapers throughout the United States on Jan. 31. (I have to admit that I tend to skim Lifestyle sections in any newspaper I read and focus more closely on News and Sports sections).
But the ever-vigilant Cycling Dude (Kiril Kundurazieff) wrote about it on his blog the other day. I, like Kiril, agree with many of the points that readers made in the column.
The complaints are similar to ones I've heard over the years: Cyclists whiz by walkers without warning, and walkers two or more abreast don't move over when cyclists do warn them. I can tell you from first-hand experience that both are true.
"The obvious solution is for walkers and riders to be considerate of one another, recognizing that we share a common road through life," Celia in Missoula, Mont., suggested.
Amen to that!Labels: trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 2:01 PM![]()
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Thanks to the miracle that is The Associated Press, I found about this man who is accused of sabotaging a mountain bike trail in Fullerton, Calif.
Warren John Wilson, 52, faces a single felony count of vandalism, police Sgt. Linda King told the AP.
As many as 50 holes were dug in a popular bike trail, some disguised with branches and brush. Some bikers along the trail reported being thrown over their handlebars when they rode over the deliberately dug holes, although no one was seriously injured.
Police say they caught him leaving the trail that runs parallel to Fullerton's Bud Turner Trail at Laguna Lake Park after fresh holes had been dug, King told the Orange County Register.
When detectives questioned him, Wilson said he had "almost been run over" by a mountain bike rider and began digging the holes and placing obstacles on the trail to retaliate, King told the Register.
There's nothing quite like desecration to exact some vigilante "justice." While it's entirely possible that the cyclist was at fault in not yielding to a walker, Wilson -- if convicted -- may find out the hard way that reporting the incident to a park ranger or police officer would have been a much better way to deal with the problem than digging holes.Labels: crime, mountain biking, Tour of California, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 10:14 AM![]()
Monday, November 26, 2007
Dardenne Greenway, initially proposed as a recreational trail across most of St. Charles County, Mo., is shrinking by more than a third, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported today.
The Great Rivers Greenway District hoped to build a 36-mile trail along Dardenne Creek from the Warren County line to the Mississippi River, the Post-Dispatch reported. But indifference or even hostility from some creekside landowners led the district to abandon its plan for the project's eastern and western ends. As a result, the trail will probably run from just west of the Busch Wildlife Area to just east of St. Peters' Lakeside 370 Park.
Nancy Thompson, the district's project manager for the Dardenne Greenway, said few landowners west of the Busch area and along the creek near the Mississippi were willing to grant trail easements.
"What happened is that we listened to the people and found that in the west part of the county there's very little willingness from property owners for a trail," she said.
Roger 0 comments links to this post 2:40 PM![]()
Friday, November 16, 2007
Nearly $1.5 million has been awarded to communities in Southern Illinois to make improvements and expand bike trails.The grants were administered through the Illinois Department of Natural Resources' Bicycle Path Grant Program.
Here are the grants:
Alhambra: $200,000 to build a 4.5-mile trail as an extension to the Nickel Plate Trail. The trail will begin at Hoxey Drive in rural Madison County to Main Street in Alhambra.
Granite City: $199,800 to build 1.9 miles of trail as phase two of the Six Mile Prairie Trail System in Granite City. The trail runs along a sanitary canal between Pontoon Road and Maryville Road.
Madison County Transit District: $600,000 total in three separate $200,000 grants. The grants will be used to: Build four miles as an extension to the Confluence Bikeway. The section begins at 20th Street in Granite City and runs to the McKinley Bridge which crosses at the Mississippi River. The trail will be built on top of the Chain of Rocks Canal levee; build 2.8 miles of limestone screening trail as an extension to the 14-mile Nickel Plate Trail. The section starts at Fruit Road in rural Madison County and extends east to Hoxey Drive; build a 0.4-mile addition to the Watershed Trail in Edwardsville. This segment start at West Union Street and ends at West High Street.
Metro East Park and Recreation District: $200,000 to build a 6-mile trail on Chouteau Island along the levee. The trail will run from Chain of Rocks Road south to the southernmost tip of Chouteau Island. This is phase one of the new Eagle Points Trail System.
Roger 0 comments links to this post 2:45 PM![]()
Monday, July 16, 2007
Today's post consists of some bits and pieces from the cycling scene:
TOUR DE DONUT: Congratulations to all the winners in this year's Tour de Donut, which was run Saturday in Staunton, Ill. A round of applause goes out to all the winners, and you can see all of the actual times and doughnut bonus adjusted times at the ride's Web site. As you know, I consider the people with the best adjusted times as the champions of the Tour de Donut, and special credit goes out to Anna Witt, who defended her title in the Women's Under-50 division by eating 16 doughnuts for an adjusted time of 1 hour, 13 seconds.
ITS TRAIL: Speaking of Staunton, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch today reported on the efforts of the ITS Trail Committee to build a trail from Staunton to Benld. The trail would link a proposed Madison County Transit trail from Worden to Staunton to the existing Gillespie-Benld trail. The long-term goal is build a network of trails that would connect St. Louis and Springfield, Ill.
The Macoupin County Board supports the project, and county government will act as the committee's fiscal agent for expected future grants.
"We've seen what the trails have done in Madison County," County Board Chairman Andy Manar told Post-Dispatch reporter Terry Hillig. "It's an issue of improving the quality of life and health, and it has the potential for countywide impact."
TOUR DE FRANCE: Today was a rest day after Michael Rasmussen grabbed the yellow jersey with his Stage 8 win Sunday. Tomorrow should be a interesting day with climbs of the Col de l'Iseran, the Col du telegraphe and the Col du Galibier. The first week of the tour was slower than in recent years, and experts have various theories about why -- headwinds, cyclists saving themselves for the Alps and a reduction of doping.
TOUR OF MISSOURI: The Associated Press reports why the state of Missouri is putting so much effort in promoting the Tour of Missouri on Sept. 11-16.
The bottom line: marketing.
Here's an excerpt from the story:Life after Lance Armstrong has been anything but smooth for pro cycling, which this time of year is normally celebrating the annual Tour de France. Instead, the sport is struggling to preserve its public relevance, financial footing and athletic integrity amid increasing allegations of a rampant culture of cheating.
So what in the name of Floyd Landis is the Show-Me State doing rolling out the red carpet - not to mention more than $1 million of taxpayer money - for the inaugural Tour of Missouri, a six-day, 600-mile stage race that will bring some of the world's top riders here in mid-September?
For Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder, the answer is simple: a global marketing bonanza the likes of which Missourians have never seen.
"This is the greatest opportunity we have ever had to brand Missouri to a national and international audience," said Kinder, who is also chairman of the Missouri Tourism Commission.
Labels: Tour de Donut, Tour de France, Tour of Missouri, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 12:33 PM![]()
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
If you live in the St. Louis area, you pretty much had to be hiding under a rock Monday to have not heard about the attack on a female jogger that took place Sunday on the Madison County Transit Nature Trail in Edwardsville.
The good news is that Edwardsville Police have a suspect, although he was not in custody as of this morning. Also, the woman escaped his attacker and suffered only minor injuries.
The crime got big play in St. Louis-area media outlets, including the one I work for, the Belleville News-Democrat. My hope is that the extensive coverage prompts people to be more careful while using the trails, but that it doesn't create paranoia that prompt people to stop using the St. Louis region's trails.
The attack in Edwardsville also brought back reminders of an August 2006 attack that took place on the MetroLink Trail in Belleville. No suspect has been arrested in that particular attack. That attack prompted the organizers of the Tour de Belleville bicycle ride, which will take place July 13, to use proceeds from this year's ride to purchase emergency telephones that will be installed along the trail.
Police and MCT believe trails are generally safe places to be. Edwardsville Police Lt. Scott Evers said there have not been any other attacks on the miles of MCT Trails that go through his city, and MCT released this statement on the trails:"Thanks to existing security measures and a solid working relationship with law enforcement agencies in the communities served by the MCT bikeway system, tens of thousands of individuals safely enjoy the trails every year. MCT continues to believe that the trails are safe and that this was an isolated, unfortunate incident."Nevertheless, Edwardsville Police offered several tips to stay safe on the trails, including cycling, running or walking with a friend or in groups and exercising only during daylight hours.
Here are some links to coverage on the attack:
Belleville News-Democrat
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
The (Alton) Telegraph
Edwardsville Intelligencer
KSDK-TV
KMOV-TV
KTVI-TV
KPLR-TVLabels: MCT Trails, safety, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 9:18 AM![]()
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
PROGRESS ON NEGLIGENT VEHICULAR HOMICIDE BILL: Last week, the Illinois House overwhelmingly passed a bill (115-1) that would create the offense of negligent vehicular homicide. The bill now goes to the Senate.
The bill is, at least in part, in response to the tragic death of Champaign-Urbana area cyclist Matt Wilhelm, who was killed in 2006 when he was struck by a car driven by a woman downloading a cell-phone ring tone. The woman was charged with a petty offense after Champaign County State's Attorney Julia Rietz determined that under current Illinois law, she could not have been charged with the felony charge of vehicular homicide.
The bill would create a middle ground for those accidents that rise above a petty offense but do meet the "willful and wanton" disregard for public safety standard required for a felony charge.
STUDENT BUILDS UP FOR BIKE AND BUILD: The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports today about the efforts of 26-year-old Lindenwood University junior to raise money for Bike and Build, an organization that provides money for affordable housing projects throughout the country.
On May 25, David Gowryluk of Holland, Manitoba, and 30 other cyclists will begin a 3,600-mile journey from Manteo, N.C., to San Diego. Gowryluk and his fellow cyclists are scheduled to end the trip July 27.
CAUTION URGED ON MCT CONFLUENCE TRAIL: The U.S. Corps of Engineers will be working on the levee between Chain of Rocks Road near Granite City, Ill., and Cahokia Creek until 2009, creating rocky conditions for cyclists and runners on the Madison County Transit Confluence Trail. The Confluence Trail may or may not be closed during this period. Please ride with caution in this area until further notice.
Meanwhile, the MCT Nature Trail remains closed from Sand Road, near Edwardsville to Anderson Lane in Pontoon Beach for reconstruction. The trail will reopen June 1. Cyclists, runners, rollerbladers, etc. are urged to avoid that section of the trail.Labels: advocacy, charities, cycling, safety, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 9:39 AM![]()
Monday, April 02, 2007
As I mentioned Thursday, Madison County Transit will be resurfacing the MCT Nature Trail because of massive cracks in the pavement. On Thursday, the timetable had not been set.
That's no longer the case. Beginning Tuesday, April 3, the MCT Nature Trail will be closed from Sand Road, south to Anderson Lane in Pontoon Beach for reconstruction. The trail will reopen in this area on June 1. For your safety, MCT is asking cyclists to avoid the trail in this area.
Thanks to MCT's extensive trail system, you'll still be able to ride on a trail between the Granite City/Pontoon Beach area and the Edwardsville/Glen Carbon area while work is being done on the Nature Trail. Instead of using the Nature Trail, you can use the Nickel Plate Trail, which intersects with the Nature Trail near Long Lake, and take the Nickel Plate Trail through Glen Carbon into Edwardsville.Labels: MCT Trails, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 8:25 PM![]()
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Madison County Transit soon will be replacing the pavement on a section of the MCT Nature Trail between Pontoon Beach and Edwardsville, Ill., that is in dire need of repair.
Dan Corbett, a friend of mine and a member of MCT's board of trustees, said the board today accepted bids on the project.
The section of the Nature Trail that will be affected by the repairs is between Chain of Rocks Road just outside Edwardsville and the junction with the MCT Nickel Plate Trail near Long Lake in Pontoon Beach.
That section of the trail will be closed during the repaving, but no exact timetable has been set for the work.
At the moment, that section of trail is open, but please use caution and watch for warning signs and cones -- especially if you ride a road bike. The cracks in the pavement can easily catch a road tire.
The reason why the section of the Nature Trail has deteriorated so much is because of the soil conditions beneath the trail surface, Dan said. Work will be done to the bed beneath the trail to make it better suited to handle an asphalt trail.
Thanks to MCT's extensive trail system, you'll still be able to ride on a trail between the Granite City/Pontoon Beach area and the Edwardsville/Glen Carbon area while work is being done on the Nature Trail. Instead of using the Nature Trail, you can use the Nickel Plate Trail between Long Lake and the eastern end of the Nature Trail.Labels: bicycling, MCT Trails, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 1:42 PM![]()
Saturday, March 24, 2007
Starting April 1, Trailnet will make monitored attendant parking available at the Missouri entrance to the historic Old Chain of Rocks Bridge over the Mississippi River.
Monitored parking will be available from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday through Sunday until November 1. St. Louis Parking will be collecting fees of $3 per vehicle and $10 for 15-passenger or larger vehicles at the Missouri lot. Walkers and bicyclists entering the bridge from the St. Louis Riverfront Trail and Madison County Transit's Confluence Trail will not be charged.
Because of vandalism and car thefts in the Missouri parking lot, Trailnet closed access to the parking area during the off-peak season when monitored parking is not provided. The bridge is open daily for bicycle and pedestrian access, from a half-hour before sunrise to a half-hour after sunset.
“Trailnet is committed to keeping the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge open to bicyclists and pedestrians,” Trailnet Executive Director Ann Mack said in a press release. “There is also free parking at the Illinois entrance to the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge."
Trailnet, in partnership with the city of Madison, Ill., renovated the bridge as a bicycle/pedestrian bridge. For many decades the bridge was a key link in the beloved Route 66 and was recently named to the National Register of Historic Places. Today, the bridge is a key link in the bi-state trail system and is part of The Confluence Project, a riverside conservation, heritage and recreation corridor being developed in the St. Louis region.Labels: Missouri, Old Chain of Rocks Bridge, safety, St. Louis, Trailnet, trails
Roger 2 comments links to this post 12:57 PM![]()
Friday, February 16, 2007
The Belleville News-Democrat reported Thursday that St. Clair County, Ill., will see major bike trail construction in the next year. Linking trails will eventually cover 10 miles of ground, said Mike Buehlhorn, executive director of the Metro-East Parks and Recreation District.The proposed extension to MetroLink's bicycle trail would travel to the Swansea and Memorial Hospital MetroLink stations. It would mostly run parallel to the MetroLink tracks, and construction could start next summer and take about eight months.
Taulby Roach, project manager for MetroLink's bike path, doesn't yet know what the extension to Memorial Hospital will cost, and bids have not yet been sought for the project, the News-Democrat reported.
Meanwhile, the village of Swansea is planning a trail that will connect the MetroTrail with and existing trail between Centennial Park and Old Collinsville Road.
To see a map of existing and proposed St. Clair County trails, download this map (PDF file). The map does not include the Scott-Troy Trail, a trail under development that will link Scott Air Force Base with the Madison County Trails system and Troy, Ill.Labels: Belleville, cycling, Illinois, St. Clair County, Swansea, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 12:31 AM![]()
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
I share with you two stories that were published today in the Belleville News-Democrat that may be of interest to St. Louis-area cyclists:
Spy camera network will be put on island: The city of Madison, Ill., plans to install a $40,000 network of 22 spy cameras on 6,000-acre Chouteau Island to record who goes there and what they do.
Chouteau Island is a sliver of land between the Mississippi River and the Chain of Rocks Canal. Cyclists and pedestrians can access the island via the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge, which links Illinois with north St. Louis. While Interstate 270 goes through the island, the only way motorists can access the island is by crossing a two-lane bridge that takes Chain of Rocks Road across the canal.Madison Mayor John Hamm told the News-Democrat he hopes the cameras will catch and discourage people who have been dumping old refrigerators, stoves and other trash on the island.
"It's totally crazy. I can't believe what I see out there," Hamm told the paper. "We even had a dead body out there a couple of months ago."
The new cameras will record pictures of vehicles and their license plate numbers on the island's road and the Chain of Rocks Canal Bridge. The story does not make it clear whether cameras will be installed on the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge itself or the Missouri parking lot for the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge, which is closed because of a rash of car vandalism and theft in the lot.
As for the lot, Trailnet -- which operates the old Chain of Rocks Bridge for the city of Madison -- is planning a meeting later this month with other bridge stakeholders to discuss what to do about security on the Missouri lot, Trailnet spokeswoman Kathi Weilbacher told the News-Democrat.
Seibert Road is undergoing a facelift: Commuters who use Seibert Road in Shiloh to get to Scott Air Force Base will have to be patient for the next few years while the narrow country road undergoes a complete facelift. Cyclists frequently use Seibert Road to access other roads as part of their cycling routes.
The entire project includes widening the road, adding storm sewers, curbs and gutters, the News-Democrat reported.
A 10-foot-wide, multi-use bike trail will be built along the reconstructed Seibert Road as part of the Shiloh-Scott Trail. Eventually, the trail will hook up with other bike trail systems in the metro-east and enable cyclists, joggers and walkers to travel from Troy to Scott Air Force Base.
Labels: cycling, Old Chain of Rocks Bridge, safety, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 9:50 AM![]()
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
If you're planning to do some biking, walking or viewing of bald eagles on the historic Old Chain of Rocks Bridge over the Mississippi River, don't plan on parking on the Missouri side of the river -- at least for now.
Trailnet -- the St. Louis nonprofit agency that leases the bridge from the city of Madison, Ill., and operates the bridge -- announced Monday that the St. Louis parking lot has been closed.
In Sunday's St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "On Your Side" columnist Matthew Hathaway reported on the rash of vandalism and car thefts at the Missouri parking lot. Here's the first three paragraphs of the column:The Old Chain of Rocks Bridge may be the best place in town to take in stunning views of the Mississippi River. Last month, the National Park Service agreed and listed the 78-year-old span on the National Register of Historic Places.The column goes on to describe a St. Louis County family's recent experience on the bridge, in which a thief broke into the car, popped the trunk and stole two purses. One of the women told the Post-Dispatch that the break-in was the fifth one reported that day.
Pity is that it's hard to take in the vistas midway over the 5,353-foot-long pedestrian bridge while keeping an eye on your car parked on the Missouri side. There is no security there and, not surprisingly, break-ins are common. It's so bad that St. Louis police posted signs warning visitors to keep valuables locked in their trunks.
Petty criminals may not be the brightest of the bunch, but they often are literate. And, usually, they know that most trunks can be opened from the inside, once you smash through the driver's side window.
On Monday, Trailnet Executive Director Ann Rivers Mack responded to the Post-Dispatch article. Here's the text of that response:TO: Post Dispatch Editorial StaffHathaway wrote a column about Trailnet's response in today's Post-Dispatch with the headline "Old Chain of Rocks Bridge: Odd solution." Hathaway is skeptical about Trailnet's temporary solution:
We at Trailnet value the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge as a tremendous asset to our region. We have invested significant capital into making Bridge improvements and are also invested in ensuring parking safety. We are extremely frustrated with the difficulties in addressing car break-ins at the Bridge.Over the last six months, we have taken a number of steps to address parking including a three-season parking attendant (at a significant loss to Trailnet); warnings on our website; alerting 4,000+ e-Newsletter subscribers; and additional warning signs installed at the Bridge. Vandalism none-the-less continues and we are working on a long-term plan.
Currently, we are in discussions with Madison, IL and St. Louis Police and have closed the Missouri parking lot. The bridge continues to be open daily to walkers and cyclists.
Trailnet does not have the resources to continue to manage this community asset without long-term partners. In 2006, public funds represented less than 12% of our total budget. Given that Trailnet does not own the Bridge or parking lot, Bridge management plans include increasing regional stakeholder investment. These investments will better assure that the Bridge functions as a sustainable, safe and enjoyable venue for years to come.
We will update our website regularly on monitored parking and Bridge management plans.
Trailnet is in the business of building trails and promoting walking and cycling. It isn't an anti-crime group. Still, Trailnet's solution to the break-ins seems hopelessly naive.The Illinois lot for the bridge remains open. To get there from Missouri, take Interstate 270 across the Mississippi and the Chain of Rocks canal to Illinois Route 3 (Exit 3A). Take Route 3 south to Chain of Rocks Road. Turn right on Chain of Rocks Road, and cross the canal bridge. The road dead-ends at the parking lot for the Old Chain of Rocks Bridge.
People willing to smash a car window may not be morally squeamish about mugging pedestrians and cyclists on the Missouri approach to the bridge — especially if a closed parking lot means fewer people will visit the bridge and those who do will be more vulnerable.
You may be wondering why the city of Madison, Ill., is involved in the bridge. The bridge was built in 1929 as a toll bridge and purchased by the city in 1939. The city operated it as a toll bridge until 1968, and it once carried historic Route 66 over the river. The Road Wanderer Web site gives a pretty good overview of the bridge.Labels: cycling, hiking, Old Chain of Rocks Bridge, safety, Trailnet, trails
Roger 1 comments links to this post 10:04 AM![]()
Thursday, January 18, 2007
The League of Illinois Bicyclists is inviting you to be a part of history on National Trails Day 2007, which will be Saturday, June 2. Bicyclists and other "trail-breakers" will traverse the entire 369 miles of Illinois' new Route 66 Trail, a route of quieter roads and trails showing off the best of the old "Mother Road".
Bicyclists and other users will each ride one of 13 legs of the Route 66 Trail, simultaneously covering the entire distance of the route. They will converge at six different Route 66 towns, where ceremonies will be held at noon.
The following communities will be hosting ceremonies: Edwardsville, Staunton, Springfield, Bloomington, Pontiac and Joliet.
The ride is free, but you need to register to get a packet of information and a T-shirt for the event.
You can view the route on these PDF files:
North-to-South
South-to NorthSpeaking of LIB, the organization is selling Illinois Pedal Power jerseys, and they appear to be a fine addition for any Illinois cyclist's wardrobe. They come in sizes ranging from XS to XXXL. Including postage, the cost of the jersey is $63.05 for LIB members and $69.05 for non-members. To order the jersey, just download this PDF order form, fill it out and send it to LIB.
Also, LIB once again is offering its National Bicycle Month plate for Illinois motorists. The plates are approved for use by the Illinois Secretary of State's office for use during the months of April and May in place of your normal Illinois plates. The plates are $28 and can be order by downloading this PDF form, filling it out and sending it and a copy of your Illinois vehicle registration to LIB.
LIB has done a lot in recent years to promote cycling in the state. LIB received funding from the Illinois Department of Transportation to produce a video on motorist-cyclist safety. Copies of the video have been distributed to 900 high school and private driving education programs and to more than 900 police and sheriff's departments. LIB also has been active in cycling advocacy issues, including the effort to make cyclists intended, rather than permitted, users of Illinois roads.Labels: cycling, League of Illinois Cyclists, Route 66, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 2:13 PM![]()
Monday, December 04, 2006
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch today reports the idea of a two-state web of interwoven bicycle trails is beginning to take form. Tax-supported local agencies in Illinois and Missouri, like the railroad builders of old, extending a network that will allow riders a choice of routes for pedaling the breadth of the metro area.
As you might expect, Madison County Transit's extensive 85-mile network of trails is a big part of the story, and so are the efforts by Trailnet and the Great Rivers Greenway District in their efforts to build trails on the Missouri side of the river.
"Trails connect us," David Fisher, director of the Great Rivers Greenway District, told the Post-Dispatch. "They let us be healthy together. And they have become very, very popular."
More trails are in the works. Some of those not included in the Post-Dispatch story include a trail that would link O'Fallon, Ill., with the Madison County Trails system near Troy and a trail in Swansea that would tie into the MetroLink Bike Trail in Belleville. And let not forget about the efforts of the ITS Trail Committee, which is trying to build a trail from Staunton to Benld in Macoupin County, Ill., with a long-term goal of linking the Madison County trails to the south and Springfield, Ill., to the north.Labels: bicycling, Illinois, Missouri, trails
Roger 0 comments links to this post 11:10 AM![]()
Find out about the latest cycling news here!
Bicycle racing feeds
» Nubütte chamois cream
07/23/08 23:24 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Who won: Sastre or Evans?
07/23/08 20:01 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Casey Gibson 2008 Tour de France Gallery - L'Alpe d'Huez
07/23/08 19:38 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Scott to take over team sponsorship from Saunier Duval
07/23/08 19:27 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Fresh Korn - The Alpe
07/23/08 19:25 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Criterium thunders through downtown SLO - Santa Maria Times
07/23/08 19:18 from Tour of Missouri - Google News
» REFILE-Cycling-Tour-Evans faces tough battle, says Sergeant (Reuters)
07/23/08 18:25 from Yahoo! Sports - Cycling News
» CONI sets hearings for Ricco, Piepoli (AP)
07/23/08 18:20 from Yahoo! Sports - Cycling News
» Tour-Evans faces tough battle, says Sergeant (Reuters)
07/23/08 17:48 from Yahoo! Sports - Cycling News
» Impressive Sastre shows why he is CSC team leader (Reuters)
07/23/08 17:44 from Yahoo! Sports - Cycling News
» "Evans should be able to take the time back, but anything can happen" - JB
07/23/08 16:34 from BBC Sport | Other Sports | Cycling | World Edition
» Sastre in yellow
07/23/08 15:57 from Yahoo! Sport - Cycling
» Sastre takes over as Tour leader
07/23/08 15:55 from BBC Sport | Other Sports | Cycling | World Edition
» Sastre wins the 2008 Alpe d'Huez stage
07/23/08 14:39 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» AEG announces 2009 Amgen Tour route
07/23/08 13:36 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Evans finds stress of yellow-jersey battle tough on head, too
07/23/08 13:08 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Inside the Tour, with John Wilcockson - D-day on the Alpe
07/23/08 13:00 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -
» Live text - Tour de France
07/23/08 09:41 from BBC Sport | Other Sports | Cycling | World Edition
» Tour de France stage 17 photos
07/23/08 09:33 from BBC Sport | Other Sports | Cycling | World Edition
» Drug maker cooperated with WADA
07/23/08 09:05 from The Journal of Competitive Cycling -

» Holistic Healing at Trisara in Phuket - e-Travel Blackboard (press release)
07/23/08 23:09 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» Lance Armstrong Teams Up With Former Health Officials on Cancer - Bloomberg
07/23/08 17:49 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» McCain, Lance Armstrong to appear together in Ohio - USA Today
07/23/08 15:04 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» CELEB SPOTTING IN ALPE D'HUEZ - Cycling Weekly
07/23/08 13:10 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» Death of Le Tour? - iAfrica.com
07/23/08 11:00 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» Augustyn the Great - Wynand de Villiers - Cycling News
07/23/08 06:01 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» Tour de France L'Alpe-d'Huez Climb 2001 Flashback: Lance ... - FanIQ
07/23/08 03:50 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» 20000 tune in for Lance, Styx, Nadas - DesMoinesRegister.com
07/23/08 03:37 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» Lance Armstrong biking toward Ames - DesMoinesRegister.com
07/22/08 20:30 from Lance Armstrong - Google News
» Lance Armstrong biking toward Ames - DesMoinesRegister.com
07/22/08 20:30 from Lance Armstrong - Google News

» Brita Climate Ride 2008
07/23/08 19:26 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Cyclists and motorists -- maybe we can get along
07/23/08 19:04 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Seeking a road to peace
07/21/08 17:58 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Life in the bike lane
07/21/08 17:54 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Deadly tension on the roads — cars vs. bikes
07/18/08 17:39 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Bicycle plates could be new revenue stream
07/18/08 17:37 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Ask for Bike and Ped Funding Now
07/18/08 03:04 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Not Guilty verdict in the Gaunt double fatality case
07/17/08 20:10 from BicycleNews-MoBikeFed
» Bike lanes make parking shrink
07/17/08 19:06 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Test Drive: Trading In The Car For A Bike
07/17/08 19:03 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Beijing Transport: Car Rental v. Bicycle Rental?
07/16/08 18:58 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Legally blind man rides 20 miles to work on electric bike
07/16/08 18:55 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» Manslaughter trial in Larry and Sierra Gaunt trial gets underway
07/16/08 00:16 from BicycleNews-MoBikeFed
» Video: Mandeville Canyon - Motorist/Cyclist Cooperation
07/15/08 16:30 from C.I.C.L.E. ::
» 2-wheel tickets: Bikes not immune Bicycle ridership up; so's enforcement
07/15/08 15:57 from C.I.C.L.E. ::

» Electra recalls Amsterdam bicycles
07/22/08 22:00 from Cyclelicious
» Stage 17: Visit the l'Alpe d'Huez
07/22/08 17:14 from Cyclelicious
» Mississippi River bike / pedestrian bridge imperiled
07/22/08 05:07 from Cyclelicious
» Palo Alto to consider bike share program
07/21/08 15:28 from Cyclelicious
» Raise Your Bicycle to the Heavens!
07/21/08 04:01 from The Cycling Dude
» Crazy urban cyclists sell soft drinks in Japan
07/20/08 22:17 from Cyclelicious
» Cyclodrome Beta
07/20/08 05:03 from Cyclelicious
» San Jose Bike Party photos
07/20/08 00:11 from Cyclelicious
» Tour de France 2008 Stage 14
07/19/08 16:29 from Cyclelicious
» Trick cyclist Ines Brunn in Palo Alto
07/19/08 12:00 from Cyclelicious
» San Jose Fixed Gear
07/19/08 08:00 from Cyclelicious
» Scofflaw cyclists!
07/19/08 01:00 from Cyclelicious
» Happy 100th Birthday Model T
07/18/08 21:00 from Cyclelicious
» Mark Cavendish woo hoo!
07/18/08 16:41 from Cyclelicious
» Win a free bike from Trek
07/18/08 04:33 from Cyclelicious

» Tagged
07/23/08 01:17 from Up in Alaska
» Snain in July
07/22/08 05:34 from Up in Alaska
» Motivational poster
07/21/08 22:58 from Up in Alaska
» You meet the nicest people.....
07/21/08 15:42 from Bike riding donut guy
» Yum.....
07/21/08 13:24 from Bike riding donut guy
» Glug, glug, glug
07/21/08 05:44 from Up in Alaska
» Irony.....
07/20/08 10:58 from Bike riding donut guy
» I totally called it
07/20/08 05:02 from Up in Alaska
» Gonna miss you buddy.......
07/19/08 09:59 from Bike riding donut guy
» Vote yes.
07/18/08 09:30 from Bike riding donut guy
» Granite Creek Basin
07/18/08 03:00 from Up in Alaska
» Foggy Morning
07/18/08 02:30 from Dan On Bike
» Headache deluxe.......
07/17/08 15:49 from Bike riding donut guy
» Getting my road legs back
07/17/08 07:26 from Up in Alaska
» Worst idea ever.
07/17/08 02:45 from Bike riding donut guy

Cycling blogs
Other blogs of note
Archives