Dangerous crossings along the CharlesBy Eric Moskowitz
Boston Globe, December 27, 2010
CAMBRIDGE — Shielded from the cold in black running gear, Michal
Fabinger interrupted his morning workout along the Charles the other day
and extended a gloved finger, pushing the button for the walk signal at
Western Avenue and Memorial Drive. It’s something that happens hundreds
of times a day even in winter: walkers, bikers, and joggers on one of
the region’s most popular recreational paths, stopping to wait for
traffic to pass.
And not just any traffic, but cars flooring to beat red lights and jockeying for
position on their way to and from Memorial Drive, Storrow Drive, and the Massachusetts
Turnpike.
At the Western Avenue and River Street bridges, and again at the Anderson
Memorial Bridge, the paths along the Charles River Reservation, on both
the Boston and the Cambridge sides, rise from the riverbank to cross the
surface roads. But with the state preparing to rehabilitate all three
aging spans, local lawmakers and advocates see an opportunity to improve
the crossings by routing them through bridge underpasses.
State transportation officials are reluctant to entertain the underpass
proposal, citing the difficulty of securing the federal permits needed
to disturb parkland and alter the appearance of bridges in the Charles
River Basin, a National Register Historic District. They also say
planning and building the underpasses would delay the projects and add
$10 million or more to the expected $80 million cost.
Local legislators say the state has been too quick to dismiss the idea, given
the challenge of crossing those intersections and the projected 75-year
lifespan of the rebuilt bridges. They also say the pedestrian and bike
improvements would be consistent with recent federal, state, and local
policy changes aimed at reversing decades of favoring the automobile
over other modes of transportation.
“This is a significant safety issue,’’ said state Representative Martha M.
Walz, a Back Bay Democrat whose district spans the river. “We’re
building infrastructure for the next 75 years, and we have to look ahead
for what we want our 21st-century transportation system to be, and not
just rebuild the 20th-century bridges as they are.’’
The Charles River Conservancy, a nonprofit focused on enhancing the 20-mile
park loop from Boston Harbor to Watertown, has pined for more
underpasses for several years. The road crossings at some bridges are at
odds with the otherwise inviting nature of the park, said Renata von
Tscharner, the conservancy’s founder and president.
The Western Avenue and River Street bridges date to the 1920s and the
Anderson Memorial is a decade older. The state is rebuilding the spans
as part of a $3 billion program to address hundreds of neglected,
structurally deficient bridges. The state hopes to start construction on
the Anderson — which connects Harvard Square with Allston — as early as
next year. Construction on the others could follow in 2013, said Adam
Hurtubise, a spokesman for the Department of Transportation.
Hurtubise said the state “carefully considered’’ the underpasses before
deeming them infeasible. Instead, the state plans streetscape
improvements that will make crossing the roads safer. By the Anderson,
for example, the plan is to triple the width of the sidewalk on the
Allston side of the river for those waiting to cross, and to make the
corners more pronounced in an effort to slow turning cars. All of the
bridges will also gain bike lanes for cyclists heading across the river.
“We have decided that the improvements we’re going to be making are the
more prudent course,’’ Hurtubise said.
Representative Alice K. Wolf, a Cambridge Democrat whose district fans out from the
bridges, called those improvements “quite minimal.’’ Wolf said the state
should do more to resolve conflicts between cars and path users at the
bridges, especially given the stated desire of government officials to
shift more people out of automobiles to reduce traffic congestion,
carbon emissions, and obesity.
“This is a big environmental issue, it’s a big safety issue, and it’s a big
issue for recreation,’’ said Wolf, a former bicycle commuter who started
a task force to make bicycling improvements as mayor of Cambridge two decades ago.
At Wolf’s request, the state’s top highway and bridge engineers met with local
lawmakers and von Tscharner to discuss the issue.
“I want a second opinion,’’ Walz said. “Thinking about the high benefit of
these underpasses, I want to see if there’s another way to get it done
rather than just give up.’’
Peter Furth, a Northeastern University civil engineering professor who has
studied the Anderson, said that adding an underpass on the Boston side
would not pose an unusual challenge, but the Cambridge side is cramped
by the presence of a hidden water main. On that side, a wooden boardwalk
— like the one beneath the Boston University Bridge — would be easier
and cheaper to build, though it would encroach on the river’s rowing
traffic, said Furth, an advocate for better bike and pedestrian infrastructure.
“For a lot of people, it’s hard to imagine. They see some obstacles, some
difficulties, and they say, ‘We’ve lived without them for ages. Why
should we have them?’ ’’ Furth said. But “once you had it, you couldn’t
imagine being without it.’’
At each of the three bridges, bikers, runners, and walkers interviewed
waiting at the traffic lights recounted near misses with traffic and
applauded the possibility of underpasses.
Fabinger, a graduate student in economics out for a morning run, said he thought
the popularity of the underpasses would also improve traffic flow by
removing bikers and pedestrians from the intersections. “When it’s a
rainy day, traffic is really smooth, because there are no bicyclists,
and also no runners,’’ he said.
Andrew Phelps, biking east from Harvard Square, lowered the synthetic fabric
protecting his face from the wind and grinned. “That’d be awesome,’’
said Phelps, bundled up as he biked toward his job at WBUR, cars zooming
past. “The challenge is you either wait at the light like you’re
supposed to, looking around when there’s no cars around, or you cross —
and the moment you cross, some car comes screaming by.’’
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