Friday, August 23, 2013

"Priorities for Street Design" aka "60 years of Misguided Intent"

From the window in the TOIstudio office there is an intersection in Lakewood, Ohio on Detroit Ave. that ODOT required the removal of a traffic light. The intersection in question connects two aged residential towers to bus stops and the local full service grocery store. It also connects a Northern portion of the neighborhood to the local public high school (the only one) as well as marks an end of what is considered the Downtown Business District (as noticeable by adjacent wayfinding). The removal of the traffic light means that there is over 1/3 a mile between signaled cross walks which, in such proximity to assisted care living, can be quite a distance and burden. To counter the loss of pedestrian crossing signals the city installed flashing lights on adjacent telephone poles and a metal "break-away" sign in the middle of the street informing automotive drivers of the law (that they probably should be aware of in the first place) that they must yield to pedestrians crossing the street. Throughout the day I get to watch drivers ignore their responsibilities in operating their motorized vehicles almost plowing over children, the elderly and other law-abiding citizens. It is summed up quite nicely in a video report.

In 2010 I worked with the CUDC (a local non-profit planning organization) on a public charrette entitled "Connecting Downtown Cleveland - Beyond the Burnham Plan (here is the pdf report) that studied quite a few of the questions being raised by the planning on impending construction of the new Cleveland Convention Center. My group concentrated on Public Square and connection Tower City to the Mall. Our design, based up a sinkhole created in Public Square which shut down the interior intersection for a couple month some years prior, leaving the perimeter open to traffic, reflected on how grand Public Square felt and the ease to traverse it when the main intersection at Ontario St. and Superior Avenue were removed. Despite opinion that this was impossible it now seems that the city of Cleveland is on the verge of implementing complete streets plans and using a redesign of Public Square as the linchpin. During a presentation I was trying to explain the following article to public member with the familiarity of dealing with an unnamed municipal planning organization. After the presentation I began the long look for the following article and here it is, after 3 years or so of non-deliberate looking:

A while back I stumbled up a blog post by former municipal civil engineer tasked with infrastructure planning and design (roads, sewer pipe, water pipe, stormwater) and who states that "A fair percentage of my time was spent convincing people that, when it came to their road, I knew more than they did.".

This was not only due to this fellows education and position, but most importantly, his job consisted of following sets of established standards;

"In the engineering profession's version of defensive medicine, we can't recommend standards that are not in the manual. We can't use logic to vary from a standard that gives us 60 mph design speeds on roads with intersections every 200 feet. We can't question why two cars would need to travel at high speed in opposite directions on a city block, let alone why we would want them to. We can yield to public pressure and post a speed limit -- itself a hazard -- but we can't recommend a road section that is not in the highway manual. 
When the public and politicians tell engineers that their top priorities are safety and then cost, the engineer's brain hears something completely different. The engineer hears, "Once you set a design speed and handle the projected volume of traffic, safety is the top priority. Do what it takes to make the road safe, but do it as cheaply as you can." This is why engineers return projects with asinine "safety" features, like pedestrian bridges and tunnels that nobody will ever use, and costs that are astronomical. 
An engineer designing a street or road prioritizes the world in this way, no matter how they are instructed: 
  1. Traffic speed
  2. Traffic volume
  3. Safety
  4. Cost
The rest of the world generally would prioritize things differently, as follows: 
  1. Safety
  2. Cost
  3. Traffic volume
  4. Traffic speed
In other words, the engineer first assumes that all traffic must travel at speed. Given that speed, all roads and streets are then designed to handle a projected volume. Once those parameters are set, only then does an engineer look at mitigating for safety and, finally, how to reduce the overall cost (which at that point is nearly always ridiculously expensive)."
And while this reliance on extremely old standards are no longer accepted practice the problem remains that those in charge of municipal departments most likely studied under the old model and are therefore more apt to reinforce these outdated and disproven techniques that recent (early 90's) ACSE and APA guidelines have attempted to confront. 

In no way am I suggesting that street design is easy. There are a lot of complex issues that affect adjacent property owners, users and safety personnel, many with inherent contradictory needs. It becomes a question of balance and context, but most importantly it becomes an issue of having the ability to confront the status quo when it is quite obvious that accepted guidelines do not serve the community they are supposed to (I am allowing for the use of highways where appropriate, slicing through neighborhoods not being one of them). 

Another link to the referenced blog post:
Strong Towns "Confessions of a Recovering Engineer"

Which I rediscovered through this article:
Atlantic Cities "What Happens When a Town Puts People Before Cars"

Monday, August 19, 2013

Getting There

It is all about the process.

I was wandering through this blog a while back and realized that despite my very first post this thing has become primarily my day planner. Not for all the amazing events I go to and am a big deal at, but really for just the interesting things happening around town that I figured would be fun to go to if you were an art/environmental/design/food/beer nerd (eg me). Also, this thing got way less personal, albeit with brief moments of deeply personal bits and pieces left out there for really no reason.

I tried the whole "online community of rabble rousers" bit and found that mostly discouraging. Betwixt the undercurrents of racism/sexism/classism that is evident when every other statement is "I'm not _(biased)_ some of my best friends are _(some sort of distinguishable other group)_" or just blatant stupid/ignorant hatred (see most of the comments on Cleveland.com, if you dare) one can get pretty fed up with the armchair quarterbacks bitching about their world view being threatened by people actually doing things. And the internet is great for that. For people who want to just sit back and bitch about things not going their way. You really don't need much, some vitriol, an internet connection and some way to transcribe your insanity into text and/or photographs. There is the path of least resistance and I dub thee "the internet".

Whatev.

So I am taking back this blog a big. No more daily planner for me (although I will probably mention some things coming up it should not be the bulk of the postings), not that anyone reads this, I think most of my traffic comes from Russian porn mirror sites or something stupid like that. Luckily I have reached a point in my life where taking back my voice is easy. I used to be slightly concerned with what the bosses or "powers that be" would think of my little windmill tilting. The Breuer Tower thing didn't exactly go over well at the old place, not that it was mentioned to my face, just conversations in passing. Can't bite the hand that feeds you, I guess, even if you are being fed poisoned oats (or at least the old moldy bits no one else wants).

Happily the new place of employ is giving me the power to be myself. Not that it is free reign to go out and say malicious and stupid things, but I suppose they sort of understand that the crazy guy in the corner is going to vent somewhere and you may as well let him attempt to curate it into some sort of solidified and slightly comprehensive statement of values instead of thinking he just has tourettes. So the office is giving me a day off a week (sans pay, which is fine as I keep my medical) to work on projects I deem interesting. They are mostly art installations or research or maybe even some sort of architecture/planning things that may turn into big enough projects to shepherd back into the office.

You may ask "Why? Why would anyone put up with your shit, Dru? Why would anyone let you work on side projects when you could be cranking away in the office full time, making your magic equate bonus billable hours galore?" 

"Because I am that awesome." would be my reply. Although what it really means is that some architecture firms find value in staff working on research/exploratory projects on the side and have found the perfect chance to exploit my personal ambition as a marketing tool with the low, low price of me just not being in the office one day a week.

So I get a 3 day weekend to work on things and the office gets me for 4 days relatively undistracted.

Win-mutha-f-er-win.

What this means is that my weekends should be pretty packed of me accomplishing great things. Which it isn't. I admit this weekend in particular I sat on my buttocks playing SimCity (sucks) watching some Rhino tutorial videos, sketching some quick connection details and fretting about my weight instead of actually doing much. I have also become completely freaked by the laser cutter sitting in my home office hoping to be assembled and have a home found for it. It takes up my whole side table and makes the office feel half as big.

I'm freaking out on the inside.

Regardless, things are looking up.
I have a laser cutter. Half the battle right there in making awesome stuff. Also the Creative Workforce Fellowship has given me some street cred maybe and oh yeah...

I passed my final ARE exam, meaning I am a full growed up architect. Check it.

I, Dru (andrew) McKeown, am an Architect (in the great state of Ohio)

The above could not legally have been stated aloud before. Not allowed to be aloud. Now, perfectly legal. I have stamps and bidness cards and all the accoutrement thereof. Not an intern, etc, an actual Architect. Huzzah.

So, I'm taking back the street. More inane ramblings to come.