Ok...What would you do?
#1
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Ok...What would you do?
I live in a somewhat bike friendly city. We have a great MUP that hugs the River and us good for a 20-40 mile ride. However in order to ride there from my house I have to cross a fairly busy two lane bridge. There is a bike lane but it is only on the side I'd be riding coming home. The other side has a very narrow sidewalk and a very narrow shoulder.
What would you do? Ride the bike lane the opposite way, ride the narrow sidewalk or do the technically right thing and ride in the right lane and hope nobody hits you.
I've tried the latter and can tell you it was a white knuckle experience. I have blinky lights and a yellow shirt I wear when I ride fwiw.
What would you do? Ride the bike lane the opposite way, ride the narrow sidewalk or do the technically right thing and ride in the right lane and hope nobody hits you.
I've tried the latter and can tell you it was a white knuckle experience. I have blinky lights and a yellow shirt I wear when I ride fwiw.
#2
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Can you give a good google map link to the bridge?
#3
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I live in a somewhat bike friendly city. We have a great MUP that hugs the River and us good for a 20-40 mile ride. However in order to ride there from my house I have to cross a fairly busy two lane bridge. There is a bike lane but it is only on the side I'd be riding coming home. The other side has a very narrow sidewalk and a very narrow shoulder.
What would you do? Ride the bike lane the opposite way, ride the narrow sidewalk or do the technically right thing and ride in the right lane and hope nobody hits you.
I've tried the latter and can tell you it was a white knuckle experience. I have blinky lights and a yellow shirt I wear when I ride fwiw.
What would you do? Ride the bike lane the opposite way, ride the narrow sidewalk or do the technically right thing and ride in the right lane and hope nobody hits you.
I've tried the latter and can tell you it was a white knuckle experience. I have blinky lights and a yellow shirt I wear when I ride fwiw.
#4
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Well, I assume the bike path is very difficult to get to, so my guess is that I'd ride the road, but like Paul Barnard said...I'd have to see the bridge. I've been commuting for over 30-years on all kinds of roads, that's why I would guess that I'd ride on the bridge...but never say never...
BTW, how narrow is the sidewalk and is it used a lot?
.
BTW, how narrow is the sidewalk and is it used a lot?
.
#5
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"fairly busy two lane bridge. "
Can you describe what fairly busy is?
If it has lots of cars going slowly, you can ride with them.
If it has lots of cars going really fast, take the sidewalk and walk.
Can you describe what fairly busy is?
If it has lots of cars going slowly, you can ride with them.
If it has lots of cars going really fast, take the sidewalk and walk.
#6
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Well, I assume the bike path is very difficult to get to, so my guess is that I'd ride the road, but like Paul Barnard said...I'd have to see the bridge. I've been commuting for over 30-years on all kinds of roads, that's why I would guess that I'd ride on the bridge...but never say never...
BTW, how narrow is the sidewalk and is it used a lot?
.
BTW, how narrow is the sidewalk and is it used a lot?
.
#7
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I'll try to get pictures. Hard to gauge busy. Speed limit is supposed to be 35 but 55 is the norm. I'd say when riding across you can expect to be passed by 5-6 cars.
#8
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Thread Starter
Here's a Not great picture
And yes there are other bridges including a walking bridge but it takes you out of the way. It's quite a detour.
#9
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Walk the bike on the sidewalk.
The only way I'd ride the full length would be if there's a bottleneck at the entrance and slow traffic all the way.
#10
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Yeah that picture was probably taken in the afternoon. The congested side that you see is actually the side with the bike lane. The other side is busier in the morning as people drive into downtown. THAT is the side with the sidewalk and no bike lane. So you wouldn't consider riding in the bike lane in the opposite direction? The other weird part is that the bike path starts on the left side after you walk your bike up two flights of stairs.
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I checked out that bridge on Google Street View. (Veterans Memorial Bridge in Chattanooga, Tn., which crosses the Tennessee river).
I would definitely cross that bridge on the road (both ways) and I would definitely NOT ride on that sidewalk.
.
I would definitely cross that bridge on the road (both ways) and I would definitely NOT ride on that sidewalk.
.
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If I were on a cross country bike tour and it was a one-time deal, I'd just ride across as fast as I could.
If this were my daily commute, I would look into moving to the other side of the river or finding a new job on my side.
If this is a pleasure ride, I would take the long detour to the car-free bridge. Or ride somewhere else.
If this were my daily commute, I would look into moving to the other side of the river or finding a new job on my side.
If this is a pleasure ride, I would take the long detour to the car-free bridge. Or ride somewhere else.
#13
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Yeah that picture was probably taken in the afternoon. The congested side that you see is actually the side with the bike lane. The other side is busier in the morning as people drive into downtown. THAT is the side with the sidewalk and no bike lane. So you wouldn't consider riding in the bike lane in the opposite direction? The other weird part is that the bike path starts on the left side after you walk your bike up two flights of stairs.
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Definitely do not ride in the bike lane into traffic; that's the fastest way to die there. IMO, get used to white knuckles or take the detour; nothing wrong with a longer ride.
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When there's a single bike lane on a bridge span I always assume (right, wrong or otherwise) that it's intended to be a 2 way lane. Otherwise what would be the point?
That said, I adjust my riding, and in extreme cases my decision, based on traffic volume. No problem meeting and passing by an occasional oncoming rider, but I don't like riding against a steady current. So, if conditions dictate, I'd choose the best of the other options, and use them in the way that made me most comfortable.
FWIW there's a 4-500 yard narrow stretch of high speed road -- 2 narrow lanes, zero shoulder, decent sight lines after first 100 yards --- I take from time to time. The traffic is coming off a sharp curve where I enter, so is slowed somewhat and with that, I can wait for a decent gap, then sprint for the end. I don't always jump off before a car catches up, but it's close enough that it's never been an issue. If the bike lane counterflow isn't practical, a similar approach may work for you.
That said, I adjust my riding, and in extreme cases my decision, based on traffic volume. No problem meeting and passing by an occasional oncoming rider, but I don't like riding against a steady current. So, if conditions dictate, I'd choose the best of the other options, and use them in the way that made me most comfortable.
FWIW there's a 4-500 yard narrow stretch of high speed road -- 2 narrow lanes, zero shoulder, decent sight lines after first 100 yards --- I take from time to time. The traffic is coming off a sharp curve where I enter, so is slowed somewhat and with that, I can wait for a decent gap, then sprint for the end. I don't always jump off before a car catches up, but it's close enough that it's never been an issue. If the bike lane counterflow isn't practical, a similar approach may work for you.
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Two other alternatives close enough for the distance to be irrelevant. Maybe check Strava heatmap and see which gets the most bike traffic.
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The Walnut St Bridge is a dedicated pedestrian and bicycle bridge. Why don't you use it?
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Regardless of the OP's specific alternative route options, he still raises an interesting question.
Discussion of that question, as presented, may be of value to others who may not have similar alternatives.
Discussion of that question, as presented, may be of value to others who may not have similar alternatives.
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Streetview link: Veterans Memorial Bridge - Google Maps
What I would do here is highly dependent on the actual 'feel' in person, and it's hard to tell from streetview. I wouldn't ride wrong-way in the opposite bike lane, that option is out for me for sure. Riding in the lane is certainly an option, but I don't know Tennessee traffic or bike attitudes - and I can see it being pretty sketchy. The open/straight feel of the bridge, combined with fairly long sightlines, definitely is going to lend itself to pretty high vehicle speeds. From what I can tell (Tennessee Bicycle Laws | Bike Law), sidewalk riding appears to be legal in Chattanooga, so that's certainly a possibility as well, with the caveat that it requires slower speeds and giving way to pedestrians. That said, I don't see many pedestrians so it might not be too bad. I hate riding on sidewalks, but it's legal in my jurisdiction too and sometimes it's the safest place to be on a bike (unpopular opinion here, I know). Regardless, I definitely like the look of the Walnut Street Bridge (Walnut Street Bridge - Google Maps) and would very likely use that as my primary option.
What I would do here is highly dependent on the actual 'feel' in person, and it's hard to tell from streetview. I wouldn't ride wrong-way in the opposite bike lane, that option is out for me for sure. Riding in the lane is certainly an option, but I don't know Tennessee traffic or bike attitudes - and I can see it being pretty sketchy. The open/straight feel of the bridge, combined with fairly long sightlines, definitely is going to lend itself to pretty high vehicle speeds. From what I can tell (Tennessee Bicycle Laws | Bike Law), sidewalk riding appears to be legal in Chattanooga, so that's certainly a possibility as well, with the caveat that it requires slower speeds and giving way to pedestrians. That said, I don't see many pedestrians so it might not be too bad. I hate riding on sidewalks, but it's legal in my jurisdiction too and sometimes it's the safest place to be on a bike (unpopular opinion here, I know). Regardless, I definitely like the look of the Walnut Street Bridge (Walnut Street Bridge - Google Maps) and would very likely use that as my primary option.
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In this case given there are viable and more suitable bridges to cross close by, that's what I'd do. If it was the only option, and coming home my side only had a sidewalk or ride in the traffic lane, keeping the traffic at the time in mind, if busy I'd take the sidewalk, albeit riding slowly and ever conscious if I come up on pedestrians I may have to dismount briefly. No biggie there. It's situational awareness, people may be walking on the path oblivious to anyone from behind, and me knowing that, I put myself in their shoes. So I dismount and walk my bike politely around them, a "pardon me while I pass" if needed. Everybody is doing their best you know. An attitude of gratitude never fails. Grace.
If that bridge was my only option, I'd also ride in another direction not involving it if possible. Looking at the map, I can see why the OP goes that direction though. I have an even worse bridge situation where I live, a six lane river bridge with no bike lane or sidewalk and a two lane steel grated road surface bridge that has it's walkway closed from disrepair. Needless to say I never ride in that direction. Even getting to those bridges involves crossing three lanes of converging traffic from two separate highways, and even if you could negotiate that, the emergency/side lane is strewn with all kinds of tire hazards, a mine field. Plus it's just no fun riding with traffic going 55-65mph.
If that bridge was my only option, I'd also ride in another direction not involving it if possible. Looking at the map, I can see why the OP goes that direction though. I have an even worse bridge situation where I live, a six lane river bridge with no bike lane or sidewalk and a two lane steel grated road surface bridge that has it's walkway closed from disrepair. Needless to say I never ride in that direction. Even getting to those bridges involves crossing three lanes of converging traffic from two separate highways, and even if you could negotiate that, the emergency/side lane is strewn with all kinds of tire hazards, a mine field. Plus it's just no fun riding with traffic going 55-65mph.
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Yesterday I was looking at the wrong bridge. oops.
I don't see why you can't ride a mile over the bike bridge. WTF. Your whole intent is to GO FOR A RIDE.
At the very least you could do this one way and go home the other way.
I used to ride 6 miles one way to my favorite DQ for lunch.
I don't see why you can't ride a mile over the bike bridge. WTF. Your whole intent is to GO FOR A RIDE.
At the very least you could do this one way and go home the other way.
I used to ride 6 miles one way to my favorite DQ for lunch.
#22
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So, I spent a bit of time just now looking at the street view on google of the streets leading over to the dedicated pedestrian/bike bridge and I can see how taking Frazier Ave to get there isn't exactly an improvement. There's even less shoulder room plus you're dealing with traffic turning on and off the road plus eventually parked cars. Veteran's Memorial Bridge is only slightly longer than the distance needed to ride on Frazier just to get to the bike bridge. The city doesn't make it easy either as a cyclist to take side streets to get to the bike bridge as there's only stairs on the east side leading up to the bridge from River Street and no path on the west side. Unless you like walking your bike up stairs every time you ride, you're stuck riding on Frazier for at least some distance. Super annoying.
I think I'm of the opinion that riding slowly on the sidewalk on Veteran's Memorial Bridge and being aware of and courteous to pedestrians is the safest way to travel south.
I think I'm of the opinion that riding slowly on the sidewalk on Veteran's Memorial Bridge and being aware of and courteous to pedestrians is the safest way to travel south.
#23
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So, I spent a bit of time just now looking at the street view on google of the streets leading over to the dedicated pedestrian/bike bridge and I can see how taking Frazier Ave to get there isn't exactly an improvement. There's even less shoulder room plus you're dealing with traffic turning on and off the road plus eventually parked cars. Veteran's Memorial Bridge is only slightly longer than the distance needed to ride on Frazier just to get to the bike bridge. The city doesn't make it easy either as a cyclist to take side streets to get to the bike bridge as there's only stairs on the east side leading up to the bridge from River Street and no path on the west side. Unless you like walking your bike up stairs every time you ride, you're stuck riding on Frazier for at least some distance. Super annoying.
I think I'm of the opinion that riding slowly on the sidewalk on Veteran's Memorial Bridge and being aware of and courteous to pedestrians is the safest way to travel south.
I think I'm of the opinion that riding slowly on the sidewalk on Veteran's Memorial Bridge and being aware of and courteous to pedestrians is the safest way to travel south.
#24
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All of this for the win! Yeah Walnut Street Bridge is an option except as you mentioned Frazier can be very congested and a little dangerous. I almost got squeezed up into a parked car there by some donkeyball who either wasn't paying attention or was trying to be a dicktracy. Took off the parked cars mirror (he did, not me). The other problem is that often the opposite direction that I want to go so I'm having to bike an extra couple miles. Fine for a joy ride but I'm trying to use my car less and that just makes it even more inefficient to bike vs take a car. I appreciate people trying to think outside the box but I was more interested to see how others would approach that specific route. Unfortunately while Chattanooga is more bike friendly than say, Atlanta, a lot of the "bike friendliness" is more political lip service. It could be better; although I'm not sure how much more bike lanes would get used tbh.
I know you're looking strictly for opinions on crossing the vehicle bridge, but thought I'd throw in a route possibility after taking into consideration what is actually going on with the roads and paths, at least as far I can figure based on google street view. I'm not sure exactly which street you are starting from, but I'm going to assume you eventually get on Barton heading southwest. Take the left onto Island then the immediate right onto the one way section of Frazier. Hop over to River street just after crossing under the bridge, follow that until just after you pass under the bike bridge. Looks like there's a short connector path between Frazier and River just a couple of businesses west of the bridge that has only a few stairs to carry the bike over. You could then stay on the sidewalk for that brief distance before getting on the bike bridge. Just a thought though I get how carrying a bike up stairs isn't any fun.
I know I don't worry too much about adding an extra mile onto a route to try and stick to more bike safe routes but if saving time is a concern, this route certainly won't help.
#25
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I would not ride the bike lane against traffic. Which leaves either the lane or the sidewalk and my preference would certainly be the lane. But it would depend on how aggressive the traffic was. Would not be my favorite part of the day in either case.
Last edited by jon c.; 09-15-23 at 01:50 PM.