I need a gut check
I have found myself in the dubious position of having to stake out vocal opposition to a planned roundabout at an intersection near one of the main staging areas for many of our club rides. The Citizens Action Committee narrowly voted to defer this project a year for deeper evaluation, but that committee is one of 9 votes to occur in a couple weeks at the Policy Committee, and I have to gauge how/if I will stand again in opposition.
The Engineering Presentation
As a motorist, I have looked forward to this traffic circle; the intersection is prone to peak hour backups (not major - of about 20 minutes) and slow downs when the adjacent church lets out, but mostly because the motorists just don't get how to efficiently handle the existing four way stop. The area is active with walkers, road riders, leasure/path riders, skaters, etc. The field to the southwest has become a defacto community park.
Here's my issue:
- this is an intersection used often by our club as we frequently gather for group rides (25 participants last Tuesday) at the church to the southwest.
- currently, with the four way stop, cyclists stand in equal position as the cars...and traffic is slowed by the stop.
- as I see this, the cars will not have to stop, will go faster (regardless of the posted speed), the multi lane ramps will cause confusion for all, and cyclists will be more vulnerable in the circle, but all bike/ped activities will be at greater risk in crossing because of faster moving cars.
The City Engineer quickly pointed out the new sidepath/crosswalk design and pointed out that vulnerable cyclists could simply enter the sidepaths and cross there. I told him that the expectation that one class of user would be expected to abandon their legal right to safe road access was simply offensive.
So, please:
Look at the design.
Am I overreacting?
Do any of you live in communities with rotary designs like this? How do they work?
I don't oppose accommodation to improve the flow of traffic (of all types), but I see this as actually increasing the speed of vehicles at the risk of all vulnerable road users.
The intersection gets about 12,000 cars/day and will be the first rotary here installed at the intersection of two arterials.