Suppose someone came to your neighborhood and told you that the street was going to be optimized for some form of travel you didn't use, at the expense of some form of travel you did use. Would you be very keen on that? That's essentially what is done in promoting Bicycle Boulevards, and no wonder it stirrs up resentment.
The trick is to find the values these people want from their street, and show how Bicycle Boulevards can accomplish their goals, even though it seems somehow tangental to their needs.
Quoth BikinginLA:
By diverting traffic onto other streets, local residents can finally free themselves from the headaches of high-speed traffic in front of their homes. No more heavy trucks or hot-rodding hooligans in the middle of the night. And no more commuters taking a shortcut through a quiet residential neighborhood to bypass congested boulevards, turning a formerly peaceful street into a mini-throughway.
Eliminating through traffic can give residents a quieter, more livable neighborhood, where children can play outside and families stroll along peaceful sidewalks. It can also mean a more attractive place to live, as homeowners take advantage of the opportunity to clean up their streets, and the barriers themselves provide opportunities for beautification projects.
After all, nothing says barriers have to be k-rails; they can just as easily be planters, artwork, fountains or any number of similarly property-value enhancing enhancements. And that’s another key, because property values often go up as the newly peaceful neighborhood becomes more desirable to home buyers.
Then you tell them the best part. It won’t cost them a dime. Because one feature of this wonderful new street plan is something called a bike boulevard — a gap in those barriers that allows bikes and pedestrians to pass through — the DOT will pick up the entire tab.
They don’t even have to make a commitment. The whole thing can be installed on a temporary basis to prove how well it works before they agree to a permanent installation.
Now how many homeowners wouldn’t beg for something like that? And once people in other neighborhoods see it, chances are, they’ll beg for one of their own.
All you have to do is identify a street where homeowners are already fed up with traffic. Which pretty much means any street with speed bumps.
Hat tip Streetsblog.