NYC STREETS RENAISSANCE
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  last modified May 4 by png201

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Attend a Community Workshop 

May 17 - Bicycle Network 

May 31 - Broadway & Amsterdam Ave. 

 

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CONTRIBUTE YOUR OPINION: 

RESIDENTIAL SURVEY

BUSINESS/ORGANIZATION/SCHOOL SURVEY

BICYCLE SURVEY

We need your ideas for your neighborhood! Please take some time to complete these surveys, letting us know what you like about your neighborhood streets, or how you think they could be better. This information will help our designers lead effective community outreach sessions, producing Livable Streets blueprints that reflect your intimate knowledge of the neighborhood.
 

Events Calendar:

Central Park Moonlight Ride    
5/2/2008    
10:00 PM-12:00 AM    
Columbus Circle entrance to Central Park

Teach Your Child to Ride a Bike    
5/3/2008    
10:00 AM-1:00 PM    
St. Nicholas Park 

Wine & Cheese Info Session    
5/5/2008    
7:00 PM-8:00 PM    
JCC MN, 334 Amsterdam Ave.

More Events

Already a Campaign Member ?

If you want to work on a specific issue on the UWS, check out the Campaign's Working Groups:


Bike Network

Amsterdam Ave

Broadway

Parking Reform

Safe Routes to School  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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­Upper West Side Streets Renaissance­

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LIVABLE STREETS
A new vision for the Upper West Side.

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Est. November 6th­, 2007

 

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*­­­JOIN THE CAMPAIGN: TAKE ACTION ON THE UWS ­*

 
The Upper West Side Streets Renaissance Campaign is a community-led effort to advocate for and win great walking spaces, safer streets, less traffic, a world-class bike network, and cleaner air on the Upper West Side.

Live on the Upper West Side and Want Better Streets?  In 2008, the Renaissance  Campaign  will work with Upper West Side residents to realize their vision for neighborhood streets and organize fun community events.  One specific way in which the Campaign will help the community transform their streets is by organizing professional design charrettes (May 17th & May 31st), whereby your ideas are transferred into viable, Livable Streets blueprints--shining examples of what  your streets can and should be.

­ Get started by becoming a member of the Renaissance Campaign’s Livable Streets Working Groups.  These groups, which have been formed by dozens of UWS residents,  focus on several specific topic areas, including re-imagining Broadway and Amsterdam, safer cycling, and youth programing.  

The time is now!  With a growing coalition of community groups, elected officials, business leaders, and concerned citizens like you, the Upper West Side will achieve long overdue, common sense improvements to its local streets. 


To Learn More About All of the Upper West Side Streets Renaissance Programs, Click Here

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Design Corner

  Change Through Community - Charrettes on the Upper West Side

A charrette is a community-led workshop, in which people who live in and know about a neighborhood talk to a group of professional designers about their visions for their area.  The results can be something as simple as a call for more benches or as comprehensive as a master plan for a whole neighborhood.  Over the summer, the Upper West Side Streets Renaissance will be hosting two of these events to give Upper West Siders an unprecedented opportunity to take a hand in the area's future.  Come out and be heard.
 

May 17th - Bicycle Network Design

American Bible Society
1865 Broadway (at 61st)
10:30am-12:30pm

May 31st - Broadway and Amsterdam 21st Century Re-Visioning

West Side YMCA
5 West 63rd Street
10:30am-2:30pm
 
And there's plenty to do before the big days.  Most importantly, please take the surveys posted above.  They will help define the parameters of the conversations that will take place at the workshops.  And last but not least, don't forget to log on to this website, join a Working Group, and contribute your opinion on the crucial questions facing the Upper West Side.

 

*RSVP FOR MAY 17TH AND MAY 31ST DESIGN WORKSHOPS*

 

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In The News: 

Dear Editor: Listen Up!

by NJ

UWS Streets Renaissance member, Columbia Urban Planning graduate student, intrepid volunteer and all-around advocacy all-star Inbar Kishoni was perusing a copy of Marie Claire recently when she noticed that its editorial staff had judged Bike to Work Day “iffy” in its monthly feature “The Good, The Bad and the Iffy”. Not one to take such an obvious and egregious misjudgment sitting down, she penned this letter, which she’s been good enough to share with us:

“I am writing to express my disappointment in your classification of Bike to Work Day as “iffy” in “The opinionated guide to May” article. The dependence of the United States on the automobile has led to an overuse of limited resources and an abundance of health concerns that range from asthma to obesity. Bike to Work Day is meant to encourage healthy, environmentally sustainable, and affordable forms of transportation. Granted some people live too far from work to bike, but this day is meant to encourage people to consider the alternatives.

In publishing a magazine you are in the position to motivate people to make decisions that are healthy for themselves and for the planet. Your position comes as a surprise to me since you do so much to encourage humanitarian causes. Cycling provides mobility to those who cannot afford or are not yet old enough to drive an automobile. I hope that you will consider your influence before writing off something like this in the future.

Inbar Kishoni, New York, NY”


Well played, Inbar! Here’s hoping someone over there is listening…
 

106th St Update

by NJ

First and foremost, thanks again to the over 40 people who showed up at Community Board 7 to express their support for the DOT’s proposal to install buffered bike lanes on W. 106th St., which will provide a crucial crosstown park-to-park linkage.  In the wake of that first meeting local stakeholders, including the Jewish Home and Hospital and Greenmarkets, have been taking part in ongoing discussions about how to best implement the bike lane plan without disrupting residents daily lives.

Best of all, the DOT is moving forward with the plan, and are projecting a completion date of July, 2008.  In other words: in less than two  1/2 months!  This is a fantastic example of a community coming together behind a beneficial project, and the city listening.  Moving forward, there is another meeting of the CB7 Transportation Committee on May 13th, where the proposal is expected to pass.

The most important date to mark in your calendar is June 3rd.  This is when the full board of CB7 will meet to hear the proposal, and vote yes or no.  It is crucial that we turn out big support at this meeting, so that CB7 and the DOT will know that this is a plan which the community supports.  The details are below, hope to see you there!

 

CB7 Full Board Meeting

St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital 

1000 Tenth Avenue

(58th - 59th Streets)

7:00 pm

June 3rd­­­ ­­

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