Resource Conservation Manitoba will be
hosting the following APBP (Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals)
webinar on "Road Diets" on Wed, Aug 18th. If you would like
to join us, please let me know at beth@resourceconservation.mb.ca.
See you then! -thanks, Beth
Webinar: Road
Diets
Date:
Wednesday, August 18 • 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. CST
Location: EcoCentre boardroom (303 Portage
Ave, third floor - enter via elevator inside front doors of
MEC)
Learn how space on wide, busy streets can be reallocated,
turning mundane sidewalks into inviting linear parks that promote active
transportation. More cities are choosing road diets to reward shorter trips,
deter aggressive speeders, make pedestrian crossings safer, increase levels of
bicycling, and create downtown districts rich in social and economic exchange.
Mark de la Vergne (Sam Schwartz Engineering), Brian Dougherty (City of Seattle)
and Ian Lockwood (AECOM) join forces on Wednesday, August 18 at 3:00 p.m. EDT to
explore the history, planning and design of road diets, offering tips to build
stakeholder support through public process. Examples of road diets from around
the U.S. and Canada include a closer look at two specific locations: Stone Way
in Seattle (the city's 23rd road diet) and the 2nd Street Connector in Macon,
Georgia, where a mayor's visionary planning process for a livable street will
help knit a community together.
Presenters:
Mark de la Vergne is an Associate and Project Manager with Sam
Schwartz Engineering, a transportation engineering and planning firm. He is
currently working in a number of communities across the country to help improve
their sustainable mobility options and develop realistic plans for
implementation. He holds a Bachelors of Science in Systems Engineering, with a
focus in Transportation, from University of
Pennsylvania.
Brian Doughtery is a transportation planner with the Seattle
Department of Transportation's bicycle and pedestrian program. He has been the
project manager for six completed road diets and is currently in the planning
stage for another six road diets that are expected to be implemented in 2011. He
also leads Seattle's Safe Routes to School program. As a citizen activist
interested in neighborhood traffic calming and bicycle advocacy, he successfully
lobbied the city to fully implement the Stone Way road diet in 2007.
Ian Lockwood, Principal, AECOM, is nationally recognized for his
work on Smart Growth, context-sensitive design and traffic calming. He has won
awards from the ITE, APA, Renew America, and CNU and frequently speaks at
professional conferences, seminars and universities. During the last five years,
Mr. Lockwood has helped various public health organizations make the connection
between the built form and community health. He has Bachelor and Masters degrees
in civil engineering from Carleton University.