On weekday mornings, like many of you,
I am owned by my clock. Often, I'll finish getting ready for the day
and my clock will tell me whether I will ride my bike to work or
whether I will drive.
It's three and a half miles to get to
work. At a pace that won't later draw my co-workers away with my body
odor, it takes about five or six minutes longer to ride the bike than
to drive. And that's just what I can measure in riding time. If the
bike isn't ready, I have to carry it up the basement stairs to the
porch, and if the tires need inflating, that takes a little time too.
Naturally, I'd bike to work every day
if I could. It's better for my health and it's better for my fellow
commuters when they don't have to contend with a slow-moving 3,300
lb. Element that doesn't run yellow lights and never races up to a
red. But sometimes, I need that extra five or six minutes each
morning.
I got to thinking about the 'extra five
or six minutes' recently when I learned that the Connecticut
Department of Transportation was thinking about selling the land the
Stamford train station parking garage is on to developers, and thus
moving the parking garage away from the station.
See the little hamster Habitrail-like
tube sticking out of the left side? That's the tunnel that leads to
the parking garage, located conveniently across the street from the
train station. When you park in the garage, this is what your walk to
the station looks like. I wish bike parking was in there, too, but one thing at a time.
If the garage moves, it may scamper up
to a quarter of a mile away from the station. That means no hamster
tube, and that isn't sitting well to a lot of commuters. But
seriously, though: how long is a quarter of a mile? I don't mean that
in a how-many-beers-are-in-a-six-pack sense, I wanted to find out how
much of a time commitment Stamford commuters would truly be in for.
So, around high noon on Sunday, I set
off on a bike to find out. I took the Mystery Guest from South Norwalk because of its small size. However, I had added a key piece
of equipment to the handlebars.
Yes, an old Micronta (does that brand
even exist anymore?) G-Shock wristwatch with no band but a functioning 1/1000 of
a second stopwatch. Plus, I had my Garmin bike GPS.
I knew the Garmin would do fine for the
¼ mile journey, but first I wanted to find out how long it
would take to get to the parking garage under the existing system.
For that, I reached into my backpack and pulled out another piece of
equipment. I started my stopwatch and walked casually across the tube
that connects the station to the garage.
Yes, my Measure Master from the
Rolatape Corporation of Spokane, Washington (Like many of my tools, I
really have no idea why I have it, but I do) gave me my first result:
the length of the tube connecting the station to the garage measured
about 71' and 6”. Barely a 20 second stroll. It's an extra four
feet from the water fountains in the station, which was where I
wanted to start the next test.
I returned the Measure Master to my
backpack and stood once again at the water fountains, reasoning that
commuters, when walking to the new parking garage, would probably
have to start there unless the train had arrived on track four (I
know my beloved Stamford train station).
I started the stopwatch and GPS at the
same moment and strode to the escalator. I didn't walk down the
escalator, reasoning that during rush hour it would be clogged with
people. I learned two things while I did this: first, when you are
paying attention to the time, escalators are slow. Second, the
Mystery Guest of South Norwalk, with its 14” tires and short
wheelbase, is made to ride on escalators.
The bike is also easy to walk, and walk
it I did. With normal strides I headed past the hopelessly inadequate
bike rack and made it to the end of the cab line. I easily crossed
the street and headed down to the next one. I pushed the button and
waited for the signal to cross. If I had a lot more time I would have
made several walks and recorded the average, but the wait I had
before crossing seemed neither long nor short.
I walked past the sign that read
'WELCOME TO THE DIYBIKING.COM TRANSITWAY' (or, rather, could say that
someday) and noticed the sign for the bike lane. I remembered the
days the transitway was being built in order to make it easier to get
to the station, and I hoped that the nice bike and car lanes would
continue to do that instead of bringing travelers to something like Starbucks or a
Baby Gap.
I walked on, and the GPS passed the .22
mile mark. Keeping one eye on the sidewalk as I turned the corner
onto Pacific Street and waited until I hit a quarter of a mile. It
took some doing to keep the bike upright, but I was able to stop the
stopwatch and the GPS counter at the same moment, just a short walk
from Pacific Swim Bike Run.
The results?
The person who estimated it would take
about five minutes to walk a quarter mile was only a little off. 5 minutes 40 seconds and 607/1000's of a second is
closer to six minutes, but I give that time with an asterisk, which
is:
*a donut-appreciating but otherwise
fairly healthy 5'11” man in his mid thirties, walking without
having to contend with a lot of other pedestrians, on a beautiful
day, who didn't have to worry about rain or avoid puddles, easily
crossing the Station Place road normally filled with traffic, and doesn't have to walk
slower on snow or ice, can walk a quarter of a mile from the station
in about six minutes.
I also need to point out I had
absolutely nothing better to do that day but walk from a train
station pushing a strange folding bike with a stopwatch and write a
blog post about it. I don't have to do it every day, five days a
week, fifty weeks a year. Not only would it be like having to pick
the car instead of the bike to get to work every day but six more
minutes to get to work each morning would mean six fewer minutes at
home, six fewer minutes sleeping next to your spouse, and six fewer
minutes to enjoy the last cup of coffee.
Six more minutes going to work also
means six more minutes going home, which means six fewer minutes
asking your loved ones how their day was, six fewer minutes to plan
dinner and six fewer minutes to read your favorite cycling blog. It
adds up to just over two full days a year a given Stamford car
commuter would have to give to get to work (and that, of course, is
if they stick with using the train. I worry a bunch of them will pick
the car to get to work over the train, and that'll put more cars on
the road – and that's something I certainly don't want).
I hope my state has the good sense to take the advice of the Connecticut Rail Commuter Council and others and keep the parking garage
connected to the station. And if anyone reading this has an opinion I hope they attend the public hearing this Thursday in Stamford. Thanks for reading.
Check out a great counter-argument from Small Streets.org.
ReplyDeletehttp://blog.smallstreets.org/post/18496915718/turn-this-parking-lot-into-a-village
Land near the station is incredibly valuable and ultimately it is far more productive to use it for housing, retail and jobs. Building communities around transit hubs ultimately leads to much better ridership and fewer vehicle trips than using that land for parking.
Thanks David. The argument is well made, but it is specific to a massive outdoor parking lot, not a garage that doesn't take up as big a footprint. Also, they recently built a nice apartment building just behind the station with retail nearby, so people who want to live right near a station can do it and people who come in from further away aren't stuck with spending an extra 12 minutes to commute. The garage where it is (with, someday, indoor bike parking) helps the largest number of commuters, not just the ones right at the station.
ReplyDeleteThanks David. The argument is well made, but it is specific to a massive outdoor parking lot, not a garage that doesn't take up as big a footprint. Also, they recently built a nice apartment building just behind the station with retail nearby, so people who want to live right near a station can do it and people who come in from further away aren't stuck with spending an extra 12 minutes to commute. The garage where it is (with, someday, indoor bike parking) helps the largest number of commuters, not just the ones right at the station.
ReplyDelete