Showing posts with label muni-meters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label muni-meters. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Axed single-space meters turned into bike racks (UPDATE)

For those wondering what would happen to the single-space meters, you now have an answer.

If that car was a bike, he wouldn't have gotten a ticket.
Some get removed completely and recycled. Others, as seen here, have found a new use as bike racks. There are a bunch of these scattered along Johnson Ave. and W. 235th Street in Riverdale, with more coming throughout the borough soon.

This has been a long time coming for some members of the community. Current Community Board 8 chairman Robert Fanuzzi said he has been trying to install bike racks in the area since at least two years ago.

Fanuzzi and fellow board member Thomas Durham drove through the community board, searching for corridors they could put bike racks in.

"We inventoried all the places that’d be great for bike racks and certainly Johnson Avenue was one of them," Fanuzzi said.

When he was the chair of the economic development committee, in 2009-10, "I heard from young families that this was the way to save local businesses was to make it more bike accessible, because lack of parking was a turnoff."

He made it very clear where else he would like to see bike racks.
"Where there is trouble parking there should be bike racks."
What do you think? Are these a good use of the old meters?

For past stories about the change of meters, check out here.

UPDATE: The Department of Transportation sent out a press release today about the new bike racks.

They say the city has converted 175 of the decommissioned parking meters throughout the city. Also, the city is currently reviewing responses to a Request for Proposals for a vendor to manufacture 6,000 additional racks to be installed at meters citywide to help meet the city’s growing demand for public bike parking.

"Our infrastructure needs to keep pace with new demands on city streets,” said DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan. “By transforming obsolete parking meters into off-the-rack bike parking, we are recycling old facilities to meet this growing need."

Made from galvanized, durable ductile iron, meter racks easily slide on to former parking meter posts that have had their heads removed following DOT’s installation of the new muni-meters. By taking advantage of already-installed infrastructure, the meter racks eliminate the cost of removing old posts combined with the cost of installing an entirely new bike rack.

The new meter rack’s design is based on the standard “Hoop” rack designed by Ian Mahaffy and Maarten De Greeve, which was selected as the winner of a DOT and Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum-sponsored competition in 2008.

New Yorkers can also request rack installations at nyc.gov/dot.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

DOT putting stickers on their parking signs

Two Department of Transportation employees have a pretty repetitive job right now.

They were seen today outside our office putting stickers on parking signs, changing 'HR METER PARKING' to 'HR MUNI-METER PARKING.'
Stickers!
Thank goodness they hopped right on this, because I for one would have been even more confused than the signs already make me.

To the DOT's credit, at least they're saving money by not replacing the entire sign.

R.I.P.
The DOT is replacing every single-space meter in the city right now, saying the muni-meter's are better because they offer more parking spaces (Unless they don't know how to pull up to the car in front of them!), you can pay for parking with a credit card or dollar bills and not just quarters, they break less and are less expensive to maintain.

Friday, October 14, 2011

DOT continuing to ax single-space meters

As I promised before, here are the dates more single-spaced meters in the Bronx will be replaced with the muni-meters:


  • Monday, Nov. 7— Melrose
    • 149th Street from Park to Melrose Avenue
    • Third Avenue from 150th to 155th Street
    • Willis Avenue from East 146th to East 148th Street

  • Monday, Nov. 7— Westchester, Schuylerville & Throgs Neck
    • East Tremont Avenue from Miles Avenue to Overing Street
    • Williamsbridge Road from Westchester Avenue to Sackett Avenue
    • Sections of St. Raymonds, Halperin, Ponton, Fink, Roberts, Frisby and Otis Avenues, and Greene, Sullivan, Scott and Lamport Places

  • Saturday, Nov. 12— Kingsbridge, North & South Riverdale
    • Riverdale Avenue from West 235th to West 261st Street
    • Moshulu Avenue from West 255th Street to Post Road
    • West 235th Street from Arlington to Oxford Avenue

  • Monday, Nov. 14— Kingsbridge & Van Cortland Village
    • Goulden Avenue from West 197th Street to Sedgwick Avenue
    • West Kingsbridge Road from Sedgwick Avenue to Grand Concourse
    • Jerome Ave from East 192nd to 196th Street
    • Bedford Park Blvd from Goulden Avenue to Grand Concourse

  • Wednesday, Nov. 16— Morris Park
    • Morris Avenue from Williamsbridge to Unionport Road
    • Pelham Parkway from Wilson to Eastchester Avenue
    • Williamsbridge Road from Neill to Sackett Avenue


  • Friday, October 7, 2011

    Parking meters dressing up as Muni-meters for Halloween, then never changing back

    It's already happened in Manhattan: there are no more old, single-space parking meters. And now it's beginning to happen in the Bronx. Yes, many corridors have already made the transformation, but now the city is coming in to finish the kill.

    RIP single-space parking meters
    Beginning Oct. 28, the DOT will be in the Fordham area replacing the single-space meters with munis. Whether you like them or not, the city doesn't care. Not only do they raise more revenue (you can't piggyback off someone's leftover minutes anymore), but also they cost less to maintain and operate. And if one is broken, you're suppose to find the next closest one to get your receipt from. No more free rides.

    I'll update this blog with new posts every time I hear about a new area being converted.

    Here are the areas being updated Oct. 28:
    • West and East Fordham Road from King Boulevard to Hoffman Street
    • Grand Concourse from East 180th Street to East Kingsbridge Road
    • Jerome Avenue from East 184th Street to East 193rd Street
    • Webster Avenue from East 187th Street to Bedford Park Boulevard
    • Sections of Marion, Bainbridge, Tiebout, Briggs, Valentine, Creston, Morris, Walton, Davidson and Grand Avenues, and East 188th Street