Innerbelt

Submitted by David Beach  |  Last edited March 16, 2010 - 11:05pm
Posted in | »

Update:  Gov. Ted Strickland tells ODOT: Rethink Inner Belt Bridge bike lane 
 We received hundreds of emails and letters to the Governor. Thank you!

Open minds and open access:
A new bridge for all

Local designers and members of the bike community have created a drawing showing the potential for bike and pedestrian accommodation as part of the new bridge:

Timeline

  • 2009
    • December 2009 - ODOT bid package released
  • 2010
    • February 2, 2010 - ODOT to release RFQ
    • March 2, 2010 - RFQ submissions due - list of firms submitting qualifications
    • March 23, 2010 - Selection of 3 design finalists
    • August 2010 - Bridge designs due, selection process begins
  • 2011
    • Construction begins

Image and video gallery


Explore images of what the new Innerbelt bridge can be, photos of existing conditions, and ODOT's proposed bike accomodation on local streets. Innerbelt image gallery.

Innerbelt song on YouTube

Innerbelt song on YouTube

Important Downloads

Design-build teams submitting qualification statements

Reasons to support biking and walking options

  • Improved health and fitness
    A walking and biking transportation infrastructure is a practical way for many to achieve recommended levels of physical activity. Modest increases in bicycling and walking for short trips could provide enough exercise for 50 million inactive Americans to meet recommended activity levels, reducing America's activity deficit.
  • Reducing transportation costs to ease household budgets
    For most Americans, transportation is an expense second only to housing (higher than health care, education and food).

    • Even before runaway gas prices, the average American spends 19% of their income on transportation, with households that heavily rely on cars for transportation spending 50% or more.
    • Based on AAA reports of typical transportation costs 56.1 cents/ mile and $5 daily parking, typical car commuter costs are more than $11,500/year.
    • NEO combined household + transportation expenses (location efficiency) are out of line with other regions. Cleveland proper is one area where the ratio is better, due to public transit accessibility, and walkable and bikable communities. See CNT Housing and Transportation Index.
  • Equity - See map of Cleveland households without cars
    Overall, 25% of Cleveland households do not own a car (46,841 households, 114,292 individuals)

    • 30% of Tremont households do not own a car (962 households, 2347 individuals)
    • 65% of Central households do not own a car (2934 households, 7159 individuals)
    • 42% of Downtown households do not own a car (1126 households, 2747 individuals)
  • Proactive response to climate change
    Multiple organizations, including recent Lancet coverage, have found important health gains and reductions in CO2 emissions can be achieved through replacement of urban trips in private motor vehicles with active travel in high-income and middle-income countries. In addition:

  • Done as a matter of course in other states
    At least 30 communities benefit from cycling and pedestrian access to an interstate highway bridge. In many cases, these are dramatic and beautiful shared spaces that enhance the city’s life.
  • Proposed "alternatives" don't work
    There are 2 other primary ways to get downtown on bike or foot. However, each of these existing options (even if enhanced and improved) has serious setbacks - including safety, distance, time and elevation changes. We don't ask cars to go a 1/2 mile out of the way, why should we ask a bicyclist or pedestrian to do the same?
  • Financial sense.
    Bicycle and pedestrian accommodation on the Innerbelt Bridge makes financial sense. During development of bridge options, ODOT posted acceptable cost ranges for a variety of bridge options, yet successful cyclist and pedestrian accommodation was already acknowledged to be well below these acceptable cost ranges. Nevertheless, ODOT still says "no," without any explanation or analysis. Here is a quick analysis:

    • In the immediate neighborhoods on Tremont, Central and Downtown, over 5,022 households and 12,254 individuals have no vehicle available.
    • A recent NOACA traffic count on the Innerbelt Bridge calculated 130,930 vehicles - total, traveling in both directions
    • 12,254 individuals without car / 130,930 cars = 9.4%. A fair starting point for ODOT accomodation of bikes and pedestrians might be 9.4% of the project budget (and probably significantly higher, as the traffic count records single automobiles that travel over the bridge twice - once into downtown, and once out of downtown)
    • ODOT's own back-of-the-envelope estimate to accommodate bikes was 20 million dollars, or roughly 4% of the project budget. Although ODOT has not released the details of its calculation, it appears to be based on typical highway bridge construction costs per square foot - and thus is probably inflated, as a bike and pedestrian accommodation will not need to be engineered to the same weight specifications. A more realistic number might be 10 or 12 million - or 2% of the project budget.
  • One size fits all highway approach doesn't work in cities
  • Tourism, views and connectivity
    A bike/walk path on the Innerbelt Bridge will provide NE Ohio residents with a dramatic, beautiful, healthy and practical connection to downtown Cleveland. Whether they bike, walk or drive, the bridge should be available for all Cleveland residents, not just those driving to or through downtown Cleveland.
  • Leverage Towpath Trail investments
    Bridge access is a great way to leverage the Towpath Trail investments and share downtown. It’s a sound investment with a terrific health and environmental return for the community, offering a big impact for modest investment.
  • Oft cited concerns of safety and snow can be overcome
    Safety is a foremost priority. ODOT's proposed bike and pedestrian routing will increase the numbers of bicycles and pedestrians through The Flats or onto Lorain-Carnegie Bridge, neither of which is ideal from a safety or snow perspective. A well designed and integrated bike and pedestrian path can overcome safety and snow objections - through large break down lanes, setbacks, cement and fence barriers. 30 other communities have "figured it out" and successfully integrated bike and pedestrian access with automobile access. So can Cleveland. Similarly, bike and pedestrian paths already exist and are being built in places which receive snow
    - Boston, Chicago, Minnesota, Sweden, to name a few. If these regions can figure it out, so can Cleveland.

ODOT's proposed alternative

How you can help

Update:  Thanks to the hundreds of emails, calls, letters and public testimony at meetings over the past few months, bike and pedestrian access on the new Innerbelt Bridge is gaining momentum.  The Cleveland City Planning Commission, Congressman Dennis Kucinich, Mayor Frank Jackson, State Representative Michael Skindell, State Senator Dale Miller, Senator Sherrod Brown and Governor Ted Strickland have all put their support behind accommodating bikes and pedestrians on the new bridge.  See an expanded list of supporters below, and help us contact additional decision makers that can help make this a reality.

  • Connect with the "Innerbelt Bridge access for everyone" Facebook page
  • Attend an upcoming meeting
  • Have your organization officially endorse the project
    • Contact us if your organization is interested in joining the 30+ organizations (and growing!) that have officially endorsed the project or if you would like a presentation on why your organization should consider endorsing this important project.
    • Download a short PowerPoint presentation explaining the project (PDF, 1.5 mb)
  • Contact a decision maker and let them know you support bike and pedestrian access on the new Innerbelt Bridge 
    • Send an email to bridge@greencitybluelake.org and we will forward your comments to the decision makers (to get started, download this sample letter of support)
    • Write or email a letter to the editor
    • Email, call or write ODOT District 12
      • Bonnie Teeuwen, District 12 Deputy Director
        5500 Transportation Blvd.
        Garfield Heights, OH 44125
        Phone: (216) 584-2000
        Email: bonnie.teeuwen@dot.state.oh.us
    • Email, call or write ODOT State Headquarters
      • Jolene Molitoris, Director
        1980 West Broad Street
        Columbus Ohio, 43223
        Phone: (614) 466-2336
    • Email, call or write Governor Ted Strickland
      • (view sample letter)
        The Honorable Ted Strickland
        Governor of Ohio
        Riffe Center, 30th Floor
        77 South High Street
        Columbus, OH 43215-6108
        (614) 466-3555
    • Email, call or write your U.S. Reprensentatives
      • Senator George Voinovich
        1240 East Ninth Street
        Room 3061
        Cleveland, OH 44199
        Phone: (216) 522-7095
                      (202) 224-3353 - DC Office
        Email Senator Voinovich (web form)
      • Senator Sherrod Brown - Letter of support sent 3/4/2010
        Please thank Senator Brown for his support
        Phone: (216) 522-7272, Fax: (216) 522-2239
        Email Senator Brown
      • Representative Marcia Fudge (bridge is in her district)
        4834 Richmond Road
        Suite 150
        Warrensville Heights, OH 44128
        Phone: (216) 522-4900
        Fax: (216) 522-4908
        Email Representative Fudge (web form)
      • Representative Dennis Kucinich - Letter of support sent 12/6/2009
        Please thank Rep. Kucinich for his leadership on this issue
        Phone: (216) 228-8850
        Email Representative Kucinich
         
      • Representative Tim Ryan
        197 West Market Street
        Warren, OH 44481
        Phone: (330) 373-0074
                      (202) 225-5261 - DC Office
        Fax: 330-373-0098
        Email Representative Ryan (web form)
      • Representative Betty Sutton
        39 East Market Street, LL #1
        Akron, OH 44308
        Phone: (330) 865-8450
                      (202) 225-3401 - DC Office
        Fax: (330) 865-8470
        Email Representative Sutton (web form)
    • Email, call or write State Representatives
      • State Representative Robin Belcher (east side of bridge)
      • State Representative Michael Skindell (west side of bridge)
    • Support printing, mailing and other costs associated with this advocacy effort
      • Mail a check made out to Cleveland Museum of Natural History, with GreenCityBlueLake Institute (Innerbelt) in the memo line to:
        1 Wade Oval
        Cleveland, OH 44106
      • Contribute online and select "GreenCityBlueLake Institute"
        http://www.cmnh.org/product/donation/donatenow.aspx

Letters of support (and endorsements)

GreenCityBlueLake Innerbelt project coverage

Recent press coverage

Learn more about the project

For nearly ten years, the Ohio Department of Transportation has been planning the biggest and most expensive road repair project in our region’s history -- the reconstruction of the Innerbelt where Interstates 90, 71, and 77 connect and pass through downtown Cleveland.

Innerbelt Bridge over the Cuyahoga RiverMore than $1 billion could be spent on this project, yet many questions remain about the impact of this investment on the long-term health of the city. For example:

  • Will plans to smooth out traffic flows on the Innerbelt make the city more livable and more economically competitive, or will they simply ease traffic away from downtown?
  • Will the urban scars created years ago when the highways slashed through the city be healed and capped over with new parks and development sites (i.e. High Street's cap over I-670 in Columbus)?
  • With creative engineering, can the old Central Viaduct Bridge be replaced by a single signature bridge that doesn't negatively impact Tremont?
  • How does the $1 billion investment in road work relate to the city's larger goals for increased housing opportunities downtown and in surrounding neighborhoods?

Other Resources

January 30, 2010 - 6:15pm

innerbelt debacle from the gitgo on SOI

Susan Miller Says:

Alsenas and Litt go for the throat telling the real story of the innerbelt. http://www.wcpn.org/WCPN/soi/29501#

Unbelievable! Ed Hauser is smiling in his grave. Flawed process exposed and this is not just some know nothing whiners commenting on Cleveland.com. These guys know their stuff.

Crucial info for anyone trying to understand the "selling" of the innerbelt debacle.

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