Anonymous wrote:Or maybe we could at least call it Empty Streets? Since it seemed to benefit no one but a handful of bicyclists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Open Streets caused massive traffic jams throughout Petworth, inconveniencing hundreds of thousands of people. But, hey, 50 bicyclists got to ride their bikes down the middle of the street!
I doubt that!
NP. Okay so maybe not hundreds of thousands but it certainly made trying to go north on 13th, 14th or 16th a nightmare today. Can't speak for the other streets. Maybe no parking on 16th streets when they do this? Or come up with other traffic patterns to help?
Easily hundreds of thousands. There's probably 50,000 people who live in Petworth. There's probably 35,000 in Brightwood. Those are just the neighborhoods immediately affected. Now think of everyone, on a Saturday, trying to get anywhere between Silver Spring and downtown DC. And all the people trying to go EOTP to WOTP. Georgia avenue is a major artery and closing it shunts an enormous amount of traffic onto side streets that were never designed to accommodate so many cars.
Anonymous wrote:You all are full of it. I was there all day as a vendor and can tell you thousands of people were out. And it was hard to clear the streets. The local businesses were busy and they got foot traffic and new people noticing them. All of my neighbors were and everyone who lives up loves it. GA does not get “hundreds of thousands” of cars on and certainly not on the weekends. We are starting now to make it an annual thing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Open Streets caused massive traffic jams throughout Petworth, inconveniencing hundreds of thousands of people. But, hey, 50 bicyclists got to ride their bikes down the middle of the street!
I doubt that!
NP. Okay so maybe not hundreds of thousands but it certainly made trying to go north on 13th, 14th or 16th a nightmare today. Can't speak for the other streets. Maybe no parking on 16th streets when they do this? Or come up with other traffic patterns to help?
Easily hundreds of thousands. There's probably 50,000 people who live in Petworth. There's probably 35,000 in Brightwood. Those are just the neighborhoods immediately affected. Now think of everyone, on a Saturday, trying to get anywhere between Silver Spring and downtown DC. And all the people trying to go EOTP to WOTP. Georgia avenue is a major artery and closing it shunts an enormous amount of traffic onto side streets that were never designed to accommodate so many cars.
Anonymous wrote:Dear Popville,
I wanted to drive my car right next to a major event and had to sit in traffic! Ugh, why don't people get out of my way? I'm going to be late for my Soulcycle Zumba class. Don't these people understand that I have places to drive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I heard many people say things along the lines of "oh, I never saw that popcorn place before, didn't know it was there..."
I bought food and books at a place about a mile and a half south of me. I wouldn't have gone or brought my kids if the street had been as usual.
Sounds like you've never been to Petworth before. Everyone knows "that popcorn place." It's called Stella's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Open Streets caused massive traffic jams throughout Petworth, inconveniencing hundreds of thousands of people. But, hey, 50 bicyclists got to ride their bikes down the middle of the street!
I doubt that!
NP. Okay so maybe not hundreds of thousands but it certainly made trying to go north on 13th, 14th or 16th a nightmare today. Can't speak for the other streets. Maybe no parking on 16th streets when they do this? Or come up with other traffic patterns to help?
Anonymous wrote:I heard many people say things along the lines of "oh, I never saw that popcorn place before, didn't know it was there..."
I bought food and books at a place about a mile and a half south of me. I wouldn't have gone or brought my kids if the street had been as usual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or maybe we could at least call it Empty Streets? Since it seemed to benefit no one but a handful of bicyclists.
+1
The local businesses must hate it. There is no one out compared to the usual Saturday morning.
Anonymous wrote:Dear Popville,
I wanted to drive my car right next to a major event and had to sit in traffic! Ugh, why don't people get out of my way? I'm going to be late for my Soulcycle Zumba class. Don't these people understand that I have places to drive?