Endless Summer on Brooklyn’s Fifth Avenue

For most New Yorkers the official end of summer is Labor Day which, this year, fell on Monday, September 4, 2006. For astronomers, pagans and Daniel Libeskind’s "Wedge of Light," the end of summer is the Autumnal Equinox, the moment when the sun crosses the celestial equator from north to south. By that measure, Fall begins on Saturday, September 23 at 12:03 am this year. But for those who commute by bike along the northern end of Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, Brooklyn, the end of summer will be the day that New York City’s Department of Transportation creates bike safety improvements along this stretch of avenue recently identified as one of the city’s top three bicyclist fatality areas. At the moment, there is no end in sight.

On June 9, 2005, a 28-year-old pro-bono lawyer named Elizabeth Padilla was killed on Fifth Avenue near Park Place when a truck driver carelessly opened his door into the path of her bicycle (Aside: There’s going to be a memorial 5K run for Liz on October 1 in Prospect Park). Fifth Avenue is a designated bike route and in the aftermath of Padilla’s death, community members, elected officials and bike advocates made repeated calls to DOT asking for safety improvements along the narrower stretch of the avenue between Flatbush Avenue and Carroll Street. On May 19 Councilmember Bill DeBlasio received a letter from Brooklyn Borough Commissioner Joseph Palmieri stating, "We anticipate installation" of Class III Bike Route improvements "to be completed by this Summer."

It hasn’t happened.

We know that the Brooklyn Borough Commissioner’s office lost its Downtown Brooklyn traffic coordinator to a job promotion at the end of July and only just recently filled that post. And we know that DOT has been focused on a larger, citywide, bike safety initiative for the last few months as well. Still, it has been 15 months since the death of Liz Padilla and a commitment is a commitment.

So, why the delay? When can we expect to see safety improvements along this important and heavily-used bike route? We have a call in to DOT’s public affairs office and hope to have a response shortly.

DOTBikeLane_5thAve.jpg

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

DOT Reply on Brooklyn’s Fifth Avenue Bike Lane

|
Earlier this week we asked why the Department of Transportation had not followed-through on its promise to fix up the Fifth Avenue bike lane in Brooklyn by end of summer. Ryan Russo, the agency’s new Director for Street Management and Safety got back to us with this response: Fifth Avenue in Brooklyn, between Carroll and […]

City Promises $5M in Ped Safety Improvements at Mural Opening

|
The mother and grandfather of James Rice. With weeping family members and the ghostly, smiling images of three boys watching over them, city officials and elected representatives joined 100 community members on a Brooklyn street corner Tuesday evening to pledge "Not one more death."   State Senator Velmanette Montgomery, Assembly member Joan Millman and representatives […]

Liz Padilla Memorial & Bike Improvements

|
 On June 9, 2005, one year ago tomorrow, 28-year-old pro bono lawyer and Park Slope resident, Elizabeth Kasulis Padilla was hit by a truck and killed on the corner of Fifth Avenue and Prospect Place while riding a bicycle to her new job at the Brooklyn Bar Association. Since that day, members of Park Slope […]