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He wants to reclaim towns for pedestrians
By Matt Crenson | Associated Press
The Christian Science Monitor
Published 10.15.03
online at http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1015/p13s02-lihc.html
(EAST AURORA, N.Y.) Dan Burden is playing in traffic. The
lanky 50-something scurries into the busy main street of this
western New York village, unfurling a
metal tape measure as he goes. He gets a quick measurement
of the distance from the curb to the double yellow line, then
retreats to the sidewalk.
"Twenty-two feet," he says. "Plenty of room
for a bike lane."
Mr.
Burden is a guest here, invited by a group of citizens who
want his advice on how to make their town a better place to
walk and bicycle.
That's no mean feat. Americans now use automobiles for more
than 90 percent of their daily trips. An average person travels more
than 9,000 miles a year by car, compared with less than 4,000 miles four
decades ago. The average driver spends 443 hours a year behind the
wheel.
The result of this automotive addiction: a world where children
are
sometimes bused 300 feet to school because they can't safely
cross
eight-lane suburban boulevards. Two-hour commutes on clogged
highways.
Quaint main streets forsaken for windowless hulks set along
acres of
asphalt.
"America is out of sync with its values," Burden
tells 100 people who
have gathered for a slide presentation in a school cafeteria.
"We say
we're for kids. We say we're for safety. We say we're for
families. And
we build this ..." A slide comes up of a woman pushing
a stroller along
the shoulder of a busy road, a toddler with her walking inches
from the
traffic.
Children and the elderly suffer most when the automobile
conquers a
town, Burden says. In a car-dominated landscape, those who
can't or
won't drive suffer impaired mobility, recreation, and peace
of mind.
But the damage can be repaired, he says. Our towns and cities
can be
refashioned into places where children bike to school and
their parents
walk to work, where picking up a gallon of milk doesn't have
to burn a
pint of gasoline.
Burden is seven years into a decade-long road show dedicated
to
spreading the word, like a postmodern Johnny Appleseed who
plants ideas
instead of seeds. In 1996 he set up Walkable Communities Inc.,
a
nonprofit business that offers planning, traffic management,
and
community design. He travels 350 days a year - ironically,
often by
automobile - and vows to keep moving until 2006. So far he
has visited
1,300 communities.
His early paths
This isn't the first time Burden has hit the road in the
name of nonmotorized transportation. In 1971, he and his wife
embarked on Hemistour, a National Geographic-sponsored bicycle
expedition from Alaska to Argentina. They rode with one other
couple, Greg and June Siple.
The Burdens had to drop out 18 months into the trip when
Dan became ill
in southern Mexico. But by then Burden and Greg Siple had
conceived
another grand adventure, a mass transcontinental ride to celebrate
America's bicentennial. More than 4,000 people participated
in what
organizers called Bikecentennial.
Burden settled down some after that, going to work for the
federal
Department of Transportation and later as Florida's bicycle
and
pedestrian coordinator. But he says a vacation to Australia
in 1980
helped him realize that highways and shopping malls have led
America
astray.
"I started to walk the streets and wander through the
villages and
began to realize that Australia, every town I was in, was
the America I
remembered as a child," he says.
He's playing in traffic again
This time Burden has positioned 20 East Aurora residents
in the street as if they were traffic cones. He's lined them
up in an arc that sweeps forward from the front left fender
of a parked car before curving to the curb at the end of the
block. This, he explains, is a curb extension.
Widening the sidewalk at the end of a block prevents turning
cars from
cutting the corner and forces them to slow down. It also gives
crossing
pedestrians a vantage point that is unobstructed by parked
cars and
shortens the distance they have to walk across the intersection.
The knowledge Burden imparts is not innovative - any traffic
engineer
knows about curb extensions. What makes Burden special is
how he
spreads the word to non-professionals who share his vision
for a
pedestrian-friendly America.
"You need to know those kinds of terms to be able to
speak," says Bruce
Davidson, president of Aurora Citizens for Smart Growth.
Mr. Davidson wants to learn the lingo because in a few years
the New
York State Department of Transportation plans to tear up East
Aurora's
main street.
"We want to make sure that the project works in our
favor, that there's
no widening, that pedestrians come first and foremost,"
says Libby
Weberg, a member of Aurora Citizens for Smart Growth.
If western New York hadn't snoozed through the most recent
period of
national prosperity, East Aurora might have more problems
than it does.
The west end of town already has a shopping plaza and its
share of
fast-food restaurants and drive-through banks.
But the village of 6,673 people also has a real Main Street,
anchored
by a genuine five-and-dime that sells Necco Wafers and other
candies
that haven't been seen in most places for years.
The town also has a movie theater straight out of "The
Last Picture
Show" - one screen, 650 seats, and real butter on the
popcorn. Next
door is Patina, a restaurant that serves new American cuisine
in a
restored 19th-century home.
"The things you've got, other people wish they had,"
Burden tells the
100 people assembled in the middle school cafeteria.
Still, this community has made some critical mistakes, he
says.
Building the new high school a mile outside town means more
kids will
ride the bus or drive instead of walking. And those who have
no other
transportation must walk home from after-school activities
along a busy
road with no sidewalk.
East Aurora's post office has moved out of the town center,
too.
"They've stolen your post office," Burden admonishes.
"You need to get
your post office back."
In Burden's ideal community, traffic would roll along Main
Street at 15
to 20 mph. The library, post office, and town hall would sit
in an
attractive downtown with parking on the street.
"Cities work best if we keep them compact," he
says.
Burden wants to see housing in town, and most people living
within
walking distance of a "100 percent place" - such
as a public square
where people can gather. Nobody should live more than an eighth
of a
mile from a park. Bike lanes and walking paths would link
the town's
major attractions to one another and to neighborhoods. And
there would
be enough crosswalks so pedestrians didn't have to go more
than 150
feet out of their way to cross.
East Aurora could be like that, Burden says, but only if
the people who
live there take some initiative. They need to persuade transportation
officials to preserve Main Street as a focal point, not a
thoroughfare.
And they must encourage national chains to lay aside their
plans for
drive-through megastores and think outside the big box.
"If you do nothing," he warns, "then what
you get is going to haunt you
for the next 50 years."
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