More New Bike Racks at Fifth & Alton
The “bog box” mall at 5th St and Alton Rd in South Beach surprises us yet again. After installing 14 new bike racks along the Publix front on 6th St, I just spotted 20 new bike racks along the Lenox Ave side of the mall.
I had already seen four when I first reported on the new ones along the Publix side, but wow, what a pleasant surprise to see an extra 16! This really gives me hope that they will also address the 5th St end of the mall once stores open there. Many thanks to the developers, AR&J SOBE, LLC.
And if we can be a bit bold, maybe you’ll also consider some of the ideas tossed out in this other post? I took this pic while it was raining, and boy, it would’ve been nice to have a dry place to park the bike. Just saying.
9 Responses to More New Bike Racks at Fifth & Alton
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
Categories
Accident Architecture bicycles bike lanes Bike Miami Days biking Biscayne Boulevard Brickell bus Climate Change Coconut Grove complete streets Downtown Miami FDOT High Speed Rail Metrorail Miami Miami-Dade County Miami-Dade Transit Miami 21 Miami Beach Museum Park News Parking Parks Pedestrian Pedestrians Pic o' the Day Planning Real Estate Development Rickenbacker Causeway Sprawl Streetcar Traffic Transit Transitography Transit Oriented Development Transportation Tri-Rail Uncategorized Urban Design Urban Development Boundary Urban Growth Urban Planning WalkabilitySouth Florida Transportation
- Bike SoMi
- Emerge Miami
- Florida Bicycle Association
- Florida Department of Transportation
- Florida Greenbook Roadway Design Manual
- Green Mobility Network
- Miami Bike Report
- Miami-Dade BPAC
- Miami-Dade Expressway Authority
- Miami-Dade Transit
- Slow Bike Miami
- Spokes 'n' Folks
- State of Florida Bike/Ped Laws
- TACOLCY Bicycle Club
- The M-Path to Enlightenment
- The Miami Bike Scene
- Transit to MIA
- Tri-Rail (South Florida Regional Transportation Authority)
Transit Blogs and Resources
- Transit In Utah
- The Overhead Wire
- Design New Haven
- The Transport Politic
- City Transit Advocates
- TheCityFix.com
- Streetsblog
- Trains For America
- public transit
- Metro Library and Archive Transportation Headlines
- Greater Greater Washington
- CTA Tattler
- CitySkip
- Portland Transport
- Welcome to the FastLane: The Official Blog of the U.S. Secretary
- Human Transit
- trainjotting.com
- Spacing Wire • understanding the urban landscape
- JACKSONVILLE TRANSIT
- CoolTown Studios
- Buildings and Food
- Midwest High Speed Rail
- Off the Kuff
South Florida Blogosphere
- 305 Misadventures
- Beached Miami
- BRICKELL LIFE
- Buildings and Food
- Coconut Grove Grapevine
- Coral Gables
- Coral Gables Watch
- Dolce Miami
- Eye On Miami
- greenerMIAMI
- Hallandale Beach Blog
- Herald Watch
- HOMESTEAD IS HOME
- JUSTICE BUILDING BLOG
- Liam Crotty Photography
- Miami beach 411
- Miami Every Day Photo
- Miami Fever
- Miami For Change
- Miami Urbanist
- Michael Emilio
- Photography is Not a Crime
- REV Miami – Music, Art, Events, and Counter-Culture Magazine
- Riptide 2.0
- South Beach Hoosier
- South Florida Bike Coalition
- South Florida Daily Blog
- Urban City Architecture
- Urban Environment League
- View from Virginia Key
- What Miami
Planning and Design Resources
Archived Posts
Subscribe via Email
Recent Comments
- Carlos on Lost Vision? Miami-Dade Transit 40 Years On . . .
- Pili on Lost Vision? Miami-Dade Transit 40 Years On . . .
- Matthew Toro on Worth a Reminder: County Transportation Summit
- Ashley Jimenez on Sun-Rail & Florida’s High-Speed Rail Future
- xxs on Lost Vision? Miami-Dade Transit 40 Years On . . .
- Matthew Toro on Worth a Reminder: County Transportation Summit
Planetizen- Taking the Guesswork out of Designing for Walkability May 21, 2013Summary: The lack of adequate pedestrian behavior models means that designing for walkability has largely remained a matter of intuition. However, agent-based simulation can provide insight into the keys for creating pedestrian-friendly places. […]
- Annual Search Begins for UK's Ugliest Building May 21, 2013Oliver Wainwright solicits contenders for this year's Carbuncle Cup, Building Design magazine's annual search for the UK's worst "crimes against architecture". […]
- High Above Hollywood, Buying Into the Glamour Without the Grittiness of the Boulevard May 21, 2013With new luxury high-rises sprouting in a densifying Hollywood, and many more on the way, those hawking penthouses priced between $1-$45 million play up the unique amenities and play down the messy reality of a changing neighborhood. […]
- Take Your Kids to the Park and Leave Them There...Seriously May 21, 2013Apologies for being a little late on this one, but apparently last Saturday was the fourth annual 'Take Our Children to the Park...and Leave Them There Day.' Sounds crazy right? Lenore Skenazy argues why it may be the smartest thing you do all week. […]
- Environmental and Transportation Challenges Await New L.A. Mayor May 21, 2013Whoever is victorious in today's election to choose L.A.'s next mayor, the celebrating may be short lived. Pressing needs to strengthen the city's water supply, maintain transit momentum, and relieve toxic hotspots await the city's next leader. […]
- Greenest Building in UK Approved May 21, 2013Norwich, England will soon be home to the "greenest building in the U.K.," reports Mark Wilding. […]
- Planning Fatigue Plagues San Diego Outreach Efforts May 21, 2013After participating in at least 27 planning processes over the last 15 years, residents of City Heights can be forgiven for wanting to actually see something built. Plentiful funds for planning, but meager funds for building, are causing frustration. […]
- Environmentalists Told to Get With the Fracking Program May 21, 2013Environmentalists charged that the new federal rules guiding hydraulic fracturing do not protect the environment and inform the public about the fracking process. The new Secretary of the Interior, Sally Jewell, appeared prepared for their comments. […]
- Step Aside California, Michigan Modernism Gets a Spin in the Spotlight May 21, 2013During the post-war years, the Wolverine State gave the world much more than just elegant automobiles. A new exhibit explores Michigan's under-appreciated contributions to the design world. […]
- Comprehensive Planning off the Beaten Path May 21, 2013Liven up your comprehensive planning effort Texas style. Matthew Lewis, Development Director for the city of San Marcos, used everything from Legos to "design rodeos" (i.e. Texas charrettes) to get to common ground. […]
- Taking the Guesswork out of Designing for Walkability May 21, 2013
Green Mobility Network- An error has occurred, which probably means the feed is down. Try again later.










I saw all those new bike racks as I was walking down Lenox Av, and I was pleasantly surprised. Bravo to them, and I wish every building in South Beach had this much bike parking, wow.
Typical for the new Transit Miami. Never enough…
TM Reader,?
Mediocrity has never been and never will be accepted by Transit Miami. If
we had remained complacent about the bicycle parking situation, bicyclists
would still be locking their bicycles up to tress and garbage cans. We are not asking for too much, we are simply asking for secure and covered bicycle parking. We have already commended the developer for going to great lengths to improve the parking situation; but why stop short? The City of Miami Beach should be working with the developer to find a place for a bicycle shelter.
While I fully support covered bike racks, and more bike parking in general, you have to keep in mind a few things.
1. Who is paying for the cost of bike racks?
2. Is this an expected cost?
3. Has the city asked that this be part of their development or is it a gesture to cyclists?
4. Have you considered that the location may not be the problem but that it costs substantially more money to build a shelter?
While TM Reader has expressed frustration with the new transit miami, and you may blow it off without really considering what he/she is saying. You seem to have a strange view of how things actually get done, and it’s charming that you are idealistic. Have you discussed what the City of Miami Beach is doing to improve bicycle parking citywide? Have you proposed ordinances, and asked them implement them? If you are just expecting that developers will always listen to people who complain on a blog about the way things should be, your results will not always be as good as this. Yet even when the developer does the commendable thing, you go the extra step and say it’s not good enough. You have to walk before you run before you ride, but that may be mediocre.
I would suggest getting involved before projects are built and asking that planning incorporate transit friendly concepts into the design. Maybe attend a public meeting on the subject and ask that that be included on the record. Who knows you could ask that the county pass a bicycle parking ordinance that would include covered parking, showers, lockers the works. That would require more than taking pictures and blogging about it though.
Ack, that should’ve been “big box,” not “bog box.” Sorry.
@TM Reader:
at the end of the post would’ve better conveyed the tone of the last paragraph? I am actually very glad that the developer has been so proactive in putting up bike racks. I know for a fact the City had been requesting them, but I think this is beyond what the City was expecting. I duly commended them, and will do so again and again. That said, there’s nothing wrong with putting the idea out there that there is more that could be done. With the amount of bike traffic this mall is seeing, it isn’t crazy to suggest that our needs be better met if possible. If it were cars, no one would be batting an eyelash.
Perhaps a
@Hagbard Celine:
1- The developer, at around $160 per rack, if they are using the City’s supplier (which it seems they are).
2- Yes and no. The City requested them from the start and has been on their case to provide them. Though there is no legal requisite for the provision of bike racks in MB yet, that’s coming and the mall was sort of a testbed.
3- The City has requested it from the planning stages, IIRC.
4- It is costly to build shelters, yes, but so was building the garage to begin with. Comparatively it is far cheaper to build a covered bike parking space than a car parking space of equal size which can fit at least 3 to 4 times as many customers. It’s an investment to serve your customers; the mall gets a large amount of bike traffic, so eventually it will become a matter of providing for the needs of those spending money there.
As for the rest, I can’t speak for any other TM writer, but I do attend the City of Miami Beach Bikeways meetings and have been part of the process of asking, cajoling, begging, settling and wishing that gets things done for bikes in the city. The case of the 5th & Alton Mall is one we’ve been talking about for months, even before I began to attend, and one that for a while there wasn’t showing any signs of movement. So yeah, it is pleasantly surprising that the developer acted to such an extent, which is why I praise them, and yeah, sure, ask half in jest/half seriously for further improvements.
I know for a fact that no one in the Bikeways Committee reads TM (or didn’t till I started forwarding them relevant links) and I imagine the developer doesn’t even know we exist (something I also want to change as soon as I can find a contact email), so it isn’t that this blog had an effect. But this blog IS the voice of concerned citizens, and thus carries a certain amount of weight in that it reflects a sampling of the public opinion, and that means something.
And to reply directly to your last paragraph, a little bit of research on me, the writer, would tell you that I have done all that already, that I’m not bloggin out my butt here, and that I am fully aware of things in the pipeline, such as an ordinance making temporary and long-term bike parking mandatory on all developments in MB. So in essence, when I ask for covered parking as a winky addition at the end of a post that’s all in good vibe, is giving them a chance to get ahead of the game, because if/when the ordinance passes, then they’ll be forced to. So which is the better choice, by their own volition, or by forced mandate?
To readers in general: don’t assume we post willy-nilly without knowing what we’re talking about.
Is it at all possible for bike racks to be placed inside the parking garage? Would it be possible for cyclists to somehow walk their bikes up the garage ramp? This would provide sheltered bike parking.
@Richard:
Is it possible? Sure. I wouldn’t mind them putting some inside at all. Going up the ramp is not really feasible since it is not safe for pedestrians. You’d have to use the elevators to reach the upper floors.
Seeing as how this was originally designed as a major Beach intermodal center replete with a streetcar stop and numerous bus bays, the very LEAST they could do was put in this scaled-down version of a public transit center that, in essence, is strictly for bikes.
Once again, the City of Miami Beach compromises alternative transportation–or throws in a sorry sop–rather than present something meaningful and not autocentric–which I’ll be soon be addressing in a upcoming column (see Ad Hoc At Home http://www.miamisunpost.com).
The City, alas, is still batting .1000 when it comes to less-than-effective–way less–alternative transportation measures.
@Jeffrey:
By all means call the City of MB out on what it needs to be called out, but do get the fact straight that this mall is under private development and at the moment, the city has no legal way to demand bike parking (that I’m aware of).