How Mt. Diablo embraced safety and made history – The Mercury News

WALNUT CREEK — There’s an inherent peril looming behind the estimated 150,000 cyclists who make the climb up Mount Diablo’s steep 3,849-feet summit each year: motorists speeding past them along the same narrow, winding roads and blind curves.

A decade ago, Alan Kalin, of Danville, rallied a working group within the Mount Diablo Cyclists club to craft a solution that could help ease tensions between people traveling on both two and four wheels but, more important, to also find a safer way to alleviate traffic backups and reduce the number of dangerous collisions.

Their first blueprints for bike turnouts were drafted in 2014, featuring a pioneering design that allowed bicyclists, who pedal uphill at slower speeds, to pull into their own paved lane so that vehicles can pass safely — engineered to mimic turnoff lanes that have for years aided vehicular traffic. Mount Diablo State Park’s roads are the only documented location that has implemented bike turnout infrastructure on a significant scale.

“They don’t exist anywhere else in the world,” Kalin said in an interview. “Motorists love them, cyclists love them — bike turnouts keep everybody safe and lowers the animosity between both groups. It’s not going to eliminate a collision, but we have saved the lives of people that we’ll never know.”

Alan Kalin stands along South Gate Road in Mount Diablo State Park on Thursday, Aug. 2, 2018, near Danville, Calif. Kalin, an avid bicyclist, has been documenting the hazards of vehicles trying to navigate around tight turns and narrow roads on the way to the summit of Mount Diablo. (Aric Crabb/Staff Archives)
Alan Kalin stands along South Gate Road in Mount Diablo State Park on Thursday, Aug. 2, 2018, near Danville, Calif. Kalin, an avid bicyclist, has been documenting the hazards of vehicles trying to navigate around tight turns and narrow roads on the way to the summit of Mount Diablo. (Aric Crabb/Staff Archives) 

Ten years and 1.5 million cyclists later, 67 total bike turnoffs — also known as auxiliary bike lanes — are now open across Mount Diablo State Park.

On Saturday at 10 a.m., Kalin will join dozens of cyclists, elected officials, parks staff and community members at Curry Point — a scenic staging area halfway up the mountain on South Gate Road — to celebrate this milestone for their model safety campaign.

“This took me 10 years, but we did it,” Kalin said in an interview, recounting the hours of research and gobs of surveys, public records requests and petitions that fueled the project. “I never dreamed that this would happen. I was just trying to save a few lives. The word ‘wow’ almost doesn’t do this justice.”

After construction wrapped this month, there are now a total of 26 bike turnouts along South Gate Road, 16 dotted on Summit Road and another 25 paved on North Gate Road — a 2,133% increase from the original three turnouts that kicked off a pilot program in 2015-16, alongside the installation of new signage and road striping.

The newest phase of turnouts cost $927,000, according to California State Parks officials.

Map of Mount Diablo State Park showing where 22 new bike turnouts along park roads will open on Saturday, providing more safety for bicyclists.Clint Elsholz, superintendent of the Diablo Range District, in a statement lauded how the infrastructure has helped improve accessibility for both bikers and drivers to enjoy some of the East Bay’s most striking panoramic views and natural wonders.

“We are thrilled to offer these new bike turnouts, which represent our commitment to improving the safety and experience for all who enjoy the beauty of Mount Diablo State Park,” Elsholz said in a statement. “These new turnouts not only enhance safety but also encourage more people to explore the park by bike.”

State Senator Steve Glazer and Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan helped lead a major push in 2021 to extend the network of turnouts by facilitating $1.5 million in California’s budget for additional funding. The money helped bring the total number of turnouts to 45 by October 2022, a significant jump from the previous 17 existing auxiliary lanes.

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