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March 2008

March 25, 2008

Medford Middle School Goes Green in a big way!

Green_streets_371 This just in from the Andrews Middle School's Green Streets coordinator:

Sorry we couldn't join you at Joey's(?) Thai Cafe last night. I will try to purchase some Green Streets Initiative T shirts for my family for the next Walk/Ride Day !!
 
My kids said more pictures were taken of the students who wore green during the school day by one of the guidance counselors, so hopefully those pictures will be sent soon. My daughter said alot of students wore green. I don't know the actual count yet of how many students turned in their Green Pledge Sheets.
 
Bailey and 8 friends(all 7th grade girls wearing green) went with their stamped Passports to Colleen's in Medford Sq. for ice cream after school. We thought Colleen's was offering a discount for Walk/Ride Days participants, but the servers and the manager said they were not offering a discount. They did, however, put their names and phone numbers into a raffle at Colleen's.
 
Cheers,
Hallie

March 05, 2008

Little by little... One woman's experience with Walk/Ride Days

March 5, 2008

 

Walk Ride day has become an inspiration for my children and me. We are getting some much needed exercise while doing something good for the environment and spending precious time together.

We started driving/walking on the last Friday of every month when we first heard about the green streets initiative. Since then, we are not only walking longer and driving less, but we are getting to it about three times a week.

It has added very special family time to our lives. My seven year old daughter and four year old son and I have long discussions as we walk along, jump along, roll along and run along to school. Daniel asks questions like, “Does walking to school help to save the lions??” So he’s putting it together piece by piece. My daughter understands the terrible dangers posed by global warming. They are both growing a social and political conscience and this walking time has certainly enhanced it.

It has also been wonderful for my son, who gets asthma and does not have a lot of physical stamina. I can see his strength growing each week as I slowly increase the distance they are walking. My daughter’s stamina has also improved greatly, and I feel better myself, getting the blood flowing first thing in the morning.

So overall, it has truly been an enriching experience for us. We get very excited on those days when we see other passers by in their green shirts. It makes us feel a part of something bigger. For children, I think that is so important, to realize they are a part of a community of people who believe that together we can make some positive changes on this planet!

March 01, 2008

Thank-You from Joey's Thai Cafe

Hello Jane,
 
It was our pleasure to see all of you at Joey's Thai Cafe last night.
Here is our email address for your future contact.
Thank you so much again and we look forward to seeing you at the cafe! Go Green!!
 
Warm Regards,
Joice & Joey

Changing Habits: A Chat with Andrew Brown of the New Amsterdam Project

Dsc05175In Porter Square, outside of the building that houses Healthworks Gym and CVS Pharmacy, there is a thin row of shrubs surrounded by concrete. On one side there is a parking lot, and the other a sidewalk. To get from the bike rack, or parking lot, to the entrance of the building one must pass these small shrubs. If you aren’t paying attention you might miss them.

Last fall I parked my back in the rack almost everyday and walked to the entrance of the gym. At first I diligently passed around the shrubbery, but slowly I became a creature of convenience and hopped over the shrubs instead. Soon I noticed footprints between the plants; wear and erosion followed. Shortly thereafter the plants weren’t doing well; the slight missteps here and there and the compaction of their soil began to take a toll.

In order to go around the shrubbery, rather than through it, one would have to add a total of no more than about five to ten extra steps to an already short walk. Nonetheless, with frost and cold nipping at my toes, I found myself forgetting my vow not to walk over the shrubs anymore. Sometimes I remember them as an afterthought and whispered apologies behind my quickly moving legs.

This fall a protective railing appeared around the shrubs. It is simple, black, unobtrusive, and incredibly effective. The plants are thriving. People walk around them all day. All is, comparatively, well for this urban vegetation. We just needed a little guidance to get out of our bad habits and let life bloom.

Like the guide-rail in Porter Square, Andrew Brown, founder and CEO of the New Amsterdam Project (or NAP as it is fondly called), is hoping to guide the habits of the future, but he is thinking beyond shrubbery.

A bicyclist since the age of four, Andrew has always dreamed of a city built around a cycling infrastructure. Having lived in the original “New Amsterdam,” or New York City, for much of his life Andrew proclaims an innate dislike for cars.

“I have never understood why anyone would want to drive a car in a city. It is just a complete mystery to me. I’ve never enjoyed cars.” He said, while seated on the plush couch of his new showroom on Oxford and Sacramento streets in Cambridge. “Automobiles are killing us emotionally and physically.”

Andrew knows what he is talking about. As a physician and an active community member he has seen, first hand, the problems that a “car culture” has helped to create. Andrew cites obesity, stress, and anger, as just a few of the symptoms that driving cars induces.

Enter the New Amsterdam Project: a business that aims to “replace internal-combustion vehicles in North America with human-powered vehicles to build stronger, more resilient, and self-reliant communities.” Through the showroom in Cambridge, as well as through outreach to businesses in the community, the New Amsterdam Project wants to provide people with alternatives.

“One of the projects we are working on, that I am really excited about, is removing small trucks from the road. And with the $100 barrel of oil just around the corner this is sounding more and more possible. We want to take many of the delivery jobs that are out there and make them healthier – we can transform the work experience.”

Andrew explained that the current focus of their “small truck project” is on deliveries that happen within the city: dry cleaning, food, carpenters, and products that are on their “last mile.” So, if food were delivered to the Boston area from say, Lincoln Massachusetts, and needed to be distributed to five different grocery stores, then the Tri-Cycle Trucks in the NAP showroom could take the place of those five different delivery trucks around the city.

The “Tri-Cycle Trucks--” a bicycle contraption with trailer attached to the back-- can carry up to 600 pounds, and they are, according to Andrew, easy to ride. In case you are wondering how one would get 600 pounds up a large incline, they come equipped with what Andrew calls a “power assist.” It is a rechargeable battery that plugs in over night. Then, on those delivery days when the hills are just a little too large, you get a little help, but you never stop pedaling—they are first and foremost a human powered bicycle.

“Our truck model makes a driver healthier, happier, and from a business perspective it’s infinitely less expensive than all the costs of owning a mini-van.” Andrew proclaimed proudly as he lifted up the trailer to display the spacious inside.

Speaking of mini-vans, one of the other models on display in the showroom is something that Andrew termed the “SUV” of bicycles. On the NAP website it is listed as a “Bicycle Mini-Van,” and it is what Andrew uses to transport his own children, 4 and 10 years old, around town.

“In the U.S. there is particularly strong anxiety about safety, so I am adding improved seatbelts to this model.” Andrew explained.

Even as a parent Andrew said he doesn’t need a car. He has found bicycles to be the best way to transport his children throughout the city and to school.

“I don’t own a car.” Andrew says “And I believe the only reason people don’t bike more is a matter of habits.”

According to Andrew habits are what got us into this driving mess in the first place, and they are definitely what got Andrew into this line of work.

Dsc05177 His first trip to Amsterdam, in February 2006, was a pivotal moment in his life. There, he struck up, what became a four hour conversation, with a stranger. It was this Dutch man’s critical but gentle words on American car culture, which lead to an epiphany,

“You Americans have very bad habits.”

From here, as Andrew tells the story, it was short leap to realizing that what was standing between his dream and the reality of that dream was the small matter of habits. If Andrew could provide people with reasonable ways to change those habits his dream, of an entire city based around a cycling infrastructure, could be realized.

“The New Amsterdam Project is about getting from point A to point B in the quickest, healthiest, and most sensible way possible.” Andrew said. “Nothing more complicated than habit explains the difference in behaviors-- with regard to getting from point A to point B-- between Amsterdamers and Bostonians.”

“Imagine,” Andrew said at the end of the interview, “if when you were a little girl, instead of loading all of your things into the family station wagon, your family packed up their bikes with all that you needed, and headed out onto the bike highway. Wouldn’t that be wonderful?”

Indeed Andrew, I think it would be.

If you want to learn more about the New Amsterdam Project, see their delivery and commuter vehicles, and meet their highly motivated crew, you can visit them at their showroom: 35 Sacramento at Oxford Street in Cambridge, MA.

For more details visit their website: http://www.newamsterdamproject.com/openhouse.html

By Paige Doughty, Green Streets Program Coordinator

February 2008 Walk/Ride Day: Cambridge Mayor Pedals on Coldest Walk-Ride Day of the year!!!

Globe_3208_mayor_on_bike_3

A now famous (in small circles!) shot of Cambridge Mayor E. Denise Simmons riding on the back of Green Streets Dire ctor, Janie Katz-Christy's tandem bike!

And here's the also famous (it was a Globe Picture of the Week!) shot of Rosaleah's foot on her 3 speed's pedal!:Rosaleah_browns_greenhighheel_2

Click here or read below: Margaret Desjardins' great posting about Cambridge Mayor Denise Simmons and her trusty, always-stylish aide, Rosaleah Brown, biking to their early morning meeting on February 29's Walk/Ride Day!

Have Bike, Will Travel: Cambridge Mayor Pedals for Walk-Ride Day

Img_2926 Despite the c-c-c-cold yesterday morning, Cambridge's own Mayor Denise Simmons (left) and her aid, Rosaleah Brown (right), went g-g-g-green! In honor of February's Walk-Ride Day, the two City officials pedaled to the Harvard Square Business Association's annual breakfast.

Mayor Simmons was chauffeured on the back of a bicycle-built-for-two by Green Streets Initiative founder and organizer, Janie Katz-Christy.

Walk-Ride days, sponsored by Cambridge-based Green Streets Initiative, are always the last Friday of every month and encourage people to, yes… to walk, ride, carpool, bus, T, or use some other mode of transport than their own personal car.

For every mile you don't drive you save one pound of carbon dioxide (CO2) and for every gallon of gasoline you don’t use, you keep 20 pounds of CO2 out of the atmosphere!

"It was Freeeeezing!" said Janie Katz-Christy, founder and organizer of Green Streets and the monthly Walk-Ride days. "But invigorating and wonderful," she added. "You just need to wear more layers!"

Mayor Simmons said her forehead hurt from the cold, but seemed very proud. Her aide, Rosaleah Brown, wore green high heels!

Next Walk-Ride day is March 28th; hopefully it will be a little warmer by then, although in New England you just never know.  So go green, wear green, and don’t forget…Online raffle, retail sponsors: free dessert at Pizzario Uno, Coffee or tea at Z-squared, ice cream...