File #: 2025-4886   
Type: Regular Agenda Item
Body: Commission on Persons with Disabilities
On agenda: 3/12/2025
Title: Review Design Concept for Willie Stargell Complete Street Project
Attachments: 1. Stargell Exhibit 1 - Engagement Summary, 2. Stargell Exhibit 2 - Corridor Concept Plan, 3. Stargell Exhibit 3 - Roundabouts Performance Memo, 4. Stargell Exhibit 4 - Presentation
Review Design Concept for Willie Stargell Complete Street Project

To: Honorable Chair and Members of the Commission on Persons with Disabilities

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The Willie Stargell Avenue Complete Street project will construct safety and transit improvements between Main St and Mariner Square Loop by improving school crossings, providing active transportation facilities, slowing traffic, improving the safety of major intersections, installing landscape and green infrastructure, and adding new bus stops for AC Transit's Line 19 that will be re-routed later in 2025. After multiple rounds of community outreach and refinement, the full concept plan includes pedestrian and bicycle paths, bus stops, roundabouts, and crosswalk safety enhancements.

Staff recommend that the Commission on Persons with Disabilities review and provide feedback on the concept plan. Staff will then bring the concept to City Council for approval and continue to detailed design.

BACKGROUND

Stargell Avenue between Main Street and Mariner Square Loop serves as an automobile, pedestrian, and bicycle connection between Alameda Point, the Alameda Point Collaborative, and the Main Street Ferry Terminal to the west; and the College of Alameda, Alameda Landing Shopping Center, and Webster Street to the east. Along the way, the roadway serves multiple low-income housing communities and Coast Guard housing. The corridor also serves as a school route to Ruby Bridges Elementary School and seven other West End schools, including for many families crossing the street on foot. West of 5th Street, it is a two-lane roadway with a sidewalk on the south side only, bicycle shared lane "sharrows" in the 14' travel lanes (which are wide lanes but too narrow to add bicycle lanes), and a vacant right of way to the north. East of 5th Street, the roadway is four to six lanes, with left turn lanes.

The width of the Stargell Avenue right of way west of 5th Street was originally established to accommodate a four-lane...

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