Posted by: David Giacalone | December 22, 2016

one-page 2017 Stockade calendars (with our thanks)

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Whether or not we have a white Christmas this year in the Stockade, I hope the one-page 2017 calendars I’ve uploaded for this posting will help spread the Yule holiday spirit in our neighborhood.  They are a small thank-you to all those who have come to “suns along the Mohawk” this year for a taste of Stockade beauty and events. Each of the calendars is ready to print, email to family or friends, or leave on your digital device for reference in 2017.

  • The two calendars with a white background are formatted to be printed at 5″ x 7″; the two with green backgrounds are formatted to be printed at 4″ x 6″. The jpg. files are the original image files, for high resolution.
  • One version has a photo of the leading Stockade-athon runners on Washington Avenue in November 2015; the other shows the 2016 Jumpin’ Jack’s Fireworks as seen from the Mohawk River Bank, along the rear of Cucumber Alley.
  • An image with Lawrence Circle reflected in a Stockade Christmas tree ornament appears on each calendar. If you squint, you can see the photographer in front of Lawrence snapping the photo.
  • Click on each of the images for access to the full jpg. file, or right-click on it to save or copy it.

newyearfootprint4x6 As a bonus, I’m including a Yule greeting card, formatted at 4″ x 6″, which is seen on the left. In addition, for those celebrating the Last Stockade Christmas without a Casino nearby, my reminder that opening day, February 8, is also the date of the Schenectady Massacre of 1690, can be seen below. It is also formatted for a 4″x 6″ print.

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See the posting “our infamous February 8th“, at our sister weblog, “snowmen at the gates,” for ironic similarities between the two events.

Here are the remaining calendars:

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  • Whichever Holiday you celebrate, may it be joyous, and may the New Year bring a few good surprises along with good health and prosperity. 
  • And, may we all work together to protect and preserve the residential nature and beauty of our lovely Stockade Historic District.

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. . happy faces at the 2016 Stockade Holiday Tree Lighting

p.s. Stockade & Schenectady postcards available at The Open Door make great stocking stuffers (and postcards), and are for a good cause. See out postcard page.

Posted by: David Giacalone | December 5, 2016

2016 Stockade Tree Lighting

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. . the 2016 Stockade Holiday Tree . . 

img_3174-003 There is a tree involved, but there’s no controversy over this Stockade tradition: Our Holiday Tree-Lighting ceremony and Afterglow Party is an enjoyable, community-nurturing event well-worth preserving. Even burdened with the need to snap a lot of photos, I had a very good time, saw some of my favorite faces (and people), met a handful of new ones, and escaped well within my calorie quota. Festive thanks go to the Stockade Association for sponsoring the event, especially to the event chairs, Colleen Macauley and Kevin Grace; and to Susannah Hand, who arranged for donation of the lovely tree by her employer, Saratoga Tree Nursery (NYS DEC).

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img_3222-002 The collage above features some of the captured faces (click on it for a larger version). The slideshow below, offers a glimpse of festivities at Lawrence Circle and inside the Great Hall of St. George’s Church. [As always, for a larger version of an image in the slideshow, pause it, right-click on the image, and choose Open Image in New Tab.]

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Posted by: David Giacalone | November 20, 2016

images of the 2016 Holiday Parade

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 The 49th Annual Daily Gazette Holiday Parade took place yesterday evening, November 19, 2016, along State Street in downtown Schenectady. See “Thousands line State Street for annual Holiday Parade” (Sunday Gazette, by Daniel Fitzsimmons, November 20, 2016) The theme was The Movies. For the first time, the event was live-streamed at the Chamber of Schenectady County’s Facebook page.

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. . . finally, Santa Claus

Take a seat, and see the Parade in our slideshow, with 60 photos. (for a larger version of a Slideshow image, pause the slideshow, right-click and choose Show Image in New Tab)

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Proctor’s float – Metropolis

Posted by: David Giacalone | November 13, 2016

eponymously viewing Stockade-athon 2016

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. . . Washington Avenue, Schenectady Stockade, 12Nov2016

In this webpost, you will find a celebration of Stockade-athon 2016 as it passes through Schenectady’s Stockade Historic District, its namesake neighborhood. The Stockade is the first designated historic district in New York State. The Stockade-athon, first held in 1976, “is popularly recognized as the oldest ‘major’ 15K road race in the USA.” Click for the 2016 Stockade-athon Elite Runners Roster (with BIB numbers); and for the Street Closing and Spectator Guide. You’ll find links to our previous coverage on our Stockade-athon Category portal page.  And, Schenectady Gazette reportage here.

Our Stockade-athon photos may be used for any non-commercial purpose without further permission from the editor of this website, David Giacalone, the photographer. If posted online, please credit “suns along the Mohawk” and David Giacalone, with a link to this posting.

Share this post with this short URL: http://tinyurl.com/2016Stockadeathon

10:20 Teaser:

While I sort through over a hundred photos, I hope the images of the first men and first women runners in the Stockade will whet your appetite for more:

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. . above: leaders on Washington Ave.: Louis Serafini [BIB 5]; John Raneri [BIB 2]; Dan Lennon [BIB 4]; Omar Boulama [BIB 6]. update: The top two event winners were Louis Serafini and John Ranieri, with Jake Sienko in 3rd, Dan Lennon in 4th, and John Busque in 5th.

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img_2383-001 . . first Women’s seed, Hannah Davidson [BIB 1, last year’s winner], was the first woman into the Stockade; she won her division in 52:24.

img_2387-002 . . . img_2388-001 . . [R] Katie O’Regan [in pink, BIB 22, finished 4th in the Division, in 57:03] was apparently too fast for my lens! (Sorry, Katie. I definitely shouldn’t wave while taking a photograph); [L] late entrant Brittany Winslow [BIB 1468, finished 2nd, in 56:39]; 

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. . [L] Katie Messina [BIB 25, finished 5th]; [R] Mollie Turner [BIB 24, finished 3rd]; Susan Hay [BIB 43, 1979 Winner]; Erin Corcoran [BIB 34]

RESULTS : The Albany Running Exchange reports that the Top Five Men’s Division winners are: First Place – Louis Serafini [BIB 5, Brighton MA, in 45:23]; 2nd Place – John Ranieri [BIB 2, New Fairfield, CN, in 45:30]; 3rd Place – Jake Sienko [BIB 3, Woonsocket, RI]; 4th Place – Daniel Lennon [BIB 4, Morrisonville, NY]; 5th Place – John Busque [BIB 50, Manchester, CN]

In the Women’s Division, Hannah Davidson finished in First Place, and Brittany Winslow in 2nd. Mollie Turner was 3rd; Katie O’Regan was 4th; and Katie Messina 5th.

The best place to get and search for race results, by place, age, name, gender, division, home city, etc., is still The Albany Running Exchange.

The Main Event

The following Slideshow has about 75 photos in random order, which were taken in the Stockade as the 2016 Stockade-athon runners streamed past me coming down Washington Avenue and entering Riverside Park, along the Mohawk River. Thanks to all the runners — whether elite or “pedestrian” — for keeping us inspired.

  • For a larger version of a slideshow image, pause the slideshow, right-click on the image, and choose Open Image in New Tab.

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  • Note: Below, I have singled out some of my favorite images from the Slideshow. Unfortunately, while I was in the Park taking photos, my stationery camera at Cucumber Alley stopped its video movie after only 43 seconds (all before the lead car even arrived), so I cannot grab frames from it to create my planned second slideshow.

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two latecomers persevere long after other runners left the Stockade

 

 

Posted by: David Giacalone | November 8, 2016

need a Schenectady postcard?

stockade-cuc-wash-autumn  We are pleased to report that the venerable and popular Open Door Book Store & Gift Gallery is now displaying six postcards featuring photographs taken by the editor of this website. Two of the six have images from the Stockade and are presented in this posting. Click here or on the Postcards tab in the masthead above to see the rest of the set.

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The Store is pricing the postcards at $1.00 each. My proceeds from the first printing of the postcards are being donated to Family & Child Service of Schenectady, our Stockade neighbor. Future proceeds will be earmarked for problem gambling education and treatment.

UPDATE (2020): After a successful run at The Open Door, our postcards are no longer on sale there. If you or your organization is interested in one or more of the postcards in this set, or would like to discuss creating other postcards, please contact David Giacalone directly or by leaving a comment below.

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The Open Door Book Store, 128 Jay Street, Schenectady, on the Jay Street pedestrian mall.

Posted by: David Giacalone | October 11, 2016

DOES A SHARED-USE BIKE PATH MAKE SENSE FOR RIVERSIDE PARK?

below: scenes along Riverside Park’s only paved path (click on it to enlarge);

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right: Google Map of the Park and vicinity . . RiversideParkGoogleMap

Sch BIMP Public Meeting Flyer . . update (June 28, 2017): On June 29, 2017, the City of Schenectady will unveil and explain Bike Schenectady (Draft), the Schenectady Bike Infrastructure Plan. (Click image to the left for Public Meeting flyer).

 See our posting “The City’s Bike Plan: a Crucial Battle for Riverside Park” (June 28, 2017), for specifics relating to the Bike Plan and Riverside Park, a Slideshow with four dozen photos of users and usage of the Park Path, and additional commentary and sources.

  • fog21Sep2011-walker-001 Schenectady’s Riverside Park is only 6 acres in size, stretching about a one-third of a mile along the Mohawk Riverbank; in many places it is only 150 – 200 feet wide. [click for TopoMap]  Riverside Park’s only path is much more than a thoroughfare from point A to B. It has for decades been used by people of all ages and abilities for many leisurely pedestrian, passive-park and public-square purposes that are especially convenient on its paved surface. For example, many neighbors take advantage of the path for dog-walking (often more than one at a time), scenic exercise, romantic and platonic strolling with a friend, stopping to admire babies and puppies, catching up on family and neighborhood news, teaching a tyke how to ride a tricycle, complaining about City Hall, and watching sunsets and watercraft on the River.  
  • 1RiversideParkNarrowTrail Moreover, it was traditionally a narrow footpath, having been widened significantly to its 10-foot width to keep large City vehicles and police cruisers from tearing up the ground on either side of the path. The path is bordered by benches, many large trees, an unfenced children’s play-lot at the east end, a Pump Station & Esplanade at its center, and small gardens with flowers and ornamental grasses on its especially narrow west end.  Visibility along the path can be hampered by thick morning fog off the Mohawk River, and its pavement is spotted with many wide and deep puddles long after any significant rainfall. In the River’s floodplain, the path is inundated with river water several times a decade (or more).

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7PlaylotFlood8Sep2011 . . bench-path-flooded08Sep2011

  • These facts should make planners and leaders pay heed to the sincere and strong concerns of Schenectady citizens, especially the current, past and future users of Riverside Park as a Park Path. We must all stop to ask whether current-Park-path users can safely and comfortably co-exist with two-way bicycle traffic, given the likely conduct of pedestrians and cyclists on the path. That is especially important when the Bike Network, and specifically the segment from Freeman’s Bridge through Mohawk Harbor and the Stockade to Western Gateway Bridge, is being touted in ways sure to attract cyclists who are commuters or enthusiasts seeking to zip as quickly as possible through the famously-tranquil Riverside Park

gazFamKidsPuddle . . .  RiversidePark-hopscotch 

  • There is no other pavement in Riverside Park offering firm support for those using a walker, stroller, or wheelchair, for Hopscotch & Puddle-Jumping, or many other small, everyday joys that happen on our long, narrow, tranquil “public square” along the Mohawk.

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  • Insight from Victoria Walks. For a thoughtful discussion and recommendations on shared-path appropriateness and safety, based on significant experience and research, please read the 4-page position paper “Shared paths – finding solutions” (2015), by Victoria Walks, an advocacy group in the Australian State of Victoria (Melbourne is the main metro area). For the detailed, 40-pp research paper, see Shared paths – the issues.
  • A main point of the group: “Victoria Walks has significant reservations regarding shared paths and how they impact walking, particularly by more vulnerable walkers. Generally, slow moving recreational cyclists may be able to share paths with walkers. However, walkers do not generally mix well with commuter or sports cyclists, who typically travel at higher speed.” Victoria Walks also recommends that “Road managers should avoid converting footpaths to shared paths, as they may be ‘designing out’ the most vulnerable road users – older walkers and those with a disability.” That issue is crucial at Riverside Park.
    • For a brief piece commenting on the Victoria Walks recommendations from the perspective of bicycling advocates, see “Paths: shared or separated” at Bicycle Network (1Jul2015).

Original Posting

 This evening (Oct. 11, 2016), the Schenectady County Legislature will almost certainly pass a resolution to authorize acceptance of a grant from the New York Department of State for an ALCO Trail Extension Feasibility Study — extending the Trail from Mohawk Harbor, under the CSX trestle and through Riverside Park. Legislators have touted it as 1.5 miles of uninterrupted bike path connecting Freedom Bridge in Glenville to the Great Western Gateway Bridge (Rt. 5) and Scotia. Some people have said that it would be “nice” to have a bike path through the Park. Others see the connected trail as another way to make Mohawk Harbor more marketable as a place to live, work, shop and play. Cycling advocates stress it will complete a shared use path that stretches from Albany to Buffalo NY (as if, a cynic might say, that would be a pinnacle of Western Civilization).

  • RiversideParkNarrowTrail My request and hope is that those conducting the Feasibility Study and the County Legislature will seriously consider what a bike trail used by commuters on bicycles, and other cyclists going at high speeds, would mean for this small gem of a park, which is often praised for its low-key ambiance, and which has but one narrow path through it, that has been used for decades by individuals, couples, and families of all ages, on foot, for many leisure purposes. [Right: photo from Schenectady County Historical Society Library shows path before it was widened to allow police cruisers and maintenance trucks to traverse Riverside Park without leaving deep tire tracks or otherwise tearing up the lawn.]

Riverside Park is on the southern border of the residential Stockade Historic District, along the Mohawk River. [click to see the Google Map of the Park] It is only about 6 acres in size, a narrow wedge stretching about 0.3 miles. Indeed, for most of its length it is only 150 to 200 feet wide. The one path through the park is only ten feet wide.

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. . the path is bordered by large trees and passes only a few yards from the kiddie lot . .

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The letter to the left appeared in the Times Union Getting There column (Aug. 22, 2016), and is by cycling advocate Paul Winkeller, the Executive Director of the New York Bicycling Coalition. (Click on the image for larger version.) It states his concerns about the hazards he sees as inevitable on our shared bike-ped trails without significant public safety education and enforcement. Mr. Winkeller wrote about stand-alone bike-ped trails (often constructed along railroad beds or canal tow-ways), but his concerns seem even more cogent and urgent with regard to the proposed bike-ped path through an existing, small, passive park like Riverside Park.

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Sch’dy Code re Bicycling

PARK SAFETY. The bicycling safety rules for all Schenectady Parks appear to be reasonable and appropriate. They require that bikes only be used on Park driveways-roadways, and at a speed less than 15 mph. Similarly, citywide provisions ban those over ten years old from using a bicycle on a public footpath or sidewalk that is intended for use by pedestrians (see Code sections to right; click on it for a larger version). Ignoring those limitations, and indeed encouraging bicycling in Riverside Park, without at least providing a separate pedestrian path (an alternative suggested in the City Urban Bike Route Master Plan), seems inappropriate and ill-advised. “Feasibility” of the Trail extension must take into account the City’s policy for preserving the safety of its park users.

  • BikeSchdy-ParkPathCode update (June 28, 2017): The draft Bike Schenectady Plan text speaks of “policy” changes to the Schenectady Municipal Code that would, among other things, “open access to park pathways to bicyclists.”  (App. D, page D-11; the Appendices are not yet online.) I believe this is an admission that the current Schenectady Code, by its plain language, does not permit bicyclists (unless under 10 or handicapped) on paths such as the one in Riverside Park. It is neither a roadway nor a driveway. 

DESIGN STANDARDS.  The NYS DOT Highway Design manual for bicycle facilities (Chapter 17 Bicycle Facility Design, Revision 83, June 24, 2015) is cautious about constructing facilities that mix pedestrians with bicycles. It states that:

“Whenever possible, shared use paths that are intended to accommodate pedestrians and higher speed users (bicyclists, inline skaters, etc.) should be designed to minimize the potential for conflicts. Where separate facilities are not feasible, a shared-use path should incorporate additional width, signing, and possibly striping to minimize conflicts.”

Importantly, the NYS DOT Design Manual states:

The Department’s minimum recommended width for shared-use paths is 4 m.

10ftpath Four meters is 13.1 feet. Another two-foot graded safety edge is recommended on each side of the path. [Click to see this screenshot from the 2001 Schenectady Urban Bike Master Plan, which shows a cross-section of a Shared Use Path. The text, at p. 28, states, “Typical cross sections provide a minimum of 3.0m (10 ft) wide firm surface with 2 foot wide graded shoulders on both sides of the trail. Nonetheless, the Figure erroneously labels 10′ as “recommended.”) As stated above, the paved path in Riverside Park is only ten feet wide, with no graded shoulders. And, with trees lining it, and benches, and the limitations imposed by the Overlook/Esplanade and Pump House, it is difficult to envision room for a trail of adequate width, much less for safety signage needed along the trail.

Follow-upGiven the expected users of the Riverside Park path, the 2012 AASHTO guide, which is the standard that NYS DOT uses, would require more than a 10’ wide shared use path (in addition to 2’ buffers, and 3’ clearance for signs and trees). The current AASHTO guide (2012) was described in its Overview document (at 39) as having more “nuanced guidance on widths” than its prior edition, and calls for wider paths where a high percentage of users are pedestrians. Here is what the 2012 Guide says:

AASHTO Guide for the Development of Bicycle Facilities (2012) 

Chapter 5: Design of Shared Use Paths

5.2.1 Width and Clearance

The minimum paved width for a two-directional shared use path is 10 ft (3.0 m). . . . 

In very rare circumstances, a reduced width of 8 ft (2.4 m) may be used . . . . 

Wider pathways, 11 to 14 ft (3.4 to 4.2 m) are recommended in locations that are anticipated to serve a high percentage of pedestrians (30 percent or more of the total pathway volume) and higher user volumes (more than 300 total users in the peak hour). [emphasis added]

dockview29apr10nofertrees Finally, the disruption of existing uses of recreational space, in addition to the possible safety issues on the mixed-use trail, and for the nearby narrow roads of an historic district, are exactly the sort of negative impacts that would have to be addressed and mitigated, in the required Environmental Impact Statement, if a proposal to extend the Trail is presented to the Legislature. The essence of Riverside Park is its beauty, relative tranquility, and the leisurely pace enjoyed along its pathway and the River, which were praised by the editor of Architect Forum as “probably the finest thing of its kind in America.” (Dec. 1961) Likewise, the Schenectady City Council stated in its 1998 Resolution that “to change its special nature would deprive visitors and disadvantage the homeowners who are the caretakers in this Historic District of national importance.” I hope that the Legislature will ensure that its Feasibility Study takes these important factors fully into account, with ample opportunity for public input as part of the Study process.

Posted by: David Giacalone | October 8, 2016

lovely morning at the Park

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  • click on the collage for a larger version

My pre-coffee schlep to Riverside Park in search of morning fog on the Mohawk found only a little mist, but captured rowers, dogs and a day’s worth of beauty.

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This slideshow presents some of the highlights.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | September 26, 2016

“Yuan” is back at the Rose Garden

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O
n August 21st, we wrote of changes at the Central Park Rose Garden, in preparation for construction of a pergola in the Garden this Fall. A major change was removal of Robert Blood’s sculpture Variations on the Chinese Character “Yuan”, to make room for the pergola, with a promise that The Yuan would return. I am pleased to say that Yuan Is Back, reinstalled in a far front corner, close to the Crime Victims section, near the roundabout at Iroquois Way and Monument Hill, and across from the Dog Park.

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This posting has images of the re-installed sculpture, from various perspectives. Although it is currently standing on a bare patch of crushed stone, it will again be surrounded by bushes and plantings either before winter or in the Spring. Click on the inividual photos for a larger version.

The Slideshow below has about a dozen photos. To see a larger version of a photo in the Slideshow, pause the Slideshow and right-click on the image, you can see a larger version, then choose Show Image in Separate Window.

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Here’s my favorite photo of the Yuan in its original location. It’s impressionist feel says “unfocused” to some viewers, but now it whispers “hazy memory” to me.

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