March 18, 2010 at 2:55 pm by Steven Vance
Filed under Bicycling, Places and Spaces, Transportation, Tucson
![Across the University of Arizona campus, students, faculty and staff get to enjoy these separated bike paths.
<a href="http://www.stevevance.net/planning/2010/03/tucson-has-every-kind-of-bikeway/" rel="nofollow">As seen on my blog</a>.
<a href="http://loc.alize.us/#/flickr:4434063201" rel="nofollow">See where this picture was taken.</a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/geotagging/discuss/72157594165549916/">[?]</a> Array](http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4033/4434063201_5a5e5c5bfa_m.jpg)
A bicyclist rides north on the “Highland Avenue” separated bike path on the University of Arizona campus in Tucson, Arizona.
(This is the second post about Tucson, and the fifth about my December 2009 trip to Arizona.)
I had heard that Tucson was a bicycle friendly town. I didn’t know just how friendly until my dad and I rode our bikes around town and happened onto one of the many bike-only separated paths. You can see the campus bike map (PDF).
There are probably 10 different names for this kind of path. It’s not a separated path because there’s no adjacent roadway accessible to automobiles. You could call it a multi-use trail, but it’s not really a trail. The path is part of the city’s street grid; some streets “dead end” into the entrance so bicyclists don’t have to turn onto another street to go straight, they simply enter this bicycle only path. In some places, the path is grade separated and travels under a shared street.
I like this kind of bikeway a lot. I know they are standard fare in the Netherlands, and it’s nice to know they are standard fare somewhere in North America.
See the full photoset of bikeways in Tucson.
![Across the University of Arizona campus, students, faculty and staff get to enjoy these separated bike paths.
Separated from cars, buses, and pedestrians - this is probably the best way to get more people on bikes. The year round great weather helps, too. Many bicycle trip surveys tell of respondents indicating weather as an important factor :)
<a href="http://www.stevevance.net/planning/2010/03/tucson-has-every-kind-of-bikeway/" rel="nofollow">As seen on my blog</a>.
<a href="http://loc.alize.us/#/flickr:4434844112" rel="nofollow">See where this picture was taken.</a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/geotagging/discuss/72157594165549916/">[?]</a> Array](http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4045/4434844112_14dcf844d7_m.jpg)
Riding under Speedway Boulevard on the “Warren Avenue” bike path.
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January 12, 2010 at 5:22 pm by Steven Vance
Filed under Bicycling, Cities, Places and Spaces, Urban Planning
The Rialto Theater was built in 1919 and now sits on the National Register of Historic Places. As you can see from the photos and mural, some big bands play at what was originally a movie and Vaudeville theater. Read more at Wikipedia.

Upcoming shows at the Rialto Theater at the time I took this photo (December 26, 2009) included Clusterfck Dance Party and Sonic Youth. Clusterfck Dance Party is a dance party and “a post-modern mish mash of rock-n-roll subculture” (more information about that event).

Artist Joe Pagac (University of Arizona graduate) painted this mural to advertise the upcoming Sonic Youth show on January 4, 2010. The mural faces the theater parking lot, and busy Toole Avenue. According to Joe’s website, other clients include Trader Joe’s and the Tucson Jewish Community Center. He also traveled through India and Southeast Asia teaching art and English to children.
![Tucson has installed on-street bike parking in front of several major destinations, including this popular music venue on Congress Street.
<a href="http://loc.alize.us/#/flickr:4253900481" rel="nofollow">See where this picture was taken.</a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/geotagging/discuss/72157594165549916/">[?]</a> Array](http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4072/4253900481_3b678f888d_m.jpg)
Tucson is a great city for bicycling. The City of Tucson provides on-street bike parking at several locations around town, including downtown in front of the Rialto Theater. There are even four parking spaces for motorcycles.
I’m still uploading photos from my day trip to Tucson, but the rest are on my Flickr. Check out the bike boulevard on University Boulevard at Stone Avenue.
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January 9, 2010 at 12:56 pm by Steven Vance
Filed under Air, Business, Travel
A lot of people got really excited when the first Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft took off from their testing airfield outside Seattle, Washington, on December 15, 2009.
I found the videos mildly interesting (it shows the “Delay Liner” lifting off and landing). It seemed like the top topic on Twitter that day.
But traveling to Tucson, Arizona, 11 days later (December 26), I spotted the Dreamlifter, or Boeing’s modified 747-400 large cargo lifter. It looks like a 747 (the largest passenger plane until the Airbus A380 came along) with a hunchback (or broad shoulders). I didn’t see it flying, but I saw it a couple miles away from a highway while it sat and waited for something at the Pinal Airpark. Pinal Airpark hosts a boneyard for unneeded airplanes; Northwest Airlines keeps many planes there (see photo at end).
![Constructed by intensive modifications to an existing Boeing 747-400, the Dreamlifter is used exclusively for transporting aircraft parts to Boeing from suppliers around the world.
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_747_Large_Cargo_Freighter" rel="nofollow">Wikipedia article</a>.
This airplane sits at the Pinal Airpark, but instead of being put out to pasture like some of the other planes, it's probably awaiting maintenance at the adjacent Evergreen Aircraft Maintenance Facility.
My dad and I exited I-10 at <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamesbondsv/4256109602/">Pinal Airpark Road</a> and drove up to the entrance but were denied entry (no visitors allowed). I think we actually drove up to the entrance to Evergreen Maintenance Center (part of the American-based Evergreen group of aviation and agriculture companies, not related to the China-based Evergreen Group). The person at the gate said she couldn't tell us what went on here.
You can see a lot of Northwest Airlines logos on the red vertical stabilizers. <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamesbondsv/4256109842/">I've got a better shot here</a>.
<a href="http://www.stevevance.net/planning/2010/01/boeing-plane-spotting-in-marana-arizona/" rel="nofollow">As seen on my blog</a>.
<a href="http://loc.alize.us/#/flickr:4255355937" rel="nofollow">See where this picture was taken.</a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/geotagging/discuss/72157594165549916/">[?]</a> Array](http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4068/4255355937_c8c90f82ca_m.jpg)
The plane is unmistakable, even from a distance. Measuring perpendicularly from I-10 (going southeast), the runway is 2.6 miles from the road. I believe this plane sat about .2 miles closer, on the maintenance tarmac.
However, it’s more likely the Dreamlifter is waiting for a fixup at the on-site Evergreen Aircraft Maintenance Center. Evergreen International Airlines (unrelated to the Evergreen Group of shipping companies in China) operates the Large Cargo Lifters for Boeing. The Dreamlifter is named such because it typically carries parts from suppliers around the world to the Boeing assembly plant in Everett, Washington.
And not to be outdone, Airbus has a funnier looking plane called the Beluga.
![I used this screen capture of a satellite image in Google Earth for a <a href="http://www.stevevance.net/planning/2010/01/boeing-plane-spotting-in-marana-arizona/" rel="nofollow">blog entry</a> about this place.
The Pinal Airpark hosts many Northwest Airlines planes in its boneyard.
<a href="http://loc.alize.us/#/flickr:4259368283" rel="nofollow">See where this picture was taken.</a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/geotagging/discuss/72157594165549916/">[?]</a> Array](http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4056/4259368283_6263369c10_m.jpg)
A satellite photo from July 2, 2005, shows the many Northwest Airlines planes parked at the Pinal Airpark boneyard. Their red livery gives them away.
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January 4, 2010 at 5:28 pm by Steven Vance
Filed under Housing, Places and Spaces, Travel

Frat houses on ASU campus take the space of former motels.
Much has been written about repurposing dead malls into community centers or student services buildings, or Wal-Marts and other big box stores into churches or indoor go-kart tracks.
But what about turning motels into fraternity houses near college campuses?
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January 1, 2010 at 9:40 pm by Steven Vance
Filed under Change, People
I hope you got a camera for Christmas, and if you didn’t I hope you buy yourself one. Let 2010 be the year you share more photos. Write detailed descriptions so others can learn. Photos are how we travel to places around the world we can’t afford or can’t work into our schedules. Be your own National Geographic and we’ll subscribe to your photostream or blog.

In downtown Tempe, Arizona, you’ll find the Islamic Community Center mosque (or masjid).
Photograph as much as you can and know as much as you can. By knowing we can know to change, and change, we can share.
I carry my pocketable digital camera with me every time I leave my house, because I never know what I can capture and I don’t want to miss the chance. I share nearly all of it online and sometimes in this blog.
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