Press Release for the New (Fourth)
Edition
of the Map of Berkeley’s
Pathways
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contacts: Sandy
Friedland (510-655-5773)
Charlie Bowen
(510-540-7223)
New Berkeley Pathways
Map Adds Street Index
BERKELEY, Calif, August 21,
2007. Berkeley Path Wanderers
Association (BPWA) has released an improved
version of its popular map, a passport
to the picturesque public stairways,
ramps, and footpaths that crisscross
the city. The new 4 th edition of the
map adds a complete index of Berkeley
streets, making the map more useful to
UC Berkeley students, new residents,
and visitors.
Printed
on durable, waterproof paper, the easy-to-read
BPWA map shows all the 135 numbered,
city-owned walkways. They provide convenient
shortcuts to schools, shopping, and public
transportation as well as tranquil walking
routes. Paths also are key evacuation
routes in emergencies.
“If your
main interest is the pathways, then the
Berkeley Path Wanderers’ map
is a must-have,” says Heath Maddox,
the city's Associate Transportation Planner
in charge of the Bicycle and Pedestrian
programs. He adds that the pathways can
be hard to find on more detailed, smaller
scale maps of the city.
The new BPWA map
distinguishes between the paths that
are passable and those are not. It
also adds five newly completed paths
and includes more paths in East Shore
State Park and Strawberry Canyon than
did earlier editions. Recently opened
sections of the Santa Fe Right of Way
also are shown, making it easier for
pedestrians to go from University Avenue
in Berkeley to Richmond. Berkeley artist
Karen Kemp did the cover design, which
features her painting of Visalia Steps.
Walkways
that are not part of the official Berkeley
path system but are open to the public
are also included, such as those on
the UC campus, in lower Tilden Park,
and around Aquatic Park. Existing and
historic creeks also are shown.
“Paths
are great for Berkeley,” Maddox
says. “They promote walking in
areas that otherwise are not all that
pedestrian friendly because of steep
grades, winding roadways, and the lack
of a complete sidewalk network.”
The
five newly completed paths (Glendale,
Cedar, Poppy, Upper Covert, and Whitaker
) were
among the many city-owned right-of-ways
that were set aside for pedestrian use
in the early 1900’s but never built.
As cars became more common, momentum
to finish the path system diminished.
Over the years, those unfinished paths
became increasingly difficult to use
- or even to find - as brambles
took over or neighbors incorporated them
into their yards. Path Wanderer volunteers
have cleared and installed wooden steps
on 22 of the originally platted paths
and are working to complete others.
“Proceeds
from map sales support our path building
efforts,” notes Sandy Friedland,
BPWA president, “and the maps help
to get more people onto the paths. It’s
a win-win situation.”
The
4.2 earthquake that jolted Berkeley residents
awake July 20, reminded hill dwellers
that the paths not only are a pleasant
respite from streets and historic remnants
of car-free days but also are vital evacuation
and access routes in emergencies. When
roads were blocked in the 1991 Berkeley-Oakland
firestorm, the paths behind the Claremont
Hotel enabled firefighters to reach the
blaze. Following that fire, Berkeley
commissioned a survey of the path system
and added a budget line for path maintenance
in 2000. In 2005, the city allocated
$74,000 of a Fire Prevention and Safety
grant from the Federal Emergency Management
Agency to build a concrete stairway and
railing on the top portion of Glendale
Path. It took nearly two more years for
Berkeley Path Wanderers and two local
Boy Scout troops to finish the rest of
the three-part path.
The
newest paths are the result of such teamwork. “Volunteers
did almost all the work, in cooperation
with the City,” says Charlie Bowen,
BPWA Path-Building Leader. “We
are delighted that Berkeley officials
support community hands-on involvement.
It's a good way to get things accomplished
in our era of limited City funds.”
Path
building has attracted a wide range of
community volunteers. For example,
the completion of Cedar Path, which runs
between La Loma Avenue and La Vereda
Road, was managed by 17-year-old Shifra
deBenedictis-Kessner to satisfy her service
requirement in high school. She recruited
friends to work with her for 13 consecutive
Sundays. Employees from the Berkeley
REI store kicked off the improvements
on Poppy Path, and BPWA volunteers finished
it.
Thanks
to the recently completed paths, walking
through the Berkeley hills is now easier.
Cedar Path, for one, enables employees
of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
to walk to work. The three sections of
Glendale Path connect Campus Drive, Queens
Road, and Fairlawn Drive, creating a
convenient route to the Selby Trail in
Tilden from the neighborhood around Glendale-La
Loma Park. And the two parts of Covert
Path join Keith, Cragmont, and Keeler
Avenues, providing another link in a
series of paths that stretch from Euclid
Avenue to Grizzly Peak Blvd. and reduce
the need to walk on streets.
The
4 th edition of the BPWA map sells for
$6.95 and can be ordered with forms on
the Path Wanderers website (www.berkeleypaths.org).
It will also be available at the Berkeley
Path Wanderers booth at the Solano Stroll
on September 9 and the Spice of Life
Festival October 14. The maps also are
sold at bookstores throughout Berkeley
as well as at shops that sell maps and
outdoor gear.
Berkeley
Path Wanderers is an all-volunteer organization
with more than 550 member households.
It began in 1998, when four Berkeley
residents decided to help preserve and
maintain the public paths and stairways
and encourage more people to use them.
The group produced its first edition
of its Berkeley pathways map in May,
2002, after members walked every street
in the city to verify the locations of
paths and intersections. By July, the
map had made the local Top Ten List for
non-fiction bestsellers. A second edition
was published in 2003 and a third in
2005. In all, the Path Wanderers have
sold more than 17,000 maps.
Annual
membership in the Path Wanderers is $5.
The organization offers two volunteer-led
path walks a month, open to members and
nonmembers at no charge. It also
sponsors programs about Berkeley history
and its environment, publishes a quarterly
newsletter, and maintains a website that
includes directions for self-guided path
walks.
Berkeley Path Wanderers Association
is an affiliate of Berkeley Partners
for Parks.
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