An interesting way to change the nature of traffic is written in this article by The Standard. Imagine Walthamstow England (in East London) which introduced partial road closures along twelve main roads. Traffic which was over 20,000 vehicles per day was cut by 50 per cent. The aim of the project was to reduce short cutting through the neighbourhoods, making roads safer for pedestrians and cyclists.
This project was part of past Mayor of London Boris Johnson’s plan to bring cycling culture to the suburbs, with 30 million pounds available to run these types of projects in Waltham, Kingston and Enfield. And surprise! “Traffic evaporation” occurred, where fewer trips were taken by car and less rat running happened in neighbourhoods.
Collisions were also reduced with none being reported after the partial closures, compared with 15 in a three-year period. The project was backed by local residents but had some pushback from some businesses that feared it would reduce their commercial trade. The “full results — including an expected large increase in the number of people cycling and walking — will be released by the council early next year.”
And the take away? As Simon Munk of the London Cycling Campaign observed ““It’s very clear that this is a replicable approach and other areas can do it. There is not some kind of ‘magic dust’ that means only Walthamstow can do it…It doesn’t cause chaos, despite what some people say. It’s capable of making our town centres and city centres, and communities where people live and work, work much better.”
This is really good. The traffic calming in the West End and Strathcona have been good but all they did was reduce cut-through motor traffic numbers, they didn’t then take that opportunity to redesign the curbs and sidewalks to be a low traffic volume neighbourhood street.
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Reblogged this on Sandy James Planner.
A good idea. Vancouver needs far more of that.
Plus parking fees for long term parkers that convert their garage to a rental studio or gym and park for free on the streets. deleted as per editorial policy