
I recently had the opportunity to share my vision for the “Street of Tomorrow” as part of the 2008 University by the Sea event. My vision was not that of the flying cars of The Jetsons cartoon show I watched as a kid; nor was it the image of freeway off-ramps extending up the side of high-rises featured in the movie Minority Report. Instead, my vision was that the “Street of Tomorrow” actually exists today. Throughout the nation and indeed worldwide, cities are remaking their infrastructures, working to balance various mobility options and improving the quality of life for those who live, work, and play along their streets. These notions for “Streets of Tomorrow” go by names like Mental Speedbumps, Complete the Street and Green Streets; all include elements like bike lanes, permeable paving, street trees, medians, and curb extensions. Such elements can create safer, greener and friendlier streets, without the necessity of fantastic futuristic technology.
Yet while these practical yet effective ways to improve urban streets are laudatory, it bears noting that one of the most overlooked ways to improve any street is simply to reduce it to its essentials. While it is congested streets that often gain the most attention, what occurs just as often (if not more) is that roadways are wider than necessary to carry the traffic that travels along them. Local examples of this include Los Coyotes in
Reducing the percentage of a street’s width dedicated to automobile traffic in this manner is often termed a “road diet.” It is becoming a growing phenomenon across the
To maximize the traffic capacity of streets, traffic engineers typically work to fit as many automobile lanes as possible, leaving a relatively narrow border on each side for sidewalks and (in some cases) on-street parking. This sometimes results in an even number of lanes, precluding the inclusion of a dedicated left-turn lane. This typically means there must be restrictions placed on left-turn movement, as the left-most lane most do double duty as a left turn lane and a throughway lane. Because the shared lane is obstructed whenever a left-turning car is waiting for an opening to cross traffic, left turns are often limited to non-peak hours.
A typical “road diet” involves a road with at least four lanes overall, and removes one lane in each direction. The space made available by eliminating these two lanes is used for creating a dedicated left-turn lane on the one hand, and on the other hand for sidewalks, parkways, bike lanes, or a dedicated right-turn lane. Surprisingly, eliminating one through-lane in each direction does not result in a proportional loss of car-carrying capacity, and the addition of a dedicated left-turn lane (and sometimes a dedicated right-turn lane as well) helps reduce congestion. Adding turn lanes in this manner can also decrease accidents, because it results in fewer lane changes and better visibility for on-coming traffic.
Within
Major thoroughfares on the eastern side of
Because most of these major streets in eastern
A city looking to improve the quality of life for their residents and create more vibrant thoroughfares should analyze the ability to implement road and lane diets before any road construction. This strategy can fundamentally alter a city’s fabric, turning swaths of concrete into tree-lined thoroughfares, improving traffic flow and making urban life more hospitable for all.