Title: Is there
1Is there enough room for Complete Streets?
1
2Theres room it needs to be recaptured
2
3Are our streets wide enough?
150?
3
4Make optimal use of the right-of-way
150?
4
5Dont ask How much ROW do we need? butWhats
the highest and best use of this valuable space?
5
6Streets dont have to be wide to be great
6
7Conventional design from the inside out
Add up (wide) travel lane, run out of ROWResult
one narrow curbside sidewalk
7
8Proposed design from the outside in
Add up desirable elements, fit in ROW
resultnice sidewalks, bike lanes, adequate
travel lanes
8
9How much of the ROW should be dedicated to cars?
No more that 40
9
10How much of the ROW should be dedicated to cars?
About 30
10
11How much of the ROW should be dedicated to cars?
About 90
11
12Always start with the edges
12
13Same principle for sidewalks the Zone System
- The sidewalk corridor extends from the edge of
roadway to the right-of-way and is divided into 4
zones - Curb zone
- Furniture zone
- Pedestrian zone
- Frontage zone
13
14Curb Zone
14
15Why the curb zone matters Its where pedestrians
transition from/to the street
15
16Furniture Zone
16
17All these things go here!
All the stuff goes in the furniture zone
17
18Sidewalk with furniture zone is pleasant to walk
on
18
19Furniture zone can be used for bus pads and
shelters
20Pedestrian Zone
20
2121
22Frontage Zone
22
23Pedestrians dont like blank walls
23
24An interesting façade makes people feel better
24
25The Zone System - Summary
3rd example commercial street
Washington DC
26With Zone System
Street furniture arranged in zones leaves
sidewalk clear
Washington DC
27Without Zone System
Randomly placed street furniture clutters sidewalk
Silverton OR
28Textured Surfaces
- Bricks, cobblestones, textured pavement create
- Increased rolling resistance
- Tripping hazards
- Maintenance hassles
- Painful vibrations to peoplewith brittle bones
or spinalcord injuries in wheelchairs
29Concrete in the pedestrian zone,textured surface
in furniture and frontage zones
Philadelphia PA
30"Before the American city could be physically
reconstructed to accommodate automobiles, its
streets had to be socially reconstructed as
places where cars belong. Until then, streets
were regarded as public spaces, where practices
that endangered or obstructed others (including
pedestrians) were disreputable..."
- Lets establish the Green hierarchy
- People on foot
- People on bikes
- People on transit
- People delivering goods
- People driving cars
- -- Peter D. Norton, PhD, professor of Science,
Technology, Society, Univ. of Virginiafrom
"Street Rivals Jaywalking and the Invention of
the Motor Age Street"