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New Haveners Worry Route 34 Removal Will Be Less Than Transformative

The removal of Route 34, a 1.1-mile stub of a highway that displaced hundreds of Connecticut families, homes, and businesses when it was constructed in the late 1950s, has become a cause célèbre for the City of New Haven in recent years.  The City’s vision of removing the road as a way to reconnect downtown New Haven with Union Station and create a walkable, vibrant neighborhood of housing, retail and commercial development earned plaudits from local and regional advocacy groups and activists early on, and was rewarded with state bond funding, ConnDOT support and $16 million in highly competitive federal TIGER II grants.

Tri-State strongly supports the vision laid out in New Haven’s application for the TIGER II grant. But many local advocates and policymakers are worried that the implementation won’t live up to the vision.

The City’s highway removal plan would open up 10 acres for development and add infrastructure intended to support increased cycling. But much of the project could maintain an auto-centric environment that is hostile to pedestrians, cyclists and transit users. (View a city presentation here.) For example, the current intersection of Church Street and North Frontage Road is four lanes across. Instead of enhancing pedestrian connections, the most recent City proposal is to expand this intersection to five lanes across.

To the City’s credit, officials have repeatedly said that they will continue to work with community members and look at new ways to address concerns.  However, they say their hands are tied because they must work within the constructs of outdated traffic models mandated by ConnDOT and the State Traffic Commission. For example, models predict that car traffic at the Church/N. Frontage intersection will quadruple thanks to developments like a new community college. These models, based on the assumption that automobile use will increase no matter the type of land use pattern, have routinely proven to be misguided and led to poor roadway design outcomes.

Local legislators have taken it upon themselves to ensure that the implementation of the Route 34 Downtown Crossing matches the City’s initial vision.  Earlier this summer, almost a dozen of the city’s Alders, Alder candidate Doug Hausladen (who is running unopposed), and State Representative Roland Lemar submitted a proposed resolution and letter to Board of Alders President Carl Goldfield.  The resolution, spearheaded by Alder Justin Elicker, called for the corridor to contain road capacity of no more than three lanes of traffic in each direction, including turn lanes; greater cycling infrastructure in the form of “cycle tracks” separated from car traffic along North and South Frontage Roads; better pedestrian connectivity; and improved traffic calming infrastructure.

The letter also praised the City’s outreach efforts, reiterated the group’s willingness to work with the City to improve upon the project, and stated the signatories support the concept of removing Route 34.

Tri-State has similar concerns.  The five-lane intersection at Church Street and North Frontage Road would be too far for pedestrians to cross safely without at least a pedestrian island to shorten the crossing distance and provide traffic calming.  Separated cycle tracks or parking-protected bike lanes could be solutions that provide a safe biking environment and support traffic calming and safer pedestrian crossings.  In addition, simple changes like making certain cross streets two-way could also enhance pedestrian, motorist and cycling safety while reducing congestion.

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[…] ConnDOT Forcing New Haven’s Historic Highway Teardown to End With Autocentric Street (MTR) […]

Safe Streets
12 years ago

Another letter, recently sent to the Mayor from leaders of dozens of community groups, included this point:

2. The construction of Downtown Crossing Phase One must be done in a way that truly promotes multi-modal transportation in our city, and is in line with the Complete Streets Order legislation. Arguably the most important development project in decades, the conversion of Route 34 from a highway right-of-way into a livable neighborhood has strong support overall. However, major questions have been raised about the current plan, such as its incorporation of sidewalk-to-sidewalk crossing distances that are, somewhat astonishingly, planned to be in excess of 50 feet, as well as bike lanes that share the street with enormous highways. Recently, an Aldermanic resolution has been introduced which requires a very different approach. Specifically, it is time for the City to end the rhetoric about potential long-term plans for the area, and instead ensure that in all phases, it designs a place that is truly safe and accessible for our most vulnerable citizens. The Petition requested speeds of 15-20 miles per hour in areas such as the Hospital district, which are home to many pedestrians of all ages. The creation of lower MUTCD “area speed zones,” which can be geared to Hospital districts, can help accomplish this goal if combined with appropriate designs for the road system. The challenges of this project within Phase One can only be solved by the most progressive, out-of-the-box thinking. The recent reconstructions of Whalley Avenue in Amity and Whitney Avenue lacked this approach, and have left many residents and local elected officials feeling quite disappointed and vulnerable.

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[…] highway teardown in New Haven may not bring as many benefits to pedestrians as anticipated. Image: Tri-State Transportation […]

clever title
clever title
12 years ago

Is that a dedicated right-turn-only lane to the left of a bike lane in the cross-section diagram? Nothing like engineering right hooks into a street design.

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[…] than on any other road in the state). Resistance from state traffic engineers has also been a key factor holding back pedestrian and cyclist safety measures in the City of New Haven’s Route 34 […]

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[…] than on any other road in the state). Resistance from state traffic engineers has also been a key factor holding back pedestrian and cyclist safety measures in the City of New Haven’s Route 34 […]

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[…] than on any other road in the state). Resistance from state traffic engineers has also been a key factor holding back pedestrian and cyclist safety measures in the City of New Haven’s Route 34 […]

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[…] law and helped win pedestrian safety improvements at a downtown intersection. As an alder, he pushed for improvements to Route 34 and for legislation to allow municipalities to use cameras to enforce red-light running, which […]

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[…] — Farwell was critical of New Haven’s tendency “to gear development to the needs of car drivers” in a radio discussion with Economic Development Administrator Matthew […]

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[…] The bill also includes reforms to the State Traffic Commission that should speed up the permitting process (the Commission must issue a certificate of operation for any development next to a state road that is greater than 100,000 square feet or includes at least 200 parking spaces). Unfortunately, these reforms will do little to change the 1950’s era assumptions that lead to overestimates of traffic impacts caused by development projects. As Tri-State board member Norman Garrick highlighted in a 2010 op-ed about Mansfield Road in Storrs, the Commission failed to adequately consider different types of development in its traffic-generating models. By not doing so, the STC ends up recommending wider roads to deal with new development as opposed to pedestrian, cycling or transit improvements as solutions to mitigate congestion.  Similar considerations (driven by ConnDOT) are causing challenges in the Route 34 highway-to-boulevard project in New Haven. […]

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