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Car-free streets could become common in major cities

Codes and Standards

Car-free streets could become common in major cities

New York and San Francisco establish thoroughfares dedicated to transit, pedestrians.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | January 3, 2020

Courtesy Pixabay

San Francisco is the latest city to declare cars off-limits on a major city street, following the lead of New York.

The city by the bay will soon close Market Street to cars, giving streetcars, buses, bicycles/electric scooters, and pedestrians free reign. This action follows New York City’s closing of 14th Street to cars and converting it to a dedicated bus way. This move decreased average bus trips by 30%.

San Francisco will reduce the size of bustling Market Street, widen sidewalks, and add an eight-foot-wide bike lane for bikes and e-scooters. Several cities in Europe and in others in the U.S. including Denver, Santa Monica, Madison, Charlottesville, and Chicago, have established pedestrian-only zones.

With the use of shared bikes and scooters more than doubling between 2017 and 2018, such initiatives may blossom over the next several years.

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