In recent weeks, the City put the finishing touches on its sixth traffic-calming project for 2019-20 as part of the City’s Neighborhood Traffic Safety Program.
The program, a joint effort by the City’s Office of Neighborhoods, the Engineering Department and residents, is designed to help neighborhoods address traffic-calming issues and apply for engineered traffic-safety solutions.
It’s a thorough and lengthy process. First, residents meet and share information and preferences. They collect petitions to gain support from their neighbors before traffic engineers conduct speed studies and tailor a plan for devices, such as speed humps, that are specific to each community’s preferences, street design, traffic patterns and topography.
Interested in starting the process in your neighborhood? For information on the Neighborhood Traffic Safety Program, or details about starting a Slow Down in K-Town anti-speeding education campaign in your neighborhood, click here: www.knoxvilletn.gov/trafficsafety.
Meanwhile, check out this City Blog post about what neighbors in the Chilhowee Park Neighborhood Association are saying about their new speed humps on East Fifth and Woodbine avenues: https://bit.ly/2RgQdXl
As one Chilhowee Park area resident put it, “The speed humps have changed the whole vibe of our neighborhood. I see people out walking and utilizing the streets again.”
Assistant Neighborhood Coordinator Eden Slater encourages neighborhood residents to start their application process early, because building consensus and Engineering staff doing the technical work takes several years.
“Developing a neighborhood-specific traffic-calming plan is intricate and requires effort, dialogue and collaboration,” Slater said. “People interested in the Neighborhood Traffic Safety Program should go online and familiarize themselves with what the process entails. Please contact the Office of Neighborhoods. We can help navigate through the process and share what’s worked well in other neighborhoods.”
Due to the large number of applications in process and limited funding, it typically takes three to five years for a traffic-calming project to move from concept to design to installation.