Skip to main content

Vancouver moves quickly on 'slow streets'

Plans include wider pavements and vehicle lanes set aside for walking and cycling
By David Arminas June 2, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Vancouver to 'repurpose' some streets to help with Covid recovery (© David Arminas)

Vancouver plans to install 50 km of “slow streets” for walking, cycling and for business and restaurant patios as part of a Covid-19 recovery plan.

The western Canadian city said that the plans are to help residents and businesses adapt to the new reality of living and operating through a pandemic.

Already 12km has been set aside, according to media reports.

“We will work closely with businesses and community partners to address needs for space while also ensuring our streets and public spaces remain safe and accessible,” said Lon LaClaire, general manager of the city’s engineering services.

Guidelines for what it calls the “repurposing” of parts of streets will be drawn up this month.

Roads and areas for repurposing include parking spaces and vehicle travel lanes on arterial streets.

Some residential streets will become “slow streets” by allowing local traffic only in order to create space for foot and bicycle traffic, according to the city.

Pavements for queuing at businesses will be extended into kerb lanes to provide space for people to line up and also give pedestrians room to safely pass by.

Short-term loading and pick-up zones will be created near businesses with high turnover of products.

Related Content

  • Planners must 'unhook' people from cars
    October 23, 2020
    Transport policies should provide route map to carbon net zero by 2050, says TPS
  • Cost benefit: Toronto retimings tame traffic trauma
    July 11, 2018
    Canada’s largest city reckons that it is saving its taxpayers’ money simply by altering the way traffic lights work. David Crawford reviews Toronto’s ambitious plans to ease congestion. Toronto, Canada’s largest metropolis (and the fourth largest in North America), has saved its residents CAN$53 (US$42.4) for every CAN$1 (US$0.80) spent over a 2012-2016 traffic signal retiming programme, according to figures released by its Transportation Services Division. The programme covered 1,275 signals (the city’s to
  • Cost benefit: Toronto retimings tame traffic trauma
    July 19, 2018
    Canada’s largest city reckons that it is saving its taxpayers’ money simply by altering the way traffic lights work. David Crawford reviews Toronto’s ambitious plans to ease congestion Toronto, Canada’s largest metropolis (and the fourth largest in North America), has saved its residents CAN$53 (US$42.4) for every CAN$1 (US$0.80) spent over a 2012-2016 traffic signal retiming programme, according to figures released by its Transportation Services Division. The programme covered 1,275 signals (the city’s
  • Ken Leonard talks to ITS International
    August 21, 2014
    Ken Leonard, director of the USDOT’s ITS Joint Program office made time in his schedule during the Helsinki Congress to speak to ITS International. It has been 18 months since Ken Leonard took over as the director of the Intelligent Transportation Systems Joint Program Office at the US Department of Transportation. With 30 years of technical experience behind him, to say he is enjoying the challenge would be to put it mildly: “It is incredibly exciting to be working in intelligent transportation systems, th