Skip to main content

DDOT releases draft moveDC Plan

The District Department of Transportation (DDOT) has released the draft moveDC Transportation Plan, a comprehensive, multimodal transportation strategy that outlines policies, programs and capital investments to enhance the District’s transportation network, and includes detailed elements or master plans for each mode of travel in the District. The plan takes into account projections that the city will add about 170,000 residents in the next 25 years, and increase jobs by 40 per cent, for an additional 2
June 6, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The 2134 District Department of Transportation (DDOT) has released the draft moveDC Transportation Plan, a comprehensive, multimodal transportation strategy that outlines policies, programs and capital investments to enhance the District’s transportation network, and includes detailed elements or master plans for each mode of travel in the District.

The plan takes into account projections that the city will add about 170,000 residents in the next 25 years, and increase jobs by 40 per cent, for an additional 200,000 people working in the city.

Highlights of the plan include recommendations for more educational campaigns to promote safe pedestrian practices, bus stop improvements, a sidewalk on at least one side of every street, and the expansion of the District’s speed and red-light camera programs to enforce speed limits, raise the comfort level of pedestrians and reduce pedestrian-related accidents.

The plan for the District’s vehicular transportation system focuses on reducing automobile use or maintaining the current number of vehicular trips. It calls for toll lanes at major entry points into the city and cordon area congestion pricing, in which vehicles would be charged to access downtown.

The plan also calls for 70 miles of high-capacity transit (streetcar or bus), a new downtown Metrorail loop, dedicated bus lanes, expanded commuter rail and water taxis.

“Building a world-class, sustainable city in the District of Columbia has always been one of the principal goals of my administration, and moveDC plays an integral role in advancing this effort,” said Mayor Vincent C. Gray. “It is so exciting to see the hard work and energy of District residents pay off in a plan that will continue to move us forward into the future.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Iteris to automate real-time signal timing in Washington DC
    May 5, 2015
    Iteris, as part of the Daniel Consultants (DCI) team, has been selected by the District of Columbia Department of Transportation (DDOT), to upgrade and implement an adaptive traffic signal control system on three major arterial roads in the Washington, DC area. Iteris’ contract value for this work is approximately US$714,000 and is expected to commence immediately. DDOT is building an adaptive signal control system in order to provide more efficient signal operations and as part of this effort, is i
  • Stakeholders lobby EU for electrification of transportation
    February 11, 2015
    Ahead of its discussion on the European Union’s key priorities for the next decade, seven stakeholder organisations from industry, transport and cities have written to the College of the European Commission regarding the creation of a European Energy Union with a forward-looking climate change policy. They called on the commissioners to focus on the transport sector, which represents about a third of the EU’s overall energy consumption and is almost exclusively dependent on imported fossil fuels. The let
  • US public transportation records passenger numbers highest for 58 years
    March 10, 2015
    Americans took 10.8 billion trips on public transportation in 2014, which is the highest annual public transit ridership number in 58 years, according to a report by the American Public Transportation Association (APTA). “In 2014, people took a record 10.8 billion trips on public transportation -- the highest annual ridership number in 58 years,” said Phillip Washington, APTA chair and CEO and general manager of the Regional Transportation District in Denver. “Some public transit systems experienced all-ti
  • Four expansions added to Virginia’s Smart Road to test AVs in urban, rural and residential environments
    November 27, 2017
    The Virginia Tech Transportation Institute and the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDoT) has unveiled four expansions to the Virginia Smart Road to accelerate advanced-vehicle testing and explore how automated and autonomous vehicles (AVs) will function on U.S. roadways including edge-and-corner environments. Two new facilities have opened for testing: The Surface Street Expansion, an urban test bed, and the Live Roadway Connector, which connects the Smart road to the U.S. Route 460-Business,