Skip to main content

New York pedestrian safety plans launched

New York Department of Transportation (DOT), in partnership with the New York Police Department (NYPD), has launched Borough Pedestrian Safety Action Plans for each of the five boroughs in the city. The plans are one of 63 Vision Zero initiatives aimed at eliminating all deaths from traffic crashes, regardless of whether on foot, bicycle, or inside a motor vehicle. Despite aggressive pedestrian-oriented street re-engineering between 2007 and 2013, citywide pedestrian fatalities have not declined. In fact, t
February 27, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
New York Department of Transportation (DOT), in partnership with the New York Police Department (NYPD), has launched Borough Pedestrian Safety Action Plans for each of the five boroughs in the city.

The plans are one of 63 Vision Zero initiatives aimed at eliminating all deaths from traffic crashes, regardless of whether on foot, bicycle, or inside a motor vehicle. Despite aggressive pedestrian-oriented street re-engineering between 2007 and 2013, citywide pedestrian fatalities have not declined. In fact, they increased in 2012 and 2013 while fatalities to other street users fell. Comparing the periods of 2005-2007 to 2011-2013, pedestrian fatalities actually rose by two per cent while fatalities to all other users fell by 24 per cent. At the same time, the pedestrian share of overall fatalities rose from 51 per cent to 58 per cent, while across the US, pedestrians make up just 14 per cent of all traffic fatalities. In Manhattan alone, pedestrians are 73 per cent of all fatalities.

Each plan analyses the unique conditions of one New York City borough and recommends actions to address the borough’s specific challenges to pedestrian safety. These plans pinpoint the conditions and characteristics of pedestrian fatalities and severe injuries; they also identify corridors, intersections, and areas that disproportionately account for pedestrian fatalities and severe injuries, prioritising them for safety interventions.

The proposals include: Implementing at least 50 Vision Zero safety engineering improvements annually at priority corridors, intersections, and areas citywide, informed by community input at project locations;  Significantly expanding exclusive pedestrian crossing time on all priority corridors by the end of 2017; adding exclusive pedestrian crossing time to all feasible priority intersections by the end of 2017; Modifying signal timing to reduce off-peak speeding on all feasible priority corridors by the end of 2017; installing expanded speed limit signage on all priority corridors in 2015; Coordinating with Metropolitan Transport Agency to ensure bus operations contribute to a safe pedestrian environment; Expanding a bicycle network that improves safety for all road users; implementing the majority of speed camera locations at priority corridors, intersections and areas.

Each Borough Plan was shaped by the community input from nine Vision Zero Pedestrian Safety Workshops held across the five boroughs. Using borough crash data, rather than citywide data, heat maps were created for each borough to highlight locations with the highest density of pedestrian fatalities and severe injuries. These maps were then used to create borough priority maps. DOT and NYPD are tasked with addressing road safety for all residents in all boroughs, so creating five separate action plans was the most practical way to develop a robust set of focused, effective actions for each borough.

Related Content

  • APA supports automated work zone speed enforcement
    July 17, 2015
    A trade association representing the highway construction industry strongly supports automated enforcement of speed limits in work zones and Maryland's experience with a similarly designed program has had very good results, the association head has told a joint Pennsylvania House and Senate committee. According to PennDOT, 24 people were killed in work-zone crashes in 2014, eight more than in 2013. Additionally, there were 1,841 crashes in work zones last year, a slight decrease from the 1,851 crashes
  • New York bus passengers get real time bus information
    October 30, 2012
    Bronx bus passengers will soon be able to avoid waits at bus stops and get bus-arrival information on their home computer, smartphone or mobile phone. With MTA Bus Time, passengers can access a map showing where buses are along a particular route. They can also request a text telling them where the nearest bus is on the route. Developed by New York’s Metropolitan transit Authority (MTA), Bus Time uses accurate location data provided by an enhanced GPS device mounted inside each bus. That information is int
  • Ford, MIT project measures pedestrian traffic, predict demand for electric shuttles
    July 28, 2016
    Ford Motor Company and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are collaborating on a new research project that measures how pedestrians move in urban areas to improve certain public transportation services, such as ride-hailing and point-to-point shuttles services. The project will introduce a fleet of on-demand electric vehicle shuttles that operate on both city roads and campus walkways on the university’s campus. The vehicles use LiDAR sensors and cameras to measure pedestrian flow, which ultimate
  • Self-driving car safety perspectives
    June 2, 2015
    At yesterday’s Opening Plenary, Chris Urmson’s keynote speech dealt with the reality of driverless cars on our roads. By far and away their greatest benefit to mankind will be the potential to achieve an incredible saving of life and injury on the roads, as Urmson, director of the Google Self-Driving Car program, revealed to delegates. In response to an Associated Press article last month disclosing that self-driving cars have been involved in four accidents in the state of California, Urmson revealed th