How Does Road diets: designing a safer street Work?

A road diet is when a street gets fewer lanes so it can be safer and more fun for everyone who uses it.

Imagine you have a toy car track that’s too crowded, all the cars are bumping into each other, and no one can really enjoy their ride. A road diet is like giving that track a little space to breathe. Instead of having four lanes for cars to zoom through, we might change it to two lanes, plus space for bikes and people walking.

Why It Works

A road diet makes the street feel slower and calmer, kind of like how your room feels quieter when you take away some of your noisy toys. With fewer lanes, drivers don’t need to go as fast, which means they’re less likely to crash into each other or into people walking or biking.

Also, adding space for bikes and sidewalks is like giving everyone a special lane on the toy car track, it’s fairer and more fun for everyone!

That's how road diets help make streets safer and friendlier for all kinds of travelers.

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Examples

  1. A road diet turns a four-lane street into two lanes with bike paths and sidewalks, making it easier for everyone to move around.

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