1 Complete Streets: Guide to Answering the Costs Question Companion Presentation, Part 4.
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Transcript of 1 Complete Streets: Guide to Answering the Costs Question Companion Presentation, Part 4.
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Complete Streets:Guide to Answering the Costs Question
Companion Presentation, Part 4
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Complete Streets add lasting value.
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Use with: general public, community officials, receptive transportation professionals
Complete Streets add lasting value.
Health: Walkability and Obesity
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Residents of walkable areas:• More physically
active• Less likely to be be
overweight or obese
Kenneth Spencer
Health: Safe Streets & Women’s Health
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Only ¼ women ages 40-60 meet national guidance for recommended physical activity.
Safe neighborhoods with sidewalks and near destinations = women are more likely to walk, run, bike
Doc Searls
William Feldman
Health: Transit Users
One third of regular transit users meet the minimum daily requirement for physical activity during their commute.
Michal Ronkin
Health: Communities of Color
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Where infrastructure has fallen into disrepair or was never there, simple changes such as easily accessible paths to destinations = more physically active African-American neighborhoods
Dan Burden
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County Health Rankings
http://www.countyhealthrankings.org/
Safer Streets: Seattle
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Seattle DOT
Seattle DOT
Safer Streets: Orlando, Florida
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Road diet reduced the frequency of crashes involving injuries from 1 every 9 days to
1 every 30 days
City of Orlando
Safer Streets: Vancouver, Washington
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Road diet on Fourth Plain Blvd:
•Vehicle collisions dropped 52%
•Pedestrian crashes dropped to 0
City of Vancouver, WA
Economic Vitality: Revenue, Jobs
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• Vermont: 1,400 jobs, $41 million in wages, and $81 million in revenue.
• Wisconsin: $556 million from the bicycle industry.
• Iowa: Bike commuters $52m in indirect and direct benefits.
Economic Vitality: Job Creation
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Walk, bike, and transit projects = more jobs than auto-only projects
Economic Vitality: Lancaster, California
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$10m investment in ‘rambla’, new lighting, landscaping, and trees
= $125m private investment, 40 new businesses, 800 new jobs, 26% in sales tax revenue
City of Lancaster, CA
Economic Vitality: San Diego
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La Jolla Boulevard’s improvements helped generate 20% more sales across 95 area businesses.
Dan Burden
Economic Vitality: Property Value
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Walkability adds to commercial and residential real estate value.
Dan Burden
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“Communities that invest in bike ways and good sidewalks also attract a creative class of professionals who bring additional vitality and
economic growth to communities.” – Jeffery Tumlin, principal, Nelson/Nelson
Dan Burden
Traffic Management: Portland, Oregon
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20,000
22,500
25,000
27,500
30,000
32,500
35,000
37,500
40,000
199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008Year
Total # of Vehicles
Automobiles
1991-2008: 1% increase in auto volumesIncreases in mobility borne by bicycle traffic
Hawthorne Bridge
Traffic Management: Portland, Oregon
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20,000
22,500
25,000
27,500
30,000
32,500
35,000
37,500
40,000
199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008Year
Total # of Vehicles
1991-2008: 20% increase
Hawthorne Bridge
Traffic Management: Boulder, Colorado
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Twenty years of consistent investment:
• SOV trips 7% since 1990
• Bicycle commuting is ~20x nat’l average
• Transit use is 2x nat’l average
• Walk trips are 3x nat’l average
Dan Burden
Traffic Management: Vancouver, British Columbia
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Reallocated 1 lane on Burrard Bridge+200,000 bicycle trips, no significant impact on autos
City of Vancouver, BC
User Fees: National
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Only 1/2 of a road’s cost is paid by user fees.U.S. PIRG
User Fees: Seattle
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12% 4%
23%
2%
18%12%
28%General FundGas TaxDebtCumulative Reserve FundBridging the GapReimbursablesGrants & Other
User Fees: Boulder, Colorado
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Just 11% of transportation budget is from the state highway user’s tax.
Dan Burden
User Fees: Complete Streets Better for Drivers
Some people will choose not to drive = roads are safer and more convenient for drivers
Smart Growth America is the only national organization dedicated to researching, ating for and leading coalitions to bring smart growth practices to more communities nationwide.
www.smartgrowthamerica.org
1707 L St. NW Suite 1050, Washington, DC 20036 | 202-207-3355