Wasn’t there also one at Bay and Bloor?
It's a bit of a half-measure though. In that image, there is no reason not to narrow the roadway further and include a protected intersection for cyclists, while further shortening crossing distance for pedestrians.
Multitudes of crossing guards?^ How is it going to work without traffic signals?
^I wonder whether our local approach to education conflicts with this idea.
There is no doubt that in my part of town, the daily "rush hour" is not tied to travel to or from work.... but rather motorists dropping and collecting students from schools. The most intensive changes to roads and signage and speed limits in our ward has been outside local schools, because there are huge traffic issues with school dropoffs, and parents overwhelmingly demand the right to drive kids to school even where the distance is eminently walkable. I suspect that if schools in this city were located behind no-drive barriers, parents would howl.
This strikes me as a challenge to the "15 minute community" idea - our society seems to have decided that students should not attend local schools but rather have access to distant schools as a matter of preference or educational specialisation.
I won't recite any old-guy stuff about how we walked to our local school (yes, uphill both ways, in blizzards, barefoot) and how very few students went to anything but the local public or separate school, but there certainly has been a generational shift here.
I'm told that commuting for education represents close to 40% of ridership for some transit agencies. Maybe that's progress in education, or maybe not.
- Paul
I think today they is a lot more 'program/school shopping' and a lot more helicopter parenting; although I do recognize capacity issues. When our next door neighbour's kid was in high school, they would drive down to meet the school bus (we're rural), which was a grand total of 260m away.
For the record, my junior high was about 2.5km, fairly level, but I played the cello and had to lug it home sometimes.
Would be better with raised crossings.An update from Becky Katz on the Danforth/Kelvin project, just a bit more progress:
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Enlarged photos:
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