Traffic calming devices
In Phoenix, the city opens up a tool box of traffic calming devices to citizens, from which they can pick and choose their weapon.
''If it's speed, you can put in a chicane or woonerf or choker or speed humps. You can put in diverters,'' says James Matteson, street transportation director. ''There are dozens of different physical devices or technologies or controls that you can use. It's the engineering approach.''
But the key in Phoenix is that citizens have to meet the city halfway, both in planning the project and footing the bill.
The neighborhood has to work as a partner with the city's Neighborhood Traffic Management Team, a slate of six engineers and technicians who will direct the citizens through the process and technologies. The neighborhood selects the plan, Matteson explains. The city supplies the expertise.
''We do the technical work free, but if they want physical devices installed, the neighborhood has to pony up half the cost,'' he says. ''They have to participate in the cost to calm the traffic.''
Matteson says this method was designed after seeing what didn't work in other cities, particularly the conflict between those who love traffic calming, and those who don't.
''We realized that if the neighborhood did not buy into it, they would not support it,'' he explains. ''If you give away the devices for free, they want everything in the world. If you make them pay for half, they become a little more careful. They think long and hard before being willing to install very expensive traffic calming devices.''
The city sets aside $100,000 annually to match citizens' money for traffic calming devices. Neighborhood projects can be as low tech as signage, changing speed limits, or installing speed humps. Or, he says, it could be a very expensive reconstruction in a very large neighborhood. ''Every case is unique,'' he says.
Addressing growth, city planners hope developers will incorporate these devices into their subdivisions. The traffic calming team, along with staff from planning, developer services, fire, police and public works, devised a plan for developers to follow, ''so as to not keep repeating the mistakes of the past.''
New subdivisions are showing up with narrower streets, set-back sidewalks, shorter streets and configurations that stymie cut-through traffic.
''Traffic calming is whatever you want it to be,'' he says. ''Traffic engineers have lots and lots of tools in the old tool kit. Do it before the problem exists.''
Contact: James H. Matteson
Street Transportation Director
602/262-6284