Skip to main content

Connecticut boosts pedestrian, cyclist safety

The US state’s Complete Streets framework is an effort to lower road fatalities.
By David Arminas September 7, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Centre town Hartford, the state capital of Connecticut (image © Arenacreative/Dreamstime)

Connecticut will incorporate major road design criteria focussing on safety for pedestrians and cyclists after one of the state’s highest annual death tolls.

The northeast US state saw more than 360 fatalities on its highways last year, including over 70 pedestrian deaths.

For pedestrians, Connecticut’s department of transportation’s Complete Streets design features sidewalks, shared use paths or side paths on both sides of the road. To aid cyclists there will be paved outside road shoulders, bike lanes, separated bike paths and shared use paths on both sides of the roadway.

Highway design will, going forward, emphasise the use of public transportation such as more crosswalks, bus or tram shelters, benches and other ways to make existing or proposed transit stops more accessible to people of all capabilities.

“While this change may sound technical, it is a big deal for improving the safety of our transportation network,” said CTDOT Commissioner Garrett Eucalitto. “We are doing everything we can break down barriers to transportation and make Connecticut roadways more accessible for everyone.”

“This change will solidify and ensure that pedestrian, bicyclist and motorist safety is incorporated into the billions of dollars-worth of projects we have planned in our Capital Programme,” said Scott Hill, the department’s chief engineer.

The 12-page document, Complete Streets Controlling Design Criteria and Justification Process, is available on-line.

Connecticut, with a population of more than 3.6 million, is the southern-most state in the New England region in the northeast US where several states border Canada. The state is the third-smallest state by area and the 29th most populous, but is the fourth most densely populated of the US states. 
 

Related Content

  • Using ITS to maximise safety and traffic flow for cycling
    January 22, 2013
    Copenhagen, Denmark, has long been known as one of the world’s leading cities for cycling. In some areas of the city, the modal share of bikes has reached a level of as much as 50 %. And on some of the most frequently used bike paths the average daily number of cyclists is close to 30,000. As these numbers continue to rise, new ways of planning and implementing cycling infrastructure are needed. Increasingly, Danish traffic planners are turning to technology as a tool for planning cycling infrastructure. I
  • McCain takes on the SWARCO name
    August 22, 2022
    It was in 2016 when US-based ITS supplier McCain became a part of the SWARCO family.
  • Smombies! Look out!
    February 12, 2021
    Our city streets are being invaded by smartphone zombies, but help is on the way
  • Road deaths: 'something must change' - GHSA
    March 4, 2024
    The ‘grim and tragic milestone' of a total four million deaths in the US requires renewed road safety action, says the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA).