Car-free zone trial planned for New York
December 31st, 1969
New York mayor Michael Bloomberg has announced plans to create car-free zones in parts of Manhattan for three Saturdays this August as part of a new trial to see the effects on the number of pedestrians and cyclists. The no car zone will run along a 6.9-mile stretch of streets through Manhattan, from the Brooklyn Bridge, north to Park Avenue and the Upper East Side.
All cars, trucks and buses will be banned on the streets along the route from 7am to 1pm on August 9, 16 and 23. The new trial is being called the ‘Summer Streets’ experiment and if it proves successful at boosting visitor numbers officials will consider doing it again, Bloomberg told reporters from the New York Times.
Officials are planning to run fitness, dance and yoga classes along the empty streets and will also rent out bicycles as part of the event.
New York is not the first major city to conduct such a trial. Similar events have been run in London, Paris and Bogotá to much success. Downtown business owners were upset, especially those running parking lots and other car related enterprises, as many will lose revenue during the period.
New York mayor Michael Bloomberg has announced plans to create car-free zones in parts of Manhattan for three Saturdays this August as part of a new trial to see the effects on the number of pedestrians and cyclists. The no car zone will run along a 6.9-mile stretch of streets through Manhattan, from the Brooklyn Bridge, north to Park Avenue and the Upper East Side.
All cars, trucks and buses will be banned on the streets along the route from 7am to 1pm on August 9, 16 and 23. The new trial is being called the ‘Summer Streets’ experiment and if it proves successful at boosting visitor numbers officials will consider doing it again, Bloomberg told reporters from the New York Times.
Officials are planning to run fitness, dance and yoga classes along the empty streets and will also rent out bicycles as part of the event.
New York is not the first major city to conduct such a trial. Similar events have been run in London, Paris and Bogotá to much success. Downtown business owners were upset, especially those running parking lots and other car related enterprises, as many will lose revenue during the period.
All cars, trucks and buses will be banned on the streets along the route from 7am to 1pm on August 9, 16 and 23. The new trial is being called the ‘Summer Streets’ experiment and if it proves successful at boosting visitor numbers officials will consider doing it again, Bloomberg told reporters from the New York Times.
Officials are planning to run fitness, dance and yoga classes along the empty streets and will also rent out bicycles as part of the event.
New York is not the first major city to conduct such a trial. Similar events have been run in London, Paris and Bogotá to much success. Downtown business owners were upset, especially those running parking lots and other car related enterprises, as many will lose revenue during the period.
More from MotorAuthority
-
11/09/2009
Keating Boasts 260.1 MPH Top-Speed For TKR Supercar
You may recall that we first reported about British sports car manufacturer ...
-
11/09/2009
Jaguar Launches New R Performance Academy
For some, a day at the track driving the fastest Jaguars on sale today ...
-
11/09/2009
2010 BMW M3 GTS Shows Off In Pair Of New Videos
Over 400 pounds lighter, a whole lot less concerned about comfort and far, ...
More from High Gear Media
-
TheCarConnection.com | 11/09/2009
2010 Toyota Yaris
2010 TOYOTA YARIS STYLING | [7 out of 10] Edmunds: "looked ...
-
TheCarConnection.com | 11/09/2009
2010 Toyota Yaris
TheCarConnection.com has highlighted some of the most useful review ...
-
LexusReports.com | 11/09/2009
NHTSA Takes a Swipe at Toyota Over Recall Claims
The drama surrounding Toyota's floor mat related recall just won't go ...



Comments (7 total)
Meet the top commenters on the LeaderboardBy Raptor #1, Posted: 6/18/2008
Eco nazis
How about making New York Bloomberg-free zone?
By chris #2, Posted: 6/18/2008
u know what raptor? i've gone to chicago a couple times and I've parked my car downtown and just walked all over the place. in cities with major gridlock problems like new york, you can actually travel long distances faster by foot.
Plus, there are many cities even in north america where entire streets are closed off to motor traffic. Montreal is a great example.
besides, from the sounds of things, its just a single route that will be shut down. in a city that is nothing but a huge grid, I really dont see a problem with that. I guarantee the businesses along that street will do better on these days than they normally would. parking garages will be the only ones to suffer... but only the parking garages ONLY accessible by that route.
By NoNameDenton #3, Posted: 6/18/2008
I am so happy I live in a state run by people close to being sane and a city close to being sane.
By Gus #4, Posted: 6/18/2008
They do this in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park every Sunday already.
It's quite nice, but I have two strong legs. I wonder if there will be handicapped people, or older people, who will be pushed aside by this. They should issue permist for them, or free transportation on little electric shuttles or some such thing.
By chris #5, Posted: 6/18/2008
..or maybe... a MONORAIIIIIIIIIIIIILLLLLLLLLLLLL
By Raptor #6, Posted: 6/18/2008
But why closing the whole avenue.. I mean, if you want to walk, you can always go to Central park.
I agree you can travel some distance on foot (or by subway), but if infrastructure already exists, why not use it all the time? I agree with Gus, I am young and I can walk those 7 miles if necessery, but what about old or disabled people? Sure, issue permits to them, but than it's not a car free zone anymore.
By HECTOR #7, Posted: 6/19/2008
SHHH Raptor! Better New York deal with that blowhard than Miami.
Post a Comment
Sign In |