Widseth Blog

To Help Slow Neighborhood Traffic, Try This Strategy

Written by Tim Schoonhoven, PE, VP - Civil Engineer | Jul 1, 2020 1:00:00 PM

City neighborhoods are frequently looking for ways to slow traffic and keep streets safe for residents. More effective than yelling, “Slowdown!” from your porch are traffic calming circles. These simple designs can be a low-cost, high impact solution, and they are not roundabouts. Calming circles are generally used at low traffic volume intersections and typically consist of a planting bed, small structure, or other aesthetic treatment, around which drivers must slow down to navigate. Drivers become more attentive, and the landscaping serves to visually break up the monotony of the street grid and provide space for added greenery.

Started as a grassroots effort by concerned residents, the City of Alexandria, Minnesota, has installed temporary calming circles in neighborhoods for the past three summers. Mike Weber, Community Director for the City of Alexandria, said, “We’ve used traffic calming islands in response to requests from neighborhoods that have had trouble with inattentive drivers. They primarily serve to deflect the driver’s route, which can only be done if the driver is paying attention, but they give a secondary benefit of reducing speed at the intersection.”

In addition to forcing drivers to be more focused and to slow down, the calming circles have also enhanced the neighborhoods with colorful displays of seasonal plants and flowers.

Costs are kept down by constructing the temporary structures with re-usable materials. City crews assemble the circles in the spring, maintain them (i.e., water the plants), and remove them in the fall.

Calming circles provide several benefits to the neighborhood and the city:

  • Reduced traffic speed – drivers must slow to a speed that allows them to comfortably maneuver around the circle.
  • Heightened driver attentiveness.
  • Minimal cost – city crews assemble and disassemble the re-usable materials.
  • Effective test drive – the city can test them out before committing to building permanent structures.
  • Improved aesthetic – neighborhood residents enjoy the greenery they
  • Easy to change – tweaks can be made at any time with temporary materials.
  • Waste-free – all materials are used again.
  • Enhanced visibility – breaks up the monotony of the roadway and provides visual cues for drivers to be alert to changes along their route.

Now, when residents sit on their porches, they can relax and enjoy the beautiful plantings, slower traffic, and safer streets.