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I read the same report and am a cyclist and I don't quite get how reducing the # of overall traffic lanes (sometimes by 20%) can end up increasing traffic volume.
It's basic, if your throughput potential decreases by a quarter how does overall speed increase? Yes, average velocity has to go up (it's one of the few options) but there has to be some other factor at play? Did they change the lighting patterns while they were at it? I don't think the # of cars went down drastically - people don't make the decision between car and bike but more often public trans. vs bike. Are the city cops just hammering people who park in the street? I think there is some other factor coming in to effect that we don't see or are not accounting for. I hope some more research comes out of this because this one has me flummoxed.
H
It looks like the biggest benefit was adding a short dedicated stretch at intersections for cars making turns. It smoothes out the traffic flow. Adding bike lanes is a bit of a red herring since the only thing adding bike lanes really did was to allow NYC to redesign the lanes with the dedicated bits for turning cars.
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