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Example, look at 2nd and Coltrane and just to the west. In 1/2 mile to the west, you have Vista Ln, Davision's Greenhouse, Pub W complex, Primrose School entrance, Wade Martin Rd, Meineke Car Care Center, Church In Edmond entrance, Single Family home driveway, SureStay Plus Best Western, Eddies and then Coltrane.
Vista Ln and Coltrane are the only ones that are "mandatory" and almost all the rest could be accessed differently if they were designed differently through the planning commission / City Council. Now I know there is very little chance of anything happening to any area that is already established but you find these types of situations all over Edmond and this was just one particular 1/2 mile section that honestly isn't all that built out yet.
Just take a look at the one mentioned above and from Vista to Bryant. Both sides of the road are cluttered with curb cuts that if you cut half of them out would not impact a single business and would provide additional space.
The Eddies could be accessed better from Coltrane than 2nd. Same for the Best Western if they put in an access road. Both Daily Living Center and Meineke could be accessed from Wade Martin.
The point is, all of the curb cuts cause disruption to the flow of traffic and if planned better initially, could prevent a lot of issues. It shouldn't take 30-40 minutes to drive from West Edmond to East or East to West but it does unless you take the turnpike which is at the southern point of town.
Not efficiently.
If you drive suburban main arteries in many cities, there is a notable limit in how frequently there are curb cuts and distances from a main intersection to the first curb cut. Older streets are like May Ave, SW 29th or 2nd but newer main arteries limit cuts and setbacks.
Can you give an example in another city of a suburban main artery done correctly?
I see that there is probably some merit to this thought, however, I still feel like having way too many stoplights carries more of the burden of it taking 30 minutes to get from east Edmond to west Edmond. Even if the curb cuts were reduced, we're still sitting and waiting at all of these lights. Waiting for them to turn green only to be stopped again in a few hundred yards.
Can you give an example in another city of a suburban main artery done correctly? Maybe give a crossroad in a city that I can look at on streetview. Or two.
I see that there is probably some merit to this thought, however, I still feel like having way too many stoplights carries more of the burden of it taking 30 minutes to get from east Edmond to west Edmond. Even if the curb cuts were reduced, we're still sitting and waiting at all of these lights. Waiting for them to turn green only to be stopped again in a few hundred yards.
I think the city should have an employee and all they do is drive the roads and make note of terrible light timing and things that don't make sense. Traffic is a big part of quality of life and it seems like a lot of aggravation could be avoided with relative ease.
As for the biggest project that needs done in OKC I think it is the i40 i44 interchange (i40 east and west) where the lane goes down to 2 lanes. It needs to be expanded. I don't know how you do it and it will be a traffic nightmare but it needs to be done soon
They (Edmond *and* OKC) should have some kind of program for certain departments (streets, utilities, traffic, etc.) to have a separate phone/tablet and to note bad traffic light timing, potholes, street lights that are out, etc. Us residents shouldn't have to notify the city of all their problems all over the city all the time.
I wonder if Edmond or OKC are partners with Waze. I have reported potholes on Waze and they have been filled fairly quickly.
https://www.waze.com/wazeforcities/
I have a friend who has been an Edmond rabble-rouser the past couple years, and I recall him telling me a few months ago that Edmond has the cameras, and other technology to monitor traffic 24/7. He mentioned that Edmond does not want to use the "flow" signal control method (allowing signals to be coordinated in such a manner that people could drive several miles at the speed limit), rather it uses the "herd" method (which makes drivers catch red light after red light). Edmond is focused on a fear of speeding in the city limits.
Now, I have no idea if any of this is true. Just parroting what I was told.
I think this has to be true. Just driving in Edmond for any length of time tells you that's what they're doing.
So instead of incentivizing speed limit obedience they're actually making people speed and run red lights because of how they choose to do it. People speed off when their light turns green because they wanna catch that green they see 200 yards down the road but they don't catch it and run it anyway. Edmond is courting danger more than anything with their method.
Yeah, I don't know where roundabouts got this reputation for only being able to be navigated by geniuses and Europeans. Or genius Europeans.
There's a roundabout in Seminole, OK. If the rubes in Seminole can figure it out, then I think the rubes in Edmond might be able to figure it out too. You don't have to be a graduate of Oxford to be able to use a roundabout.
Just because they have them doesn't mean they know how to use them. I am surprised by the number of people that come to a full stop at walker and 10th when there is no traffic in circle. However, Hays Kansas has 4 of them in a row and most people seem to know how to use them.
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