Koopzilla24
Active Member
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2022
- Messages
- 393
- Reaction score
- 1,166
There's enough room on Comm Ave for an 8-Lane stroad and the Green Line ROW if you remove parking and the grade separated bike lanes, which would've already been done if this was Texas. For the most part the Comm Ave section of the 57 isn't actually that bad because the B and 57 eat up so much travel demand. The traffic problems come down to two very specific problem areas: the offset Agganis Way/Pleasant St intersection and the unfortunate BU bridge/Storrow entry combo. The final approach to Kenmore is also hell during gameday and concerts but that could be alleviated with a bus only lane from Blandford to Kenmore even if only coned out during events.Would it be possible to do bi-directional, center-running bus lanes, on all of the 57’s Comm Ave segment, independent of the Green Line tracks? There’s many ways it could work, counter-flow bus lanes could be used to share platforms, amongst other possible solutions.
Agganis Way/Pleasant St has terrible signal phasing that reasonably requires a separate cycle for each cross street but it leaves them on far longer than needed to clear out waiting traffic. Traffic rapidly stacks up from the uncoordinated proceeding signals. That's all an easy fix with modern traffic sensing signaling like other developed countries use.
BU bridge/Storrow suffers from the high traffic volumes of one of the few Charles crossings right next to a really poorly placed and designed highway exit combined with two separate signalized intersections very close to each other. Eliminating the Storrow interface is kind of a no-brainer. Leaving the road only as a connection to Bay State Rd that can only be access from Comm Ave westbound. This will allow the Carlton loop nonsense and second intersection to be eliminated with Mountfort allowing normal through traffic to the BU Bridge as a normal, albeit large, single intersection. The traffic reduction and flow simplification should make Comm Ave a much smoother corridor for everyone involved. There'd even be an easier time fitting protected bike lanes down to Kenmore with the reduction in approaches and simplified cross movements.