And finally: A ‘green wave’ to slow cars
The Times’s Winnie Hu reports:
The mounting death count is a grim reminder that biking on New York City streets can be dangerous: The 25 cyclists who have died so far this year is 15 more than all of last year — and the highest in two decades.
This week, New York City unveiled an initiative designed to help make streets safer: timing traffic lights so that anyone traveling between 10 and 15 miles per hour can glide through consecutive intersections, hitting one green light then another.
Officials called the initiative a “green wave.”
On most streets in the city, the speed limit is 25 m.p.h. On streets with re-timed signals, traffic is expected to move at a slower and steadier flow, according to traffic experts. That flow could reduce potential conflicts — including when cyclists run red lights or drivers race to beat a light, they said.
Traditionally, the green wave concept was used to move cars. Later it began to be used to improve the cycling experience; first, in 2007, in Copenhagen. By 2015, it was picked up by San Francisco, Portland, Ore., Denver and Chicago.
In New York, the plan has been operating on a stretch of Hoyt and Bond Streets in Brooklyn since December.
Many cyclists have benefited from the program without even knowing it.
“I just thought I got lucky, but it’s nice they’re doing it on purpose,” Anthony Scelza, 21, said as he rode on Hoyt Street recently. “I like keeping my momentum.”