For years, Keith
Melton, Arlington’s public works and transportation director, has watched
drivers use the wide center left turn lanes on Cooper Street for almost
everything but turning.
“They dive into
it and they speed up, they slow down, they cross over. Pretty much everything
except what it was intended for,” Melton said.
Those central
Arlington drivers can expect a slow down and a change of habit later this year
when the state begins installing new medians.
Raised brick
medians, traffic safety devices currently being used in south Arlington, will
be extended north in a move that city and state officials hope will decrease
the number of dangerous collisions and the number of pedestrians being hit by
cars.
The open center
turning lanes that now run along Cooper Street north of Arkansas Lane will be
filled in with the same medians in place between Arkansas Lane and the southern
city limits. The new medians would be added between Arkansas Lane and Mitchell
Street.
Melton said the area
currently presents a particular challenge because those who live in apartments
near State Highway 303 attempt to cross Cooper Street on foot with sometimes
fatal results.
City leaders asked
the Texas Department of Transportation to install the same medians that the
agency put in place in 2007 to replace the two-way continuous left turn lane on
Cooper Street from central to southern Arlington.
After that project,
the Texas Transportation Institute performed a post-construction evaluation and
found that safety had improved and crash rates were reduced by 47 percent from
Arkansas Lane to Pleasant Ridge Road and by 42 percent from Bardin Road to the
southern city limits.
TxDOT is expected to
bid out the roughly $8 million project this fall. Spokesman Val Lopez noted
that traffic studies have shown that raised medians reduce head-on
collisions—the most dangerous kind– by about 40 percent.
Lopez said without
the medians, it can be difficult for turning drivers to anticipate the oncoming
traffic flow and for oncoming drivers to know when and where cars will turn in
front of them.
“Medians create an
orderly, more predictable traffic flow,” he said. “And predictable traffic is
safer traffic.”
Melton said medians
provide structure, which is especially important in areas like Cooper Street
where speed and unpredictable driving patterns are common.
“There are way too
many unexpected movements going on at once in that area,” he said.
The City of
Arlington is contributing $1.5 million toward the cost of the construction of
sidewalks and drive approaches.
In addition to the
raised median project, TxDOT also will repair concrete pavement from Arkansas
Lane to Interstate 20 and build new Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant
sidewalks, ramps and driveways from Interstate 20 to Mitchell Street.
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