Filed under: walking

City of Vancouver starts work on improving pedestrian safety, access

The City of Vancouver has passed a motion to work with police and the Vancouver School Board to identify the most dangerous pedestrian intersections in the city. This is a welome move move by the City: 318,000 walking trips are made every day, which account for 17 per cent of all trips. (It's not clear whether this number includes transit trips, which begin and end on foot.) This number is likely to grow as a result of land use change, support for transit, economic restructuring, an older population, and rising fuel costs.  

The Vancouver Province highlights the need for better data and action on the issue:

SFU Prof. Anthony Perl, who specializes in urban transportation, said Vancouver is the only place in Canada where numbers of downtown residents is increasing faster than numbers of cars, with the proliferation of large, new apartment buildings.

“Our system is designed to keep cars moving safely — pedestrians are a sideshow,” he said. “More people are walking, but nothing has been done to expand the space. Pedestrians have to jaywalk or step off the sidewalk in an unsafe manner.

“Burrard and Robson is chaos at 5 p.m., with people walking back to the West End."

Perl suggests making some roads pedestrian-only, such as Robson Street between Burrard and B.C. Place Stadium.

The City is planning to have all trips in the city be walking, transit or cycling by 2020 -- a number that I hope becomes more ambitious.

Staff will report back to Council in the spring of 2011 with specific recommendations for improving pedestrian safety and accessibility

Letter: It's time to stop catering to car culture

From the Vancouver Sun:

Re: It's always a walk on the wild side for pedestrians, Oct. 29

I commend Daphne Bramham for her recent articles regarding pedestrian traffic.

Safer pathways for pedestrians in both the urban and suburban environments are needed.

It is time to stop catering to the car culture, which comes at too high a price and to start developing a pedestrian heaven. Business owners who have been reluctant to let go of a few street parking spaces in favour of a bike lane seem to forget that it is people who enter their shops, not cars.

In cities where pedestrian-only areas have been established, such as Rue St. Catherine in Montreal, the streets have become lively with restaurants, bars, entertainers and art installations.

People flock to these safe, pleasant areas by the thousands to shop, dine and stroll and businesses thrive.

Our city can sign on to the International Charter for Walking and be an exemplary host for the Walk21 annual conference being held in Vancouver in 2011.

"Let's expand the vision of our world so that people choose and are able to walk as a way to travel, to be healthy and to relax."

Vancouver can and must do much more to augment and enhance the experience of those travelling by foot.

From the bottom of my soles.

Joey Lesperance

Vancouver