Crews have begun the redevelopment of Hamilton’s Main and King Streets, the subject of recent safety enhancements approved by city councilors.
Work on ‘short-term’ changes for Main began overnight Monday and is expected to see the roadway’s lanes reduced from five to four between Dundurn Street and Sherman Avenue.
In a release on Friday, the city outlined a number of new configurations for Main it’s working on, including restriping of the roadway earmarked for completion by the end of next week (Aug. 20).
“A pedestrian buffer will be added to the south lane of Main Street and bumpouts will be implemented at various locations,” the city said in its statement.
“Additionally, a designated bus-only lane will be implemented in the south lane at Main Street and MacNab Street and a transit signal … added at the intersection.”
Get breaking National news
Motorists are also being given the heads up that the changes include the implementation of no right turn on red restrictions and early pedestrian signal intervals at intersections.
Last month, crews added ladder crossings for pedestrians, restriped roads and installed countdown signals along Main and King between Dundurn Street and the Delta.
The redevelopment of Main and King are a part of initiatives approved by city councillors in the hope of strengthening the city’s road safety approach, which has been setback by several pedestrian fatalities since the beginning of 2022.
- University Bridge construction for Bus Rapid Transit plan starts in April
- Spike in cost of diesel threatens consumer wallets, global supply chain: experts
- Calgary hit by unexpected blast of spring snow, causing dozens of crashes
- Albertans’ interest in alternative forms of travel growing as fuel prices spike
Changes across the city will include a number of lane modifications and pedestrain crossings.
Work on most roads are expected to take place during overnight hours.
So far, the number of traffic deaths in Hamilton for 2022 is 15 with nine pedestrian fatalities, the highest number since 2017.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.