Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Department of
Transportation (DOT) Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan today
announced Summer Streets, a new City program that will temporarily open a 6.9
mile car-free route from the Brooklyn Bridge to 72nd Street. Featuring
connections to Central Park and other open spaces, Summer Streets will give New
Yorkers unprecedented access to the streets for exercise and exploration from 7
a.m. to 1 p.m. on three consecutive Saturdays in August, the 9th, 16th and 23rd.
Major cross-town streets will remain open for vehicles that need to cross the
route. The Mayor and Commissioner Sadik-Khan were joined at the announcement by
Parks & Recreation Commissioner Adrian Benepe, Manhattan Borough President
Scott Stringer, Lance Armstrong and David Byrne.
"We anticipate that hundreds of thousands of
New Yorkers and visitors will take advantage of streets temporarily opened for
recreation," said Mayor Bloomberg. "We hope the Summer Streets experiment will
become as much a part of the New York experience as strolling the Coney Island
boardwalk, participating in the 5-borough bike tour, or listening to the
Philharmonic in the park."
"In Bogotá, they call it Ciclovia, or
bikeway. In Paris, it's the Plage, or beach. Here in New York, Summer Streets
will literally turn the streets of our city into a pedestrian park," said
Commissioner Sadik-Khan. "The streets themselves are among the most valuable
public space that the City has to offer, and finding the room within our
existing street space for those on two feet or two wheels is a true application
of our goals for a sustainable future under the Mayor's PlaNYC initiatives and the DOT's strategic plan."
As part of Summer Streets, DOT worked with
the Police Department, NYC & Co., the Mayor's Office of Citywide
Event Coordination and Management, and the Mayor's Community
Affairs Unit on a plan to redirect vehicle traffic around the route
that runs from Lower Manhattan to 72nd Street and Central Park via Centre
Street, Lafayette Street, 4th Avenue and Park Avenue. Local streets will remain
accessible to residents with vehicles and for deliveries.
Fitness, dance and yoga classes will be held
at a central stage along the route, with additional exercise and health
activities hosted by community groups at select cross streets. Event sponsors
will also organize activities, and bike rental facilities will be available
along the route, including at hotels. Rest areas will be stationed along the
route for water and bike repair, and serve as meeting areas to link up with
friends and family members. At the 72nd Street link to Central Park, the
car-free route will occupy the southern half of the road only, while the north
side will remain open to two-way vehicle traffic. People on bicycles can access
the park and the Hudson River Greenway from the West Side via bike lanes on West
90th and 91st Streets. In Lower Manhattan, bike lanes will connect to the route
from the Greenway via Warren, Reade, Hudson, and Chambers Streets.
The Police Department will direct traffic
around the route and all parking will be restricted starting at midnight on the
day of the event. Additional staff and volunteers will be on hand to facilitate
the event.
Transforming traffic lanes into car-free
recreation corridors has already been successful in Bogotá, Paris, Tokyo and
London. Several cities in the U.S. have similar programs, such as El Paso, Tex.,
Cambridge, Mass. and soon also Portland, Ore. and Chicago, Ill. For New York,
Summer Streets creates an opportunity for residents to experience the city in a
healthy, sustainable way while attracting "green tourism" to the city
center.
The major cross-town routes that will remain
open to traffic are:
Chambers Street
Worth Street
Canal
Street
Broome Street
East Houston Street
W.8th Street
14th
Street
23rd Street
36th/37th Streets
49th/50th Streets
53rd/54th
Streets
57th Street
59th Street