Over two miles of bus lanes and protected bike lanes to transform E.L. Grant Highway in Highbridge; “Double-header” project along wide, high-crash corridor
Mayor Bill de Blasio today announced the New York City Department of Transportation (NYC DOT) has completed a major transformation of the E.L. Grant Highway in the Highbridge section of the Bronx. Administration officials and advocates cut the ribbon today on signature transit and bicycle safety improvements to the corridor, including a combined 2.4 lane miles of dedicated bus lanes and protected bike lanes (PBL), each running in both directions. The bus lanes will serve 56,000 riders every day, on three different bus routes.
NYC DOT has completed over 16 PBL miles so far in 2020, with more than nine more miles scheduled to be completed this year. The de Blasio administration has created more than 120 miles of on-street protected lanes; its recent pace represents about one of every five protected lane miles nationwide. NYC DOT also added four miles of bus lanes in the Bronx this year and 10.4 miles citywide, primarily as part of the Mayor’s Better Buses Restart.
“E.L Grant cuts through the heart of Highbridge, and the Bronx deserves safer and more reliable alternative transit options,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “These transformative design changes will encourage bus and bike ridership, speed up Bronxites’ commutes, and save lives.”
“Today's announcement is another example of the truly transformative work this Administration is doing to ensure our streets are designed with all New Yorkers in mind," said Deputy Mayor Laura Anglin. "Bus riders, cyclists, pedestrians, now all have safer and more reliable infrastructure along one of the busiest corridors in the Bronx."
“It is not often that one project can have such a dramatic impact on so many different road users, but with new red bus lanes and green bike lanes, E.L. Grant vividly shows the very best of what DOT can do,” said New York City Department of Transportation Commissioner Polly Trottenberg. “With these changes, bus riders get to their destinations faster, cyclists get protected lanes and pedestrians are able to cross a wide street much more safely.”
E.L. Grant Highway had seen 44 injuries on average per year from 2013-2017, including eight severe injuries. Bus and bike lanes have consistently proven to make streets safer for transit riders, cyclists, pedestrians, and drivers.
NYC DOT has added 50.9 miles of bike lanes in the Bronx since 2016, including 5.7 miles so far this year. That includes projects such as Willis Avenue, Bronxdale Avenue, and Mosholu Avenue.
The E.L. Grant bus lane (.6 miles each way; 1.2 miles total), only the second center-running bus lane in the city, enhances a high-ridership corridor that had been plagued by double parking. The new lanes come with five new bus boarding islands offering benches and leaning bars for riders, while also calming traffic, shortening crossing distances, and improving pedestrian safety.
The E.L Grant PBL (.6 miles each way; 1.2 miles total) replaces a standard buffered bike lane with the full PBL treatment, including shortened crossing distances at five intersections including Jerome Avenue, 170th Street, Shakespeare Avenue, Nelson Avenue, and Plimpton Avenue. The project delivers a new signalized crossing at University Avenue and left turn restrictions at Plimpton Avenue, 169th Street and Nelson Avenue. Metered parking was also added to commercial areas and current meter regulations expanded.
Edward L. Grant Highway was named to honor former New York Giants baseball player and United States Army Captain Eddie Grant, who enlisted to fight in World War I in 1917 after his retirement from baseball. Grant was killed by an artillery shell during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive in October 1918 after his superior officers were killed and he led his remaining troops on a search for the Lost Battalion. Grant was the first Major League Baseball player killed in that war and one of only eight to die overall.
For more information about the de Blasio Administration’s Vision Zero initiative, please see www.nyc.gov/visionzero. For more on the City’s Better Buses Action Plan please see www.nyc.gov/betterbuses and for more on the New York City Green Wave plan for cycling, please see www.nyc.gov/greenwave.
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