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Chilhowee Park Neighbors Pra...
Chilhowee Park Neighbors Praise Speed Humps
As recently as a few months ago, day and night, impatient (or thrill-seeking) motorists would speed at 60 mph along the straight-as-an-arrow Woodbine Avenue in East Knoxville.
On East Fifth Avenue, the same thing: Cars would go too fast, and daring motorists would aggressively pass slower-moving cars on the residential street.
Residents of the Chilhowee Park Neighborhood Association decided several years ago to do something about it. They met, shared near-miss horror stories, petitioned and collaborated with the City's Office of Neighborhoods and Traffic Engineering.
As part of the City's Neighborhood Traffic Safety Program - visit
www.knoxvilletn.gov/trafficsafety
- more than a dozen speed humps were strategically constructed along Woodbine and East Fifth last summer.
The neighbors say they've noticed an immediate effect.
From left: Chilhowee Park Neighborhood Association members Joe Woods, Teresa Cox, Sherene Jacobs, Kelle Jolly and Karen Pace stand behind a speed hump on Woodbine Avenue
"We've wanted this for 20 years," said Sherene Jacobs, president of the neighborhood association, who lives near Chilhowee Park and also owns Perk City coffeehouse on Magnolia Avenue, adjacent to the park. "Almost everybody is on the same page in wanting the speed bumps.
"We've happy. It's made a big difference. With the cars going 60 and 70 mph, we were afraid for children being out - that a car might come up on the sidewalk even. Now, you'll see the kids playing outside. It's much safer."
Singer and WUOT Jazz Jam host Kelle Jolly, another resident who supported the traffic-calming devices being installed, agrees.
"It's definitely made a difference," Jolly said. "Cars have slowed down. It feels safer to me. It's easier to walk up and down the street, or to more safely ride a bike, or walk a dog."
Jacobs said safer streets is a critical quality-of-life issue in her neighborhood, which she describes as welcoming and robust.
"It's a mixed neighborhood," she said. "There are a lot of older people, but also hipster people in their 30s. A lot of people are drawn by the historic houses - they date to the early 1900s. It's just a quiet, nice neighborhood. And the people who live here are extremely friendly."
This past year, the City of Knoxville completed six traffic-calming projects as part of the Neighborhood Traffic Safety Program. The program, a joint effort by the City’s Office of Neighborhoods, the Engineering Department and residents, is designed to help neighborhoods address traffic-calming issues and apply for engineered traffic-safety solutions.
The $200,000 allocated for traffic calming has been tapped out for now, but funding for additional projects is anticipated in future years.
Eden Slater, the City's Assistant Neighborhood Coordinator, encourages neighborhood residents to start the application process now, because building consensus and the City developing a traffic solution takes several years. In fact, due to the large number of applications in process and limited funding, it typically takes three to five years for a traffic-calming project to move from concept to design to installation.
Posted by
evreeland
On 11 September, 2020 at 12:06 PM
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