
This past week the West Seattle Blog has broken the news that SDOT is not planning any changes to the roadway lanes north of Morgan for the immediate future. “We’re not rechannelizing the northern section at this time. That doesn’t mean we’ll never rechannelize it,” said Jim Curtin, head of Vision Zero at SDOT.
SDOT’s 2016 presentation on proposed changes for phase two notes that on the northern segment “the majority of drivers still travel at nearly 40 mph and nearly 1000 drivers per day travel at speeds of 45 mph or higher. Speed is the critical factor in collision severity and 40 mph is deadly for vulnerable users. Speed-reduction techniques will be applied in Phase 2.”
But it’s not clear exactly what the speed-reduction techniques will be if they do not come in the form of lane changes. The northern segment of 35th is the segment of the corridor with the highest traffic volumes, but the fact that traffic speeds along that segment remain high suggests that outside of peak hours, demand is still underneath what the street was designed to handle.
Without moving forward with lane changes, SDOT is proposing crossing improvements at Graham–the planned crossing point at 35th for the West Seattle neighborhood greenway–that include a signal to stop traffic, as well as a full signal at SW Dawson, which is the entrance to Camp Long, a Seattle Parks facility. The southern segment had its speed limit dropped to 30 mph from 35 mph when the changes took place. Two additional lights along the corridor may have an impact on traffic speeds, but without a rechannelization occurring, further speed limit reduction is unlikely–and even if it occurred it is unlikely that actual traffic speeds would drop accordingly.

Long Planned Fauntleroy Boulevard Revamp Put On Hold