Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
Safety

One-Year Data Shows Mar Vista’s Venice Blvd Is Safer; Pilot Upgrades Will Stay

Today, L.A. City Councilmember Mike Bonin has announced that the one-year data is in, and that the Mar Vista Great Streets project on Venice Boulevard will remain in place. Bonin also announced some small tweaks coming to the project corridor soon.

The 0.8-mile Mar Vista Great Streets project includes improved pedestrian crossings, parking-protected bike lanes, a short stretch of buffered bike lanes, and a road diet lane reconfiguration from six through-lanes to four. Project construction finished in May, 2017. Previously released six-month data was largely inconclusive. Bonin had announced that the pilot project's future would be decided based on analysis of a full year of data.

Bonin summarizes the latest news in a short video.

In the video, Bonin denounces the project's traffic safety-denier critics "For sure the Great Streets project has been controversial, but a lot of the chatter about it online is flat out lying. The data shows that the street is safe and that people feel more comfortable here than before."

The city's Transportation Department (LADOT) produced a 40-page report outlining the Venice Boulevard project history, process, and the latest data. Among the report findings for May, 2017, to May, 2018 are:

    • No severe or fatal injury collisions took place in the one-year post-project period - compared with two severe injury crashes (no fatalities) in the year pre-project.
    • Upgraded bicycle lanes resulted in a decrease in bicyclist injuries, and a higher proportion of cyclists are using the bike lane instead of the sidewalk.
    • There has been a reduction in the number of collisions due to speeding vehicles (though average speeds on the corridor remain about the same.)
    • The busiest intersection, Venice Boulevard and Centinela Avenue, saw a 75 percent reduction in collisions.
    • Traffic volumes returned to pre-project levels, meaning that the new roadway design handles existing vehicular demand.
    • Peak-period travel times are only slightly longer. City data indicates that for less than 10 percent of the day, current travel times are 30+ seconds longer than they were pre-project.
    • Some parallel residential streets are experiencing higher car traffic volumes, ranging from one to three additional vehicles per minute during the evening peak.
    • Combined pedestrian, bicycle, and scooter counts increased by 11 percent (981 to 1,090 per 6-hour period), though bicyclist counts decreased by 16 percent (483 to 405.)
    • Pedestrian counts increased 32 percent (437 to 577 ), with the percentage of females walking increasing from 31 to 36 percent.
    • Official state data (via SWITRS) showed post-project collisions increased by a small margin: 28 increased to 30. As mentioned above, severe injury crashes dropped from two to zero; fatalities remained at zero.
Mar Vista Great Streets crash data - via LADOT report
Mar Vista Great Streets crash data - via LADOT report
false

In the video, Bonin announced some additional changes are coming to make Mar Vista "even better."

Future corridor improvements will include new left-turn signals, public art, street furniture, pedestrian lighting, Metro Bike Share, and LADOT's one-year micro-transit pilot. To minimize parallel cut-through traffic, the city is also adding extended right-turn pockets on Centinela Avenue, at Venice Boulevard, as well as new stop signs on some residential streets.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

Covina to Begin Construction on Recreation Village

The new facility will be next to the Metrolink station and include a variety of opportunities for fitness and amusement

July 26, 2024

Talking Headways Podcast: Have Cities Run Out of Land?

Chris Redfearn of USC and Anthony Orlando of Cal Poly Pomona on why "pro-business" Texas housing markets are catching up to "pro-regulation" California and what it might mean for future city growth.

July 26, 2024

Friday’s Headlines

Oakland identifies sites for speed camera pilot; E-bike tariffs conflict with US climate policy; Pollution spikes around warehouses, shipping hubs; More

July 26, 2024

What the Heck is Going on with the State E-bike Incentive Program?

The program's launch has been delayed for two years, and currently "there is no specific timeline" for it. Plus the administrator, Pedal Ahead, is getting dragged, but details are vague

July 26, 2024

The Paris Plan for Olympic Traffic? Build More Bike Lanes

A push to make Paris fully bikable for the Olympics is already paying dividends long before the opening ceremonies.

July 25, 2024
See all posts