Some B-TOP members and neighborhood volunteers have been working on several different angles of the bypass issue. Today we are releasing 3 reports with the traffic engineering data that these various efforts have produced. These reports illustrate the fact that the bypass design is simply not responsive to the situation on the ground. Not only have they ignored input from Bloomington residents, but they have ignored basic traffic engineering and urban design principles. Without further ado:
- 3rd & Bypass Pedestrian Counts
- A pedestrian count was conducted at the intersection of 3rd Street and the SR 45/46 bypass (by College Mall) in August 2007 showing that approximately 400 people a day cross that intersection on foot.
- Bypass Travel Time Study
- Volunteers drove cars from one end of the project area to the other (Pete Ellis Drive to Kinser Pike) over a 12 hour period on May 4, 2010. The longest transit time seen was less than 17 minutes, and the average was about 9 minutes.
- Bypass Design Failures
- This is a summary document. It excerpts the data from our two studies, INDOT traffic data and projections, a table from the INDOT project plans, and car and bus data for the SR 45/E 10th Street corridor. This information indicates that Bloomington — even the neighborhoods around the bypass — is trending towards increased independence from the automobile while the bypass project is designed solely for the benefit of the automobile. The data also suggests that even for the target audience — rush hour drivers — the gains will be minimal.