:''
Living Streets is the name of a UK campaign group, formerly the Pedestrians' Association''
A 'living street' is a
street in which, unlike in most 20th century streets, the needs of car drivers are secondary to the needs of users of the street as a whole. It is a space designed to be shared by pedestrians, playing children, bicyclists, and low-speed motor vehicles. This contrasts with the
shared space scheme philosophy which gives all road users equal priority in community spaces.
Some national schemes with similar principles are
home zones in the
United Kingdom,
woonerf in the
Netherlands and
shared zone in
Australia. Most
side streets in
Tokyo are used similarly, without a similar national scheme.
For much of the
twentieth century, streets were designed to ensure traffic flow, but it has become apparent that streets have many social and recreational functions which are severely impaired by fast car traffic. The living street is an attempt to design for all the functions of streets.
These streets are often at the same grade as curbs and
sidewalks. Cars are limited to a speed that does not disrupt other uses of the streets (usually defined to be pedestrian speed). To make this lower speed natural, the street is normally set up so that a car cannot drive in a straight line for significant distances, for example by placing planters at the edge of the street, alternating the side of the street the parking is on, or curving the street itself. Other
traffic calming measures are also used. However, early methods of traffic calming such as
speed humps are now avoided in favor of methods which make slower speeds more natural to drivers, rather than an imposition.
The woonerf movement originated in the Netherlands in the seventies. Living streets have become common there, in Germany, and in Scandinavia, and are increasing in Britain.
See also
★
Woonerf
★
Shared space - a traffic engineering philosophy which removes comfort cues such as signs and lines and gives ''all'' road users equal priority
★
Auto-free zone
★ Rue Duluth, Montreal
[1]
★
World Urbanism Day
External links
★
Woonerf pictures
★
Home Zones UK
★
Living Streets UK
★
Living streets in New Zealand
★ http://www.streetparty.org.uk
★ http://www.streetsalive.net