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  #3041  
Old Posted May 29, 2024, 3:26 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is offline
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The CAA's "worst road" nonsense has a heavy suburban bias and always has. Bad urban streets and bad rural non-divided highways never seem to make the cut or get on their radar.
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  #3042  
Old Posted May 29, 2024, 4:09 PM
DTcrawler DTcrawler is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Uhuniau View Post
The CAA's "worst road" nonsense has a heavy suburban bias and always has. Bad urban streets and bad rural non-divided highways never seem to make the cut or get on their radar.
Yup. If you want to see a street in downright appalling condition, check out James St between Lyon and Bronson. I get it’s a residential street but you’d never see something in the suburbs get to that level of disrepair.
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  #3043  
Old Posted May 31, 2024, 4:43 AM
MarkR MarkR is offline
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Originally Posted by DTcrawler View Post
Yup. If you want to see a street in downright appalling condition, check out James St between Lyon and Bronson. I get it’s a residential street but you’d never see something in the suburbs get to that level of disrepair.

Tell me about it! I live on that stretch, and even riding my bike is teeth-rattling. At least I can dodge around the worst potholes (though I probably look drunk while doing so) if there are no motor vehicles following.

The road surface started suffering a long while back due to (so I've been told) an edict by former Councillor Homes that each intersection should be identified with brick paving. Which of course soon started losing bricks, sinking unevenly, etc. due to seasonal upheaval. James and Bay is a bad remnant of that.
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  #3044  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 2:45 PM
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I have often thought about stuff like this. I was driving along Riverdale through OOS where my mother-in-law lives, and I had to drive like a drunkard to avoid the potholes, sunken manhole covers and the washboard patches everywhere (I have a low-slung hot hatch with low profile tires as my daily driver). It occurred to me that the city seems to perpetually have a bottomless wallet for installing speed humps, signage, curbs and reflectors ( I don't know what to call the yellow and black striped dividers installed on through-streets) for traffic calming, and yet, doesn't have money to fix the actual road surface. Funny how that works...
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  #3045  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 3:12 PM
zzptichka zzptichka is online now
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But 2.5% property tax hike cap. Promised and delivered.
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  #3046  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 3:32 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is offline
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Originally Posted by Davis137 View Post
I have often thought about stuff like this. I was driving along Riverdale through OOS where my mother-in-law lives, and I had to drive like a drunkard to avoid the potholes, sunken manhole covers and the washboard patches everywhere (I have a low-slung hot hatch with low profile tires as my daily driver). It occurred to me that the city seems to perpetually have a bottomless wallet for installing speed humps, signage, curbs and reflectors ( I don't know what to call the yellow and black striped dividers installed on through-streets) for traffic calming, and yet, doesn't have money to fix the actual road surface. Funny how that works...
The traffic calming budget is small, actually.
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  #3047  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 3:45 PM
Multi-modal Multi-modal is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Davis137 View Post
I have often thought about stuff like this. I was driving along Riverdale through OOS where my mother-in-law lives, and I had to drive like a drunkard to avoid the potholes, sunken manhole covers and the washboard patches everywhere (I have a low-slung hot hatch with low profile tires as my daily driver). It occurred to me that the city seems to perpetually have a bottomless wallet for installing speed humps, signage, curbs and reflectors ( I don't know what to call the yellow and black striped dividers installed on through-streets) for traffic calming, and yet, doesn't have money to fix the actual road surface. Funny how that works...
To be fair, Riverdale is up for a full renewal (sewer, water, road reconstruction) in a few years, so they are probably holding off on "throw-away" resurfacing and repairs.
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  #3048  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 4:46 PM
DTcrawler DTcrawler is offline
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To be fair, Riverdale is up for a full renewal (sewer, water, road reconstruction) in a few years, so they are probably holding off on "throw-away" resurfacing and repairs.
If they re-paved it now, it’d probably need resurfacing again anyways by the time the city is ready to do the renewal project. Shoddy resurfacing work by lowest bidder contractors doesn’t seem to last more than a year or two (or a month or two in the case of road paint).
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  #3049  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2024, 6:43 PM
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I semi joke that the state of several roads are traffic calming measures on their own.

When I used to live in Beacon Hill every house on my street had a dip in the road where the sewer connection went out. So every 20 meters or so there was a perpendicular dip that went to at least the center of the road. You would have cars bombing down this sidestreet(it was a bit of a shortcut into the backside of an adjacent neighborhood)

Too often I would see cars doing 60kmh and bottom out their muffler and just keep going. Like.. what are you doing to your car man?

At least they were relatively gradual though unlike those sunken sewers and potholes that want to send your strut through the shock tower.

I was never much of a speeder but between the roads/traffic cameras and driving an older cargo van I just drive the speed limit right on the nose. Going 15% over all the time just doesn't really get you anywhere faster.

Unless you are on the 401 of course!
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  #3050  
Old Posted Jun 11, 2024, 2:00 PM
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Quote:
Réimaginer la rue Bank dans le Glebe

Par Charles-Antoine Gagnon, Le Droit
10 juin 2024 à 17h43


La Ville d’Ottawa se penche sur l’avenir des déplacements sur la rue Bank dans le quartier Glebe

C’est connu, l’artère commerciale située dans un secteur résidentiel de la ville est toujours très achalandée entre l’autoroute 417 et le canal Rideau, notamment lorsque le parc Lansdowne accueille des activités sportives ou musicales.

Bouchons de circulation et piétons qui se marchent sur les pieds en raison de l’étroitesse des trottoirs sont les conséquences d’une rue qui peine à accueillir l’achalandage de milliers de personnes.

La Ville invite donc les citoyens à consulter une étude de faisabilité du transport actif et de la priorisation du transport en commun dans cette section de la rue. Une première séance portes ouvertes virtuelle aura lieu à compter de 18 h 30, ce mercredi.

Le bureau du conseiller municipal du quartier Capitale, Shawn Menard, a d’ailleurs récemment mené un sondage dans lequel un peu plus d’une personne sur quatre (26 %) dans les 1449 répondants réclame des trottoirs plus larges et 43 % des répondants demandent l’ajout de pistes cyclables.

«La rue Bank prend de l’expansion et les résidents pâtissent du statu quo. Nous devons trouver des façons de se déplacer d’une manière plus sécuritaire et plus efficace, qui profite aux petits commerçants et fait de l’endroit une destination encore plus intéressante», a-t-il déclaré.

L’étude de la Ville vise, entre autres, à examiner les options pouvant améliorer l’efficacité et la fiabilité des services de transport en commun le long du couloir, à entreprendre une évaluation des répercussions et des compromis nécessaires ainsi qu’à définir un projet pilote potentiel pour une mise en œuvre rapide.

Un groupe sur le web milite pour la construction d’un métro sous la rue Bank qui relierait la Ligne de la Confédération sur la rue Queen, au centre-ville, au quartier Billings Bridge. Ça serait selon lui la meilleure solution pour désengorger la rue Bank, permettre aux citoyens de partout en ville de se rendre facilement dans leur commerce préféré de l’artère, réduire les émissions de polluants atmosphériques et accroître l’achalandage sur la Ligne 1.

Précisons que le plan de réaménagement du parc Lansdowne prévoit la construction de deux tours d’habitations avec un maximum de 770 unités. Le parc accueille plus de quatre millions de visiteurs par année alors que plus de 200 événements y sont tenus annuellement. Le secteur de Billings Bridge devrait aussi accueillir de nouvelles tours d’habitation.

Pour participer à la séance d’information de mercredi, il faut s’inscrire sur le site Participons Ottawa. Une autre séance devrait avoir lieu plus tard cette année.

Des recommandations sur l’avenir de la rue Bank seront soumises aux élus en 2025.
https://www.ledroit.com/actualites/a...ASS5SLIOO36JE/
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  #3051  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2024, 8:21 PM
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In Maude getting shit done news, here's another long stagnated project that's seeing some movement.

Quote:
Gatineau fait un premier geste concret pour l’élargissement du chemin Vanier
Par Mathieu Bélanger, Le Droit
3 juillet 2024 à 16h08


Un premier véritable pas vers l’élargissement du chemin Vanier a été fait, mercredi, à Gatineau. Le comité exécutif a octroyé un contrat de 2,85 millions de dollars à la firme WSP pour la réalisation des études environnementales et d’une étude d’opportunité nécessaires au projet.

--SNIP--
https://www.ledroit.com/actualites/a...LIRDPLYGF3NVU/
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  #3052  
Old Posted Jul 17, 2024, 5:59 PM
zzptichka zzptichka is online now
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They are resurfacing Wellington all the way to the War Museum.

I guess it means no segregated path for cyclists/ebikes/scooters on Confederation Boulevard in the foreseeable future.

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  #3053  
Old Posted Aug 7, 2024, 1:51 AM
SL123 SL123 is offline
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Got a little peak of the new widen sidewalk + Bike path on the Mackenzie King bridge and its soooo wide!!!!! Only the section on the South side of the NAC seem to be near completion

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  #3054  
Old Posted Aug 8, 2024, 2:14 AM
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Awesome. What's the plan for integrating these bike tracks with the hellscape that is Nicholas St? (...or is there any plan)
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  #3055  
Old Posted Aug 8, 2024, 1:26 PM
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Originally Posted by urbanforest View Post
Awesome. What's the plan for integrating these bike tracks with the hellscape that is Nicholas St? (...or is there any plan)
I think Besserer will eventually be part of the east-west cycling network, since Rideau's rebuild a decade+ ago did not include cycling lanes. The Rideau Centre bike lanes will connect through Ogilvy Square, so I would assume one lane of that Nicholas stub between the new Registry tower and Jail/Arts Court will be sacrificed (in the best possible way) for bike lanes to link it all together. Hoping they also include a nice link to uOttawa as well.
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  #3056  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2024, 3:14 PM
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Ottawa's speeding, red light cameras raked in $26.6 million last year
In its first three months of operation, a new Automated Speeding Enforcement camera at King Edward Avenue and Bruyère Street dished out 28,742 tickets to drivers exceeding the posted 40 km/h speed limit.

Blair Crawford, Ottawa Citizen
Published Aug 21, 2024 • Last updated 8 minutes ago • 4 minute read




Ottawa has a new king of speed cameras.

In just three months operation after its installation at the beginning of March, the new Automated Speeding Enforcement camera at King Edward Avenue and Bruyère Street dished out 28,742 speeding tickets to drivers exceeding the posted 40 km/h speed limit.

Clearly, if you come at the king, you best not speed.

King Edward topped the 22,914 speeders caught in all of 2023 by last year’s top ticketer, the ASE at St. Laurent Boulevard opposite Rideau High School.

This year that’s not even good enough for second place. That honour belongs to another new camera installed in February on Walkley Road near Halifax Drive. It issued 16,501 tickets between February and June, compared to 11,423 by the St. Laurent camera between January and June.

And, while Mayor Mark Sutcliffe has complained that the federal government is shortchanging Ottawa for Payment in Lieu of Taxes, the city’s automated speed cameras and red-light enforcement cameras haven’t let him down. Together their unblinking eyes brought in more than $26 million in traffic fines in 2023.

Speed cameras accounted for $14.3 million of that total. First installed in 2020, the number of cameras has grown from eight that year to 40 today.

Red-light cameras have been around longer, beginning with six installed in 2000 and growing to 85 in use today. In 2023, red-light cameras resulted in 56,475 charges and generated nearly $12.3 million in revenue. A breakdown of the number of violators caught by each camera is not available on the Open Ottawa website.

Meanwhile, city data show the cameras seem to be effective at reducing speeds, at least while drivers are passing the cameras.

Open Ottawa data show that, in June 2022, the average speed of cars at the St. Laurent camera was 50 km/h, with 60 per cent of drivers complying with the speed limit and only 2.9 per cent identified as “high-end speeders,” defined as exceeding the limit by 15 km/h or more. A year later, in June 2023, the average speed was 47 km/h with 75 per cent compliance and just 1.4 per cent high-end speeders. The numbers have fallen again this year, with an average speed of 45 km/h, 85 per cent compliance and 0.4 per cent high-end speeders in June 2024.

The King Edward Avenue camera recorded an average speed of 36 km/h in March 2024, the first month of data available, with 68 per cent compliance and 2.9 per cent high-end speeders. By June, the average speed past the camera was 33 km/h, compliance was 81 per cent and just one per cent of drivers were high-end speeders.

Rideau-Vanier Coun. Stéphanie Plante says she’s not surprised that the King Edward ASE is nabbing so many speeders, but says cameras are only a small part of making roads safer.

“It’s only part of a larger discussion we have to have about King Edward. Like, why do we have a truck route through a low-income area?” she said. “As long as we think of King Edward as a truck route, we’re not going to solve this problem.”

An ASE ticket is delivered by mail and includes a photo of the car and licence plate along with the date and time of the infraction. Each photo is reviewed by a bylaw officer, who must sign off on the ticket before it’s mailed. The cameras are also regularly checked to make sure they record speeds accurately.

The fine, along with a victim surcharge, is on a sliding scale depending on the speed. The ticket carries no demerit points since the cameras cannot identify who is driving the vehicle. Likewise, an ASE or red-light ticket does not affect insurance rates.

The money generated by the cameras is used to help pay for the city’s road safety action plan, which funds everything from intersection improvements to motorcycle safety courses to giving out lights and reflective gear to cyclists and pedestrians.

But ASE cameras are not without their critics, many of whom have received a ticket or two in the mail. Doug Crosse was mad enough to make a plea to the city’s transportation committee. Yes, the cameras do seem to slow speeders, Crosse says, but poor signage and roads where the speed limit varies by time of day — 30, 40 or 50 km/h — trip up many unwary drivers.

“The signage for what the speed is set so far away from the camera zone, and the fact that so many of these cameras are set up in variable-speed zones depending on the time of day, it just leaves a lot of room for confusion,” Crosse said.

“There’s a little too much guessing go on. People want to comply, but they also don’t want to get caught out by not knowing what the speed is.”

Like it or not, automated speed enforcement is not only here to stay, it’s also expanding. In February, Ottawa city council voted to spend another $2.4 million to increase the program from the present 40 cameras to 60. Eight of those will be part of a pilot project in rural villages, where there are currently no cameras.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...evenue-in-2023
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  #3057  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2024, 10:09 PM
eltodesukane eltodesukane is offline
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If the camera catches a speeding car with a licence plate from Quebec or US, are they also issued a speeding ticket?
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  #3058  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2024, 11:31 PM
DTcrawler DTcrawler is offline
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Originally Posted by eltodesukane View Post
If the camera catches a speeding car with a licence plate from Quebec or US, are they also issued a speeding ticket?
QC yes due to an agreement between provinces. Not sure about other provinces or USA.
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  #3059  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2024, 10:15 PM
eltodesukane eltodesukane is offline
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Saw this today.
I guess it means any car without this sticker will exceed the posted speed limit.
Good to know.
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  #3060  
Old Posted Aug 31, 2024, 4:59 PM
Requin Requin is offline
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I'm not familiar with the west and south end locations, so can't comment on those, but as an Orleans resident, can confirm the observations mentioned in the article below. Agree with Bronson as well.

Quote:
6 of Ottawa's worst transportation headaches, according to residents
Orléans roundabouts and a congested Barrhaven bridge among traffic nightmares in city survey
Arthur White-Crummey · CBC News · Posted: Aug 31, 2024 4:00 AM EDT |
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...ents-1.7309876
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