
This won't come as a surprise to many of you. But I recently attended a community meeting where someone was advocating for adding new lanes to a particular road. Their argument was that traffic congestion is forcing too many cars to sit needlessly idle and that that is bad for the environment. The proposed solution of adding new lanes would get traffic moving, reduce idling pollution, and therefore be overall better for the environment.
I disagree entirely.
But transportation planning seems to be one of those things that many people feel is intuitive. It's one of those things where people feel confident saying, "I know how to fix this. We just need to do this." But the reality is that cities are incredibly complex organisms and it's not always obvious what should be done. So I think that a big part of making our cities better comes down to having much better data. And that's why I'm very intrigued by the work that startup Viva, and others, are doing.

Viva uses small street-light mounted cameras and machine learning to track urban mobility (see image above). Currently they track 9 different modes: pedestrian, bicycle, e-scooter, motorcycle, car, van, light truck, semi-truck, and bus. And after they collect this data, the relevant information is extracted and then everything else is deleted for privacy reasons. There are also plans to make this data openly available to the public so that people can use it and/or build on top of it.
Obviously this is still going to raise privacy concerns and that is something that will need to be carefully addressed. But I do think that the data from a platform like this is going to be invaluable for cities. Among many other things, it will help us to better allocate space among the various modes and design much safer streets. Hopefully it can also help to take some of the politics out of these sorts of decisions: "Here's the data. Take a look."
Viva currently has 1,000 sensors already installed in London (where they are being used to evaluate the impacts of congestion pricing), and about half a dozen in New York. So it'll be interesting to see what this leads to. And who knows, maybe it will actually turn us all into amateur transportation planners. We'll certainly have access to a lot more data.
For more information on Viva, here's their website.
Image: Viva
A portion of the street that I live on has been thinking about going pedestrian-only for a few years now. Last summer it was pedestrianized for a few weekends. And this summer, it'll be pedestrianized until, I think, September as part of a more extensive pilot project. These sorts of moves can be controversial and so our usual approach is to ease-in with a pilot project.
When our condominium board sent out a notice about the pilot project, they framed it as a closure to vehicles. But of course, the other way to frame this is that the street is now open to pedestrians. And since I happen to walk this street every day (and oftentimes multiple times a day), I've been tweeting out pedestrian usage updates.
Click here to view on Twitter if the embedded tweets below aren't showing up for you properly. Spoiler: it's all working according to plan.
https://twitter.com/donnelly_b/status/1537821386844127235?s=20&t=yqnJR7hfLnnrVOlj3CCApQ
Not every street (or area) is necessarily a good candidate for a pedestrian-first focus. But there are many great examples across the city, including Kensington Market and this stretch of Market Street. So let's start investing in mechanical bollards, as they do in Europe, and make this pilot a permanent fixture.
https://twitter.com/donnelly_b/status/1438656732079722497?s=20&t=yqnJR7hfLnnrVOlj3CCApQ
It is starting to feel like 2021 could be a turning point for "missing middle" type buildings here in Toronto. Momentum seems to be growing and there's increasing interest in finding ways to make this scale of housing more feasible -- everything from duplexes to low-rise walkup apartments.
This week Councillor Bradford published a great op-ed in Spacing Toronto as a kind of call to action: Let's make this year the year. In it, he provided an update on a pilot project that will be taking place in his ward -- Beaches-East York -- this year:
We’ll be setting out this spring to find a city-owned site and the right partners for the project. From there, the work will be to go through every step of the development process, from design to construction. This Pilot is about accomplishing two key tasks. One, building housing that meets the Missing Middle typology while aiming to incorporate the affordability and sustainability elements Toronto needs. Two, through undertaking that development process, to identify the execution issues so we can bring forward the policy corrections that’ll make what we achieve in the Pilot build replicable across the city.
With the continued run-up in single-family home prices, it really is starting to feel like we're at a tipping point. Something is going to need to change. People continue to move to Toronto from all over the world. Perhaps this year will be the year. To learn more about the pilot project, take a look at this update report.