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Friday, 01 September 2006

Residents Reject Roundabout Options

By Floyd Egner

Publisher, Tropical Breeze

Safety Harbor residents who made written comments regarding a consultant's recommendations in the city's downtown mobility study were two-to-one against the idea of incorporating roundabouts as a solution to reducing traffic congestion.

A total of 46 written responses were received by the city as a result of a public

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hearing held August 16. Several hundred people attended the two-hour open house at the Safety Harbor Community Center, where American Consulting Engineers (ACE) displayed easels with conceptual drawings of several recommendations for changing downtown traffic patterns.

Roundabouts were clearly the most controversial of the recommendations, while strong support was shown for adding more stop signs in the downtown district and building raised brick walkways at cross streets on Main Street.

An analysis of the written comments showed 26 negative comments with 13 positive regarding roundabouts. However, several of the positive comments were split, favoring one of two proposed roundabouts, but not the other. ACE suggested the city construct a roundabout on South Bayshore Boulevard at the intersection with Seventh Street South and consider another on Main Street at the CSX railroad crossing.

(A pdf file containing the written comments is available at TropicalBreeze.com.)

The consultant also suggested raised brick walkways at most of the downtown intersections on Main Street, consideration of additional stop signs and speed humps on side streets and a landscaped median along a portion of South Bayshore with parking on the Bay side of that street, replacing an existing parking lot that could be lost to a roundabout. The walkways are intended to slow Main Street auto traffic and make pedestrian crossings more distinct.

Discussion at the open house was informal, allowing city residents to interact with representatives of the consulting firm and city officials. The written comments revealed the disdain a number of the participants felt.

"American Consulting Engineers should voluntarily offer to refund a significant portion of their fee. Nice pictures. No substance," wrote Safety Harbor resident Howard Sachs. "When asked what local cities or municipalities have successfully implemented these types of ‘improvements,' the ACE representative simply shrugged his shoulders and said, ‘I don't know!'"

"Do not spend any money on supposed aesthetics until drainage and infrastructure issues are resolved," wrote Brian Dean, who also questioned whether traffic calming is needed on Main Street. "Stop signs are cheap. If they do not work, we haven't lost anything."

Some participants associated roundabouts with Clearwater's troubled experience on Clearwater Beach. Six specifically mentioned it as an example of what not to do.

Others, however, had a different perspective.

"Traffic circles are an awesome idea," wrote Nick Friederich, a Safety Harbor resident who also is a design engineer with RS&H, a consulting engineering firm. "Helps slow down cut through traffic but does not impede local traffic. Single lane avoids merge problems similar to Clearwater Beach roundabout. Raised sidewalks also a big positive."

"I am opposed to the addition of roundabouts, except at the intersection of Main Street and Ninth," wrote Sherri Eriksen. "I think this intersection is complicated now and the proposed roundabout would improve traffic flow and create a nice look coming into downtown - providing it doesn't impact the Whistlestop!"

Both Eriksen and city resident George Grant supported the idea of rerouting Bayshore traffic along Iron Age Street to Second Avenue North, actually closing Bayshore as a through street in front of the city's marina.

Two business owners at the west end of Main Street, Stub Munro of Weinert Realty and Owen Linder, M.D., each suggested the city purchase currently vacant property on Tenth Avenue South to create a new municipal parking lot. Linder noted, however, that the asking price for six lots - approximately one-halfblock - is nearly $1 million. A single commercial building on two lots on the adjacent block is priced at $950,000, he added. "Either the building is only worth the land it is sitting on or the vacant land is overpriced," Linder said.

Munro, whose office is on the corner of Tenth and Main, said, "When there is a function at the marina, I have people park in my parking lot at my office. It is not out of the realm of reality to think that if there were a municipal parking lot at this location it would not be used."

An additional criticism of the proposed changes was of the landscaping. Emily Papachristou wrote: "No one wants parking on Bayshore, especially added trees. We want to see the view. We need parking on Main."

 

 
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