Valentine Street Gets a Pedestrian Crosswalk, a Makeover, and More, at the Carriage Road

Before

At first, for drivers of the Carriage Road, the STOP sign was too far from the intersection. We had it moved closer to the intersection and DPW installed a second STOP sign on the right side.

The only existing STOP sign was located at Commonwealth Avenue.

Still drivers would stop and wait in “the box,” thus blocking pedestrians and bicyclists from travel east/west.

DPW added a STOP sign on the right, but it was under the tree limbs and not particularly visible, esp as drivers were coming out of a bend in the road. So a second and larger stop sign was installed on the left. It too didn’t help much to get drivers to stop.

A Pedestrian/Bicyclist sign was added for drivers from Comm Ave, by DPW engineer, Zach Bosch.

Before

After working with Parks and Recreation to keep these bushes off the sidewalk.

Before

After working with Parks and Recreation to trim bushes and trees so pedestrians can safety and comfortably pass.

Chief Carmichael agreed that 1) the STOP sign needed to be relocated closer to Valentine (see left image) and 2) a second stop sign added on the right (see right image). DPW did both.

Chief Carmichael noted that a pedestrian crosswalk needed to be installed at the base of Valentine Street, before it intersected with the Carriage Road. After the Carriage Road was repaved in 2023, new ADA-compliant curb cuts are installed. A pedestrian crosswalk was installed across Valentine, as well as several others: One was added across the Carriage Road berm to the east of Valentine and then across Commonwealth Ave, for people wanting to safely cross Commonwealth Avenue; and another one was installed to the west of Valentine across the berm from the Carriage Road and then across Commonwealth Avenue.

Bullough Park and the Carriage Lane

This section is a special case: As Bulloughs Park approaches Commonwealth Avenue, it bisects a section of the Carriage Lane on the east that is open to EB driving, and a section of Carriage Lane on the west that is a footpath only, and closed to motor vehicles.

It is also a very popular section: Drivers get a view of Bulloughs Pond on their right, and also get to bypass the traffic light at Walnut Street.

This design however has presented several dangers. We identified a few problems and a few solutions and below you will see how these have turned out.

First, in 2012 at our request, DPW added an “EXCEPT BIKES” sign to the bottom of the “Do Not Enter” – which had previously not had any such signage at all – where the footpath begins, for those heading west:

Footpath between Bullough Park and Walnut St: View west toward Walnut Street

Another problem was the cobbled area immediately east of the intersection. The cobbles were seriously coming apart, with gaps as wide as 8 inches, and this presented a serious tripping hazard to the thousands who walked and ran here.

It took some time, but in the autumn of 2017 DPW removed the cobbles and replaced them with a new experimental surface.The Dept of Public Works was so proud of their work that they even tweeted about it (The Tweet has since been deleted, as the DPW isn’t carrying Tweets earlier than 2018 now.):

Carriage Lane before Bulloughs Park, after

With the rise in the popularity of walking on the Carriage Lane, we noticed that people started parking their cars on Bullough Park, very close to the intersection with the footpath, and this would block a southbound driver’s ability to see a pedestrian or bicyclists exiting the footpath area. Councilor Downs agreed to docket regulations that prohibited parking for some distance north of that footpath.

Potential Danger!
Once again, thank you to Councilor Downs for docketing this new signage.

Recently we put in a request to add a pedestrian crosswalk here. Due to regulatory requirements, that request could not be fulfilled, but engineer Isaac Prizant worked with the Traffic Coordinator to add additional signage here, to awaken, and warn, drivers to the existence of bicyclists and pedestrians using this area as a crossing along the Carriage Lane. (The original diamond-shaped signs were added in 2015 by Transportation Zach Bosch (at our request) at various locations up and down the Carriage Lane.)

view north (for drivers just leaving Commonwealth Avenue and turning onto Bulloughs Park.
View south toward Commonwealth Avenue. Note new sign on the right.

More recently, Traffic Council approved a parking restriction and added, all new signage on existing poles to ensure visibility of exiting runners.