City of Lynn, MassDOT, MBTA complete first bus lane for the area and a network of bike lanes to improve commutes
A series of quick-build multimodal road treatments along North Common Street, South Common Street and Market Street in Lynn, Mass., has been completed by the city of Lynn, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) and the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA).
Multimodal road improvements include shared bus-bike lanes and dedicated bike lanes. These quick-build changes are a part of the Baker-Polito Administration’s efforts to support safe, sustainable transportation modes in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The bus facilities are in effect immediately.
“This is a vital link for moving Lynn residents through their city and to other critical connections, whether it is to the Northern Strand Community Trail or the Blue Line at Wonderland,” said Acting Transportation Secretary Jamey Tesler. “In 2019, in partnership with the city of Lynn, we launched the Lynn Transit Action Plan to identify strategies to make transit service faster and more reliable for Lynn residents. After the plan recommended this project, we worked quickly to advance it to design and construction. And thanks to the city’s dedication and leadership, Lynn residents will now have faster, more convenient and more comfortable trips on buses and bikes.”
“Ridership on Lynn bus routes like the 455 has been resilient throughout the pandemic,” said MBTA General Manager Steve Poftak. “Systemwide bus ridership is around 44 percent compared to pre-COVID data, but ridership for the Route 455 has been one of the most durable, maintaining about 60-65 percent of its pre-COVID passengers. These are essential trips, and the bus lane on North Common Street will make transit service safer and more reliable for Lynn riders. We are grateful to our partners, Mayor McGee and the city of Lynn and MassDOT, for helping to bring this to fruition.”
The need for bus priority on North Common Street was identified as a recommendation through MassDOT’s Lynn Transit Action Plan, an ongoing planning initiative in partnership with the city of Lynn to make it easier for Lynn residents to get where they need to go with public transit. The Lynn Transit Action Plan aims to identify strategies for faster, more reliable transit services for the city into Boston and throughout the North Shore through improvements to bus, subway, ferry and Commuter Rail service. According to MassDOT, at the time of analysis, bus riders experienced delays of up to four minutes during peak travel times along the 0.75 miles of roadway.
The project also provides traffic calming benefits that improve safety for all road users by better organizing previously wide streets along several sections. Narrowing lanes through striping has been shown to encourage slower speeds and greater safety. The bike lane elements are a key connection between the Northern Strand Community Trail near Western Avenue and downtown Lynn.
The Baker-Polito Administration launched the Shared Streets & Spaces program to support quick-build projects that can bring meaningful benefits to cities and towns. The program is modeled after the administration’s Complete Streets Funding Program, created in February 2016, which, as of January 2020, has awarded a total $46 million to cities and towns for municipal projects improving infrastructure to improve safety for pedestrians, bicyclists, motorists, and public transportation customers.
Building on the success of the Shared Streets and Spaces initiative first launched during the summer of 2020, MassDOT extended the program to help municipalities address the particular challenges of winter amid the ongoing public health crisis. Shared Winter Streets and Spaces provided cities and towns with grants as small as $5,000 and as large as $500,000 to improve plazas, sidewalks, curbs, streets, parking areas and other public spaces in support of public health, safe mobility and renewed commerce.