Also, there appears to be no count for University/Campus Drive at UBay/Farley.

The UW and UW Hospital complex continued to build and add jobs like crazy the 
past several years, so there are certainly more people heading there. 

However, there have also been lots of road maintenance projects in the area the 
past several years, both toward Midvale and Breeze, so that may have 
discouraged some drivers.  

However, there also seems to be no data to tell whether commuters are simply 
by-passing both the Univ. Ave.  repairs of the street and lane closures at UW 
construction on Johnson, and using Farley, Highland and Bluff/Kendall to access 
the campus area.  Traffic has been backed up severely at the union of Campus 
and "Old" University for at least two years, undoubtedly compelling some folks 
to use a different route. 

I think it will be several years (if ever?) before traffic patterns readjust to 
a lull in repairs and lane closures.


Jeff Schimpff
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Madison, WI
608-267-7853
"Bus, Bike, Carpool to Work for Clean Air for Kids"

"Pedestrians and cyclists are the indicator species of a healthier community"

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Lemberger
Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2010 11:45 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bikies] Annual Traffic Vol

On Jun 3, 2010, Larry Nelson wrote:

> [regarding lower traffic counts in the central city...] I speculate that less 
> traffic in the central part of the city is a reflection of less jobs and less 
> commercial sites that generate traffic.  Traffic on the perimeter of the city 
> continues to increase, suggesting that people are traveling around the city 
> rather than to the city.

I'd prefer to see this claim backed up by more than traffic counts. I'd 
speculate that they are not enough to draw such a conclusion.

In particular, there's no mention of transit in the report. Metro ridership has 
continued to grow over the same period, to unprecedented numbers, in spite of a 
substantial fare increase:

<http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/article_2b5d0c9c-20a1-58f3-b25d-ea83686c89fa.html>

Would it be correct to assume that a traffic counter sees a bus as a single 
vehicle? Also, looking at a route map, the current Metro structure appears to 
be geared primarily to serve those areas where overall vehicle counts have 
declined.

Also absent from this report is any relationship between traffic patterns and 
the increase in residential density on or near the isthmus. It's doubtful that 
a decade of high-rise condo construction has lowered the population downtown. 
One could reasonably assume that at least some of those residents would make 
some larger percentage of their trips without a single-occupant motor vehicle 
than their suburban counterparts. Perhaps this wouldn't seem all that 
significant to individuals in either group, but it could be quite significant 
in the aggregate. The results of the current census may offer some insight here.

I'm not surprised to see a decline in bike counts, given where the counts are 
placed. Note that the drop occurs within a year of the August 2006 opening of 
the Greenbush segment of the Capital City Trail. It would be very interesting 
to see separate numbers from the John Nolen and Brittingham counters. I suspect 
that the former remained relatively constant and the latter declined 
substantially. Anecdotally, as a regular year-round commuter, bike traffic has 
not declined on the John Nolen to Greenbush to Southwest path corridor over the 
last three years, and has probably increased.



On Jun 3, 2010, Chuck Strawser wrote:

> As far as data collection goes, there is a subordination of bikes (and 
> pedestrians) to Motor Vehicles, since with the one exception you pointed out, 
> Motor Vehicles are all the city counts.

Whether it be subordination or simple neglect, this sums up why this report 
does not address whether there is more or less activity in downtown. It begs 
the question of whether an accurate measure of a city's life is how many motor 
vehicles it can accommodate on any given day.

Michael Lemberger
Madison, WI
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