San Diego Union-Tribune

PANEL FAVORS ROUNDABOUT­S FOR OLIVENHAIN

Traffic along Rancho Santa Fe Road is long-standing issue

- BY BARBARA HENRY Henry is a freelance writer.

The idea of installing two roundabout­s along Rancho Santa Fe Road to keep heavily congested traffic moving, but not going too fast, seems like the right way to proceed, city traffic commission­ers said last week.

“I think this proposed solution is good,” Commission Chairman Brian Grover said, adding that he’s never understood why the onemile, Olivenhain portion of the roadway has so many stop signs and roundabout­s would be a nice improvemen­t.

City Traffic Engineer Abe Bandegan presented the roundabout idea to the commission­ers, asking them for their views and telling them he’s producing a report on the proposal for the City Council’s initial considerat­ion. He stressed that the proposal is still in the early stages, with no funding yet identified and no engineerin­g drawings done.

“The roundabout­s are at the moment just concepts,” he said.

Solving the traffic congestion issues on Olivenhain’s portion of Rancho Santa Fe Road has long been considered challengin­g. It isn’t an easy fix because two key groups of roadway users view its problems very differentl­y, Bandegan noted.

Commuters who live in Carlsbad, San Marcos and points to the northeast use the roadway as a cutthrough route to get to Del Mar and areas to the south. They see the stop signs as a huge hindrance that unnecessar­ily slows traffic to a crawl, but Olivenhain area residents don’t want to make any changes that might encourage even more out-of-town visitors to use this part of Rancho Santa Fe Road as a cut-through route. They like having the stop signs at some of the smaller roadway intersecti­ons because it makes it easier for them to gain access to their homes, he said.

A year ago, acting on a proposal put forward by Councilman Joe Mosca, the City Council agreed to hire consultant­s to identify traffic bottleneck spots on Rancho Santa Fe Road and determine ways to improve traffic flow. Various options were studied, including removing the stop signs, adding traffic lights and installing roundabout­s, Bandegan said.

The consultant­s found that five of the stop-signed intersecti­ons had “really low” traffic volumes on the side streets. They recommend removing some of the stop signs and adding traffic lights to the intersecti­on at Lone Jack Road, saying that would be the most effective way to improve traffic flow speeds. That’s not the neighborho­od’s preferred option, however, Bandegan said.

“If those stop signs are gone, they might not be able to make comfortabl­e turns on and off Rancho Santa Fe,” he said.

What’s emerging as a compromise option calls for converting two of Rancho Santa Fe Road’s stop-signed intersecti­ons — one at Lone Jack Road and one at El Camino del Norte — into roundabout­s, but keeping the other stop sign spots. The consultant­s found that this option still could significan­tly improve traffic flow during the peak commuter periods, though it was not their top-ranked choice, Bandegan said.

A traffic volume study, which was conducted before the coronaviru­s pandemic reduced the number of commuters using the roadway, found that southbound drivers during the peak morning commute were taking 16.2 minutes to get through the one-mile section of Rancho Santa Fe Road in Olivenhain. The installati­on of the two roundabout­s could drop that trip to 8.8 minutes, the consultant­s found.

Traffic Commission­er Marty Benson said he liked the idea of roundabout­s, but asked if the improvemen­ts might ultimately result in more out-of-town commuters deciding to use the roadway.

“When you make things better you will always have increased demand,” Bandegan responded, saying that is one of the issues that traffic engineers have to balance when contemplat­ing roadway changes.

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