The Day

DAVID COLLINS New London is diverting traffic from downtown

- d.collins@theday.com

I will say upfront that I don’t like the experiment­al traffic arrangemen­t on Bank Street, which now offers two buffer zones for people but just one lane for cars. Of course, I don’t get a vote. And the people who do — or should, anyway — seem to like it a lot.

At least that’s what I learned on a stroll up and down Bank Street this week, asking any downtown merchants I could find about the new single lane of traffic for cars.

Everyone I talked to likes the change. They said it has calmed the street, made it more pedestrian friendly and safer.

Moreover, they say they’ve heard from customers who also report that they like the change, which makes it easier to park.

Still, I can’t help being a bit curmudgeon­ly about it.

It reminds me of the old days when they eliminated traffic completely on upper State Street and christened it a pedestrian mall, Captain’s Walk. People were excited then, too. Then it killed all the business there. Recorded music wafted across the empty pavers and the concrete planters in the shape of whales that had been installed over the old road bed.

But by the time the city admitted the mistake and reopened the street to traffic, it was too late, and too many of the storefront­s that had gone empty remained so.

I know that changing Bank Street from two lanes of traffic to one is much different.

But it seems to be conceived in the same vein, to wring out the urban culture that comes with a busy crowded street. That’s why people gravitate to cities in the first place.

If you want calm and more generous parking spaces, go the mall.

There have been two lanes of traffic on Bank Street since there have been cars. The city has survived that all these years.

Think of a 1969 Plymouth and the days when long-fendered behemoths like that filled two lanes of Bank Street.

This experiment of narrowing the space allotted to passing cars on Bank Street already is causing drivers to avoid the downtown altogether.

I found and followed some of these detour-seeking drivers, many of them Electric Boat workers leaving the city at the end of the work day.

Choosing to avoid the new Bank Street bottleneck is a no-brainer, as traffic now naturally backs up where two lanes merge into one.

The detouring drivers are finding their way through a warren of neighborho­od streets, often driving fast, to make their way up to the Interstate 95 entrance from Huntington Street.

Diverting traffic from a commercial thoroughfa­re into residentia­l neighborho­ods seems misguided to me.

I know this is only part of proposed downtown traffic pattern changes,

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