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Agenda - 05-15-1990 (2)
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Agenda - 05-15-1990 (2)
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BOCC
Date
5/15/1990
Meeting Type
Public Hearing
Document Type
Agenda
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the streets would be served. Local streets may be further <br />classified as either residential, commercial, and /or industrial <br />depending upon the type of land use they serve. <br />Minor thoroughfares are more important streets in the city <br />system. They collect traffic from local access streets and <br />carry it to the major thoroughfare system. They may in some <br />instances supplement the major thoroughfare system by facilitating <br />minor through traffic movements. A third function which may be <br />performed is that of providing access to abutting property. They <br />should be designed to serve limited areas so that their develop- <br />ment as major thoroughfares will be prevented. <br />Major thoroughfares are the primary traffic arteries of the <br />city. Their function is to move intracity and intercity traffic. <br />The streets which comprise the major thoroughfare system may also <br />serve abutting property, however, THEIR MAJOR FUNCTION IS TO CARRY <br />TRAFFIC. They should not be bordered by uncontrolled strip <br />development because such development significantly lowers the <br />capacity of the thoroughfare to carry traffic and each driveway is <br />a danger and an impediment to traffic flow. Major thoroughfares <br />may range from a two -lane street carrying minor traffic volumes to <br />major expressways with four or more traffic lanes. Parking <br />normally should not be permitted on major thoroughfares. <br />IDEALIZED MAJOR THOROUGHFARE SYSTEM <br />A coordinated system of major thoroughfares forms the basic <br />framework of the urban street system. A major thoroughfare system <br />which is most adaptable to desire lines of travel within an urban <br />area and which permits movement between various areas of the city <br />with maximum directness is the radial -loop system. This system <br />consists of several functional elements - radial streets, crosstown <br />streets, loop system streets, and bypasses (Figure 2). <br />Radial streets provide for traffic movement between points <br />located in the outskirts of the city and the central area. Radial <br />flow is a major traffic movement in most cities, and the economic <br />strength of the central business district depends upon the <br />adequacy of this type of thoroughfare. <br />If all radial streets crossed in the central area, an in- <br />tolerable congestion problem would result. To avoid this problem, <br />it is very important to have a system of crosstown streets which <br />form a loop around the central business district. This system <br />allows traffic moving from origins on one side of the central area <br />to destinations on the other to follow the area's border and <br />allows central area traffic to circle and then enter the area near <br />a given destination. The effect of a good crosstown system is to <br />free the central area of crosstown traffic, thus permitting the <br />central area to function more adequately in its role as a <br />E:3 <br />
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