Nova Scotia

Bus-only pilot project approved for Spring Garden Road in Halifax

Halifax regional council has approved a year-long pilot project to keep cars off a section of Spring Garden Road for 13 hours a day, starting in June.

No cars will be permitted from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on a section of the busy road starting in June

Halifax regional council approved a year-long pilot project that would make a section of Spring Garden Road a bus-only zone starting in June. It was originally proposed to start in January, but snow was part of the reason it was moved to a warmer month. (Robert Short/CBC)

Halifax regional council has approved a year-long pilot project to keep cars off a section of Spring Garden Road for 13 hours a day, starting in June.

Once the project begins, buses will be the only vehicles allowed on the busy shopping street in the area between Queen and South Park streets from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Pedestrians and cyclists will also be permitted.

Staff had recommended starting the project in January because that's when road work connected to streetscape improvements is scheduled to end.

"We'll be into winter clearing on a brand new street," said Coun. Waye Mason, chair of the transportation standing committee that brought the proposal to council for a vote.

"I think pushing it out to June gives us a clean start, we need an immaculate implementation." 

According to a report tabled at the transportation standing committee, the pilot project will help improve the reliability of transit buses and access for pedestrians.

Success of the pilot would be assessed based on several factors, including pedestrian, customer, and transit rider experience on the street; public and area resident feedback; average transit travel time; and collision data and traffic volume on surrounding streets.

Municipal planners are also looking to create a metric to measure how businesses are affected.

With files from Pam Berman