Mayor's idea to ease Crowchild traffic gets traction

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Caption: The city is looking to Calgarians for ideas on how to improve traffic congestion on Crowchild Trail. Mayor Naheed Nenshi suggested one solution could be making the busy road a green-light thoroughfare during rush hour, but he wants to see results from a pilot project in the south before deciding whether it would be a good idea. (CBC)

The idea of a simple solution to the rush-hour traffic congestion on Crowchild Trail had appeal for some Calgarians at another city open house on Thursday night.
The open house was held so the city could take in public feedback on how to improve traffic congestion on the busy thoroughfare.
On the Calgary Eyeopener Thursday, Mayor Naheed Nenshi suggested having only "right-in, right-out" east-west traffic at Fifth Avenue and 24 Avenue northwest during peak traffic hours so Crowchild traffic would flow freely with green lights.
"We really have to improve the flow of traffic on that road," he said.
Nenshi says a similar pilot project is running on Macleod Trail at Lake Fraser Gate.
He wants to wait to see how that works out before pitching the green-light idea for Crowchild.
Ald. Druh Farrell says the city doesn't have the money for more elaborate plans with interchanges and new bridges over the Bow River, but she says other ideas are welcome.
"I would assume that every solution has a problem associated with it," she said.
"You would have to mitigate that, but jumping to conclusions doesn't help either. What I think we need to do is have an open attitude toward different creative ideas."
City planners say Crowchild Trail was designed to handle 70,000 vehicles a day, but now it tops 100,000.
To pitch your own idea on improving Crowchild, the city is accepting comments for the Crowchild Trail Corridor Study(external link) on its website until the end of the month.