Downtown Montreal borough unveils plan to reduce traffic on residential streets following death of schoolgirl - Action News
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Montreal

Downtown Montreal borough unveils plan to reduce traffic on residential streets following death of schoolgirl

New speed bumps, street closures and on-way streets are coming to Ville-Marie as part of the borough's plan to make its streets safer for pedestrians.

Ville-Marie to install speed bumps, close some streets, turn others into one-ways

Roses at an intersection.
A seven-year-old girl was killed in a hit and run in December, sparking cries for safer streets in Ville-Marie. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Months after the hit-and-run death of a seven-year-old in a school zone in Ville-Marie,the downtown Montreal borough has announced new measures to make its residential streets safer for pedestrians andreduce the number of cars travelling through the area.

"Unfortunately, we've seen in the past months a big increase in collisions in our streets," said Sophie Mauzerolle, city councillor for the Sainte-Marie districtand the person responsible for transportation and mobility on the city's executive committee.

"We all remember the tragic incident that occurred in December when little Mariia[Lehenkovska]died a few blocks from here."

Mauzerolle said the goal is to reduce the level of transit in the area to protect the elderly, children and other vulnerable populations.

The measures includethe closing of streets and the redirectionof traffic.

According to the plan, announced on Thursday, one block ofLarivire Street (between De Lorimier Avenue and Parthenais Street)will be completely closed to cars, and sections of Ottawa, Sainte-Rose and Clark streets will also be closed.

Artist's drawing of street with parasols and tables, with large planters blocking access.
One block of Larivire Street will be closed to vehicles starting this summer. The closure will become permanent next year 2024. (City of Montreal)

Fullum, Parthenais, de Rouen, Peel, Hope and Sussex streets will change direction or be converted into one-way streets, while Saint-Christophe, Berthier, Sainte-Rose, du Square-Amherst streets and Clark Street near the intersection of Maisonneuve Boulevard will be redeveloped.

The borough also announced it would install over 100 speed bumps throughout the area to reduce speeding, especially in the Centre-Sud neighbourhood.

As for school zones, the borough said it may add road markings and signsor close off more streets.

In January, the borough announced the reconfiguration of four streetsinto one-ways toincreasepedestrian safety in school zones and neardaycares.

Cyclists on a bike path with a school bus nearby.
The changes are meant to make it safer for schoolchildren, pedestrians and the elderly on residential streets in downtown Montreal. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Advocates for safer Ville-Marie weigh in

Mathieu Murphy-Perron, a member of Vlorution Montral, a cycling advocacy group, said the plan is "exciting in many ways," and welcomed the news of Larivire Street closing.

Murphy-Perron said drivers usethe street as a quick shortcut to get around the city, putting pedestrians at risk.

"If people think that they can save two minutes by cutting through the neighbourhood, they're going to do it because everybody's pressed for time and every time that they do they are putting people in harm's way because those streets are not meant to be driven down in that way."

Plastic sticks in a road.
The borough of Ville-Marie is closing some of its streets to cars and reconfiguring others to increase pedestrian safety. (City of Montreal)

Chris McCray, co-founder of the Collectif apaisement pour Sainte-Marie, a group that advocates for reducing traffic in the borough's Sainte-Marie neighborhood, also approves.

"It seems like it might seem like a small change, but it's actually a pretty big source of traffic in the neighbourhood around our residential streets and in front of schools," said McCray.

"We're also happy to see the 110 new speed bumps that are going to be added."

Overall, McCray said the group is satisfied with the measures, but he said Ville-Marie has a lot more to do when it comes to pedestrian safety to catch up to other parts of the city like the Plateau.

"We need these measures to be kind of accelerated and we need them to be put into place not just in this specific area," he said, adding that the current proposals are focused on the area where the seven-year-old was killed in the hit-and-run in December.

"Mariia's death, I think, was kind of a wake up call for a lot of people, not just in not just in Montreal, but in the entire province, that a lot needed to be done to secure, especially for kids and elderly people."

with files from John Ngala