Richmond wants you to know where people are speeding most

Richmond is giving the public access to its speed data dashboard.

Why it matters: The city uses it to direct traffic engineers and planners where to focus their attention, and now they want drivers to use it to make safer choices.

The big picture: It’s part of the city’s years-long effort to make Richmond streets safer through its Vision Zero plan.

  • Richmond has ramped up its safer street efforts in recent years in response to surging pedestrian deaths by adding school zone speed cameras and traffic calming measures, like back-in angle parking.
  • The dashboard has existed for about a year, and Mayor Danny Avula decided to make it public as part of his administration’s “commitment to transparency.”

How it works: The data is compiled from locals’ cell phone and car GPS systems, per a news release last week. It’ll tell you where people are speeding in the city and how fast they’re going.

  • Take Semmes Avenue in South Richmond, where the posted speed limit is 30 mph. Per the dashboard, 85% of drivers there are going 31 mph or less.
  • It’s a different story over on the Fan’s busy West Main Street, where the speed limit is 25 mph. Only 50% are hitting 26 mph or less.

The intrigue: The dashboard doesn’t just show speeders. If you click around, you can find the places in town where drivers are crawling through the city.

  • Take West Grace Street in the Fan, which, like Main, is pedestrian-heavy, but unlike Main, has narrower streets and more traffic-calming measures, like four-way stops.
  • There, the posted speed limit is also 25 mph, but 95% of drivers are clocking in at 18 mph or under. 50% are going 13 mph or under.

Fun fact: 13 mph is just one tick higher than a “gentle breeze,” per the National Weather Service…

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