It is an incredibly frustrating and sobering reality. For years, national traffic safety studies like Smart Growth America’s Dangerous by Design report have consistently placed the Lakeland-Winter Haven metropolitan area right in the hot zone—often ranking among the top 10 or 20 deadliest metro areas in the entire country for pedestrians.
The issue is deeply embedded in how the local infrastructure was built. Decades ago, many of Polk County’s major thoroughfares were designed as high-speed connectors running between towns, orange groves, and ranches. As the population exploded, those same rural highways transformed into busy commercial corridors lined with strip malls, residential communities, and restaurants—but the road design itself didn’t evolve to protect people on foot.
Several specific factors create this dangerous environment across the county:
- Priority on Speed: Major roads are wide, speed limits are high, and crossing distances are long, meaning pedestrians are exposed to moving traffic for a significant amount of time.
- Missing Infrastructure: A lack of continuous sidewalks and dedicated bike lanes forces people to walk along the shoulders of busy roads.
- Poor Visibility: Many serious and fatal incidents occur at night or during twilight hours on stretches of road with minimal street lighting.
High-Priority Danger Zones
According to local crash data from the Polk Transportation Planning Organization (TPO), accidents happen throughout the county, but specific hotspots consistently see the highest rates of pedestrian incidents.
High-Crash Corridor / IntersectionCommon Safety Challenges…