Tag Archives: North Avenue Westport CT

Standing On The Corner

Alert “06880” reader Terry Brannigan has an interesting view of morning traffic:  He lives on North Avenue, sandwiched between Staples and Bedford.

Yesterday morning — with driving conditions difficult — he watched in amazement as a “parade of cars” delivered students to school, one by one.

“What do you suppose the reason is?” he wondered.  “Did they miss the bus?  Is it a privilege?  I just don’t get it.”

Terry is not the first Westporter to see something wrong with nearly empty school buses sharing the road with almost empty cars.  “06880” has been down this road before.

Parents cite compelling reasons why they must chauffeur their child to school.

  • “It’s the only time I have to talk with him.”
  • “It’s on my way to the station.”
  • “She’d have to get up earlier to make the bus.”

All true, I’m sure.  But multiply each reason by each car, and it’s a recipe for congestion.  (Which means getting up earlier.  And taking more time to get to the station.  And — be honest — what kind of chat can you have when your kid is listening to an iPod and texting?)

After noting that Al Gore would be “appalled at the ecological cost of cars idling in a line that must stretch for 2 miles,” Terry added:

It strikes me as so odd.  My wife and I believe making the bus every morning is a badge of honor.

For 3 years we have had Sal for the bus to Long Lots.  You can set your watch by him, and he is equal parts safe driver, teacher, referee and uncle.

We love him, and enjoy seeing him every morning.  He smiles and shrugs his shoulders at the line of traffic he endures along North Ave that impacts his schedule, but he doesn’t complain.  (I hope he doesn’t take it personally!)

The boys and I were out there again this morning, standing our post.  We turned down 2 rides to school — it was a matter of pride.  I may be developing the next generation of Irish martyr.

But seriously, it seems like on a day like today, the number of valets increases when we should try to keep the roads as clear as possible.

Or any day.

Maybe these would be cooler than yellow school buses?

Let’s Meet At…

Well, it looks like the “06880” community’s idea of using the Wakeman Park cut-through to alleviate North Avenue/Cross Highway traffic hit a dead end.

The simple fix would have saved residents, commuters and school-bound teenagers and parents countless man- and woman-hours each year.

Whatever.

However, examining that traffic flow problem made me realize the issue is more than just too many drivers trying to fit onto not enough asphalt.  There’s also the fact that Cross Highway and North Avenue don’t intersect neatly.

Rather than a clean 4-way stop, the two major roads angle into each other.  That was fine when they started out, as cow paths probably, and it may not have been an issue when there were only a couple of flivvers an hour.

Cross Highway and North Avenue: It's every man, woman and child for him or herself.

But in 2010, when every Westporter owns a car and every car is driven by Westporters who haven’t exactly memorized the rules of the road, the amount of traffic is compounded by the uncertainty of who goes next.  Those moments of hesitancy — of waiting for the other guy to go, or (more likely) both gals going at the same time, then stopping, then starting again — add up quickly.

Cross Highway and North Avenue are not our only mis-aligned intersections.  Myrtle and Imperial Avenues downtown stare crookedly at each other across the Post Road; despite a traffic light, hesitancy abounds over who goes when.  Traffic backs up unnecessarily.

For non-alignment, nothing beats the CVS and Trader Joe’s entrances and exits.  Just a few yards apart, this is such a mess that I’m sure an entire segment of Westporters simply refuses to shop at Compo and Compo Acres Shopping Centers.

If you manage to leave that area without being killed, and find your way to the end of North Compo, you’ll come to another poorly aligned intersection:  the one with Clinton Avenue, across Main Street.

Interestingly, the worst intersection in the entire town state country galaxy is less than a quarter mile away: Easton Road/Weston Road/Main Street, near the Merritt exit 42 on-off ramps.  At this spaghetti bowl of neck-wrenching twists and turns, only a couple of stop and yield signs offers guidance.

Yet everyone navigates this bottleneck safely, smoothly — and relatively quickly.  There are backups, sure, but none of the frenzied jostling and I’ll-pretend-I-didn’t-see-you maneuvers that are de rigeur elsewhere in town.

Could it be that the sheer complexity of that maze forces people to pay attention, follow rules, even practice common courtesy?

And if so, does that mean we should make North Avenue and Cross Highway more tough to navigate, rather than less, in order to improve traffic flow, blood pressure, and daily Westport life?

North Avenue Wrecking Ball

The North Avenue streetscape will soon change.

The handsome red barn near the corner of Long Lots Road is slated for demolition.

Several handsome trees have already been cut.

The barn has been part of the neighborhood for decades.

Fortunately, it is in a residential neighborhood.  So they can’t put a bank there.

Right?

North Avenue Nightmare

No, it’s not Bigfoot.  It’s just a few of the dozens of craters, cracks, ruts, holes and other chassis-jarring surprises lurking up and down North Avenue.

Well, hey, it’s winter — what do you expect?

Well, hey — no.  Adjacent roads — Long Lots and Cross Highway, for example — are in much better shape.

Maybe it’s an older surface?

Nice try.  North Avenue was resurfaced in, um, the summer of 2009.

So do roads come with warranties, like cars and microwaves?

Now you’re talkin’.