zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Beyond Cars
/
Manhattan's 14th Street Will Ban Cars Starting Thursday
Manhattan's 14th Street Will Ban Cars Starting Thursday-January 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:14:02

Yes I know the M42 runs across 42nd St and this article is about the M14 across 14th St but you’d be surprised how few photos there are of the M14.

If you’re looking for a microcosm of why traffic in American cities keeps getting worse, look no further than Manhattan’s 14th Street. One of the city’s busiest streets and an important crosstown route, the wide boulevard is constantly snarled in gridlock, a state of affairs that has only gotten worse in the last few years.

To remedy this, the city tried to make it a bus-priority road, but by the courts for months. Finally, an appeals court ruled the busway can, in fact, be implemented this week while the lawsuit is litigated. So, barring any last-minute surprises, cars will only be allowed to drive down 14th Street for garage access, pick-ups, and drop-offs.

In other words, all private cars will have to take the first right turn off 14th Street they encounter from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Emergency vehicles and delivery trucks will still have full access to the busy Manhattan route.

This may sound radical, but it is a common-sense solution to a basic problem. There are too many cars in Manhattan, and 14th Street specifically. Nobody is getting where they need to go. It is costing everyone valuable time; not just bus riders, but truck drivers, pedestrians, ridehail riders (or drivers if they’re en route to pick up a fare), and everyone else with somewhere to be. The only solution in very busy corridors like this one is to get as many people into more efficient transportation modes as possible. Many European cities are experimenting with , an idea we’ve supported because driving in a dense city center sucks anyway and it’s good to have options for how to get around.

Oslo, the capital city of Norway, has announced plans to permanently cut almost 350,000 motorists…

For 14th Street, this means prioritizing buses so everyone, whether they’re on a bus or not, can get where they’re going faster.

Here are some details from :

A 1.1 mile stretch from 3rd Avenue to 9th Avenue, bordering Greenwich Village and Chelsea, will turn into a “busway” restricting car and truck traffic, creating a corridor of express buses, wide bike lanes and pedestrian-friendly walkways. The crosstown M14 bus, which carries about 27,000 riders a day, now takes more than 10 minutes to travel those six blocks during weekday rush hour.

“New Yorkers who ride the M14 are about to see their bus line transformed from one of the city’s slowest, into one of the fastest, practically overnight,” said Thomas DeVito, director of advocacy for Transportation Alternatives, a group pushing for policies to limit car-use and encourage mass transit and bikes in the city. “This should bring an end to the legal shenanigans that have been holding up these improvements for months on end.”

While the green light for the busway is good news for New Yorkers looking to get places whether they’re in a car or not, the busway’s future still an open question in the dumbest way possible.

Before we get to the lawsuit, it’s worth illustrating precisely how badly 14th Street needs a more efficient way to move traffic. Since 2013, ridership on the M14, the bus line that runs directly across 14th Street, . One can craft a convoluted socioeconomic explanation for why M14 ridership has plummeted, but it’s really not that complicated. to walk across 14th Street than to take the bus because of the horrendous traffic.

While this is an extreme example, the dynamic at play is far from unique to 14th Street, or indeed to New York City. The proliferation of Uber and Lyft has flooded the downtown zones across America with tens of thousands of additional cars, making traffic .

The 14th Street busway appeared to be a solution until a neighborhood coalition , as it has become known, because of the effects they believe it will have on the surrounding streets. Originally , the coalition has successfully blocked its implementation ever since.

Dumb people file dumb lawsuits all the time, but the extraordinary aspect of this one has been its success in delaying the busway rollout for months, inconveniencing the 26,000 bus riders who still use the M14 despite its glacial pace. But it appears the busway can finally go into effect on Thursday to lift the temporary restraining order against the busway while the lawsuit is litigated.

And the lawsuit is indeed a dumb one. In effect, they’re contending the increased traffic on side streets will cause environmental harm to the people who live there by directing traffic to 12th and 13th Streets, a disingenuous argument on its face because far more environmental harm comes from thousands of additional private cars in their neighborhoods every day because people stopped riding buses. They also argue that traffic on side roads will slow emergency responders and potentially endanger their lives, which also doesn’t make sense considering those same side roads are currently clogged with cars, but the busway will allow ambulances and fire trucks to traverse the city much more rapidly (the FDNY because of worsening traffic).

Plus, it’s not like this is a new or novel solution. Cities all over the world have busways, which increase transit and bike use and, in fact, reduce emissions in the surrounding area. One such city is... New York, in downtown Brooklyn’s Fulton Street Mall area for decades.

The 14th Street Busway is modeled after the King Street project in Toronto, which was launched to speed up the city’s streetcar that runs along the busy thoroughfare (spoiler: ). Ironically, i, New York City moderated the King Street plan to allow delivery trucks along 14th Street so they don’t use the side streets as often.

Driving a car in Manhattan is often a terrible experience (let’s not even talk about finding parking there), and Manhattan buses have the potential to be much more useful if only they could get out of said traffic. Proven solutions like busways and bus-only lanes with physical barriers separating them from traffic could make Manhattan easier to get around. That’s something everyone should be able to support.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Beyond Cars
TSA Has Found More Than 4,600 Guns at Checkpoints In 2022, and Most of Them Were Loaded
TSA Has Found More Than 4,600 Guns at Checkpoints In 2022, and Most of Them Were Loaded
Despite strict rules on everything from the volume of liquids you can carry to how much of your face you can expose, passengers are still breaking the most simple rule of flying: don’t bring loaded fire arms through security. This year is on track to be the worst year...
Jan 30, 2026
Lamborghini Delivers its First $3.5 Million Yacht to the U.S.
Lamborghini Delivers its First $3.5 Million Yacht to the U.S.
The first of Lamborghini’s yachts have arrived in America and, while the 63-foot craft is highly exclusive, it just seems. Capable of 63 knots (or about 72 mph) the first “Tecnomar for Lamborghini 63" arrived at in Miami this week—with more on the way. If you’re wondering how many...
Jan 30, 2026
There’s Finally a Plan to Clean Up All That Space Junk
There’s Finally a Plan to Clean Up All That Space Junk
Do you ever look up at the night sky and see something streak across the darkness? It’s not flashing, so it isn’t a plane. Could it be a shooting star? Quick, make a wish! Chances are, it’s one of the stuck orbiting the Earth. In total, there are currently...
Jan 30, 2026
Over 28,000 Travelers Flooded Into Seattle Airport in Just 6 Hours
Over 28,000 Travelers Flooded Into Seattle Airport in Just 6 Hours
Travelers attempting to fly out of the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Sunday were greeted with a security line so long it stretched into the parking deck. The 2.5-hour long wait at security caused missed flights for those who thought they were arriving with plenty of time to spare. The...
Jan 30, 2026
GM Made a Self-Propelled, Temperature Controlled Electronic Grocery Cart
GM Made a Self-Propelled, Temperature Controlled Electronic Grocery Cart
General Motors’ , has been busy. In addition to supplying FedEx with a bunch of new electric parcel delivery trucks (), it’s also been coming up with smaller electric-powered devices. We’ve seen the EP1, a motorized pallet designed to make things easier for delivery drivers. On Monday, Brightdrop announced...
Jan 30, 2026
Listen to the U.S. Space Force's New Anthem,
Listen to the U.S. Space Force's New Anthem, "Semper Supra"
, the Rodney Dangerfield of military branches, now has its own goofy-ass song to go along with its goofy-ass existence that . “Semper Supra” was released on an unsuspecting world during Chief of Space Operations Gen. John “Jay” Raymond’s speech at the 2022 Air & Space Forces Association’s Air, Space...
Jan 30, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved