HomeMy WebLinkAbout2025-08-26 - Agendas - Final
City Hall Room 101
Fayetteville, AR 72701
Transportation Committee Agenda
(Immediately Following City Council Agenda Session)
City Hall Room 101 / Virtual Meeting Via Zoom
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
5:30 PM
Members
Council Member Robert "Bob" Stafford
Council Member Sarah Moore
Council Member Sarah Bunch
Council Member Min. Monique Jones
City Staff
Public Works Director / City Engineer Chris Brown
Assistant Public Works / Transportation Services Director Terry Gulley
Transportation Committee August 26, 2025
City of Fayetteville, Arkansas Page 2
Zoom Information
Webinar ID: https://fayetteville-ar.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_z2-
gkTITQyCV3o9EgqlUfA
Registration Link:
Call to Order
Roll Call
New Business
Hwy 112 Median Opening Request
Hwy 112 (Garland Ave) – Request to Modify Raised Median
Reports and Presentations
Summary Plans for SS4A Education and Awareness
Informational Items
Adjournment
NOTICE TO MEMBERS OF THE AUDIENCE
Mailing address:
113 W. Mountain Street
Fayetteville, AR 72701
www.fayetteville-ar.gov
Transportation Committee Memo
2025-1534
Meeting of August 26, 2025
To: Transportation Committee
Thru: Molly Rawn, Mayor
Keith Macedo, Chief of Staff
Chris Brown, Public Works Director
From: Paul Libertini, Staff Engineer
Subject: Hwy 112 (Garland Ave) – Request to Modify Raised Median
Recommendation:
Staff requests that the Transportation Committee select one of the options presented today as a solution to an
appeal from a resident of Bradford Place to modify a raised median on Hwy 112.
Background:
The City has agreement in place with the Arkansas Department of Transportation (ARDOT) to design and
construct Garland Avenue from Janice Ave to Drake Street, approximately 1.0 miles. ARDOT is paying 100%
of the design, land acquisition and construction with the stipulation that the City will take over the ownership
and maintenance of Garland Avenue. The construction plans are ready to bid once some right-of-way issues
are resolved.
On May 9, 2019, the Transportation Committee approved a recommendation to City Council to hire Burns &
McDonnell Engineering Company for professional services to design this highway project. A static, web-based
public information meeting was made available to the public by the City from March 9, 2022 until April 6, 2022
on the City’s Speak Up Fayetteville website. Informational letters were sent to property owners containing a
link to Speak Up Fayetteville & a QR code. The letter for Bradford Place was mailed to Harris-McHaney
Property Management, 809 S 52nd St, Rogers, Arkansas.
This highway has been designed as a 4-lane divided roadway with raised grass medians for safety. Median
openings have been provided at all public streets. The current design provides “bulb-outs” for legal U-turns for
adjacent residents. It should also be noted that this typical section is in compliance with the future widening of
Hwy 112 from Fayetteville to Bentonville (approx. 20 miles) which includes raised medians and roundabouts as
safety features (see exhibits).
The utilization of raised medians as a safety feature is supported by 2 facts sheets, one from ARDOT and one
from FHWA, which state that we can expect to see a reduction in crashes in the range of 46% to 71%
(Statewide results), and a reduction in fatal & serious injuries by 82% per a case study of Hwy 412 in Siloam
Springs.
The Average Daily Traffic from the ARDOT website is listed as 18,000 vehicles in 2024. Bradford Place
contains 44 residential units that generate approximately 292 trips per weekday (6.63 trips per unit), and 27
trips during the a.m. and p.m. peak hours (0.61 trips per unit) based on published trip generation studies by
ITE (Institute of Transportation Engineers). There are no published trip generation rates for Airbnb properties,
however it was suggested that the trip generation rates would be higher.
Mailing address:
113 W. Mountain Street
Fayetteville, AR 72701
www.fayetteville-ar.gov
Discussion:
Staff offers the responses below to the email request from Brandon Anthes (Bradford Place) to remove the
raised median:
• The City GIS map shows 44 addresses, not 39 as stated
• It appears that the studies mentioned were referring to an undivided highway vs a divided highway with
a center turn lane
• It is agreed that a center turn lane is safer than an undivided highway, but that is not the case here.
Raised medians control turning movements much better than a two-way left turn lane resulting in
increased safety.
• It is more expensive to construct a paved center turn lane than to construct a raised grassed median
• It appears that it would be possible for Bradford Place to make a driveway connection to Elm Street,
thereby having full access to a median opening
The following 4 options are offered for discussion:
1. Do Nothing, leave the raised median as designed
2. Extend the raised median or install traffic devices to deter vehicles from making illegal & potentially
dangerous crossings
3. Shorten the raised median to allow vehicles to make a southbound left turn across Hwy 112
4. Remove the raised median and replace with a two-way left turn lane (not recommended)
Budget/Staff Impact:
No Impact
Attachments: NWA Regional Hwy 112 Conceptual Drawing (approx. 20 miles), NWA Regional Hwy 112
Typical Section, Bradford Place - GIS Aerial Exhibit, Hwy 112/Garland Ave Conceptual Drawing, ARDOT
Raised Median Fact Sheet, FHWA Median Safety Fact Sheet, Email Request from Brandon Anthes of Bradford
Place
112
112
112
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Job 040752
Howard Nickell Rd. - Greathouse Springs Rd.
Job 040758
Greathouse Springs Rd. - Don Tyson Pkwy. Extension
Job 040860
Don Tyson Pkwy. Extension - Hwy. 412
PRELIMINARY
Subject To Revision
Proposed Road³
0 1,000 2,000
Feet
Photography Date: 2021
ARDOT - Environmental GIS - Reed
Map: August 31, 2021; Meeting: September 9, 2021
Public Involvement Meeting VPI Exhibit
Begin Job 040752
End Job 040752
Begin Job 040758
End Job 040758
Begin Job 040860
End Job 040860
Fayetteville, AR
ExhibitParcel Label
The data contained herein was compiled from various sources for the sole
use and benefit of the City of Fayetteville Geographic Information System
and the public agencies it serves. Any use of the data by anyone other than
the City of Fayetteville is at the sole risk of the user; and by acceptance of
this data, the user does hereby agree to indemnify the City of Fayetteville
and hold the City of Fayetteville harmless from and without liability for any
claims, actions, cost for damages of any nature, including the city's cost of
defense, asserted by user or by another arising from the use of this data.
The City of Fayetteville makes no express or implied warrantees with
reference to the data. No word, phrase, or clause found herein shall be
construed to waive that tort immunity set forth under Arkansas law.
Created: 8/14/2025
Credits: 2025 Imagery | EagleView Technologies | Surdex Corporation, City
of Fayetteville, AR
Map Author:
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raised medians
What is a Raised Median?
A raised median is a physical barrier that separates opposing directions of
traffic, thus reducing the chance of a vehicle crossing into oncoming traffic.
In urban areas, medians are often relatively narrow to limit property impacts.
Planning Division
501-569-2201Diagram: From Gluck, J., H. S. Levinson, and V. Stover. NCHRP Report 420: Impacts if Access Management
501-569-2201 Techniques, TRB, National Research Council, Washington, D.C., 1999, Figure 30, p. 72. Copyright,
National Academy of Sciences. Reproduced with permission of the Transportation Research Board.
Improved Safety
By creating a barrier
between opposing traffic,
raised medians prevent
most head-on collisions,
which can often be severe
or fatal. Additionally, raised
medians allow left-turns to be
consolidated into a handful
of well-designed median
break locations. These median
breaks can also be designed
to allow U-turns (see back).
Raised medians allow traffic to
flow in a more orderly manner,
reduce the number of conflict
points, and greatly reduce
crash severity and frequency.
According to research from the Transportation Research Board, installing a
raised median on an undivided highway resulted in a median accident rate
reduction of nearly 35 percent. Raised medians are particularly beneficial when
traffic volumes exceed 24,000 vehicles per day.
AFTER
REDUCED CONFLICTS
BEFORE
Many Conflicts with All Turns Permitted
Arkansas has 54
miles of
urban highways
with a
raised median
INSTALLING A raised medianreduce crashes
BY up to 71%
ON AN UNDIVIDED ROADWAY SEGMENT
August 2023
Reduced Delays
By reducing conflict points and improving traffic flow, a roadway is able to carry
more traffic. As a result, delays due to traffic congestion also decrease. Raised
medians have been determined to reduce motorist delays up to 30 percent.
Highway 60
Conway, Arkansas
Photo: Highway 60 in Conway, Arkansas, Google Maps
1 Access Management Application Guidelines, Companion Volume to the Access Management Manual,
Second Edition, Transportation Research Board, 2016
HIGHWAY 412 SILOAM SPRINGS CASE STUDY
Prior to 2013, Highway 412 in west Siloam Springs was a four-lane highway
with a center turn lane. The highway regularly experienced significant
congestion and safety issues. Between 2006 and 2010, 415 crashes occurred
on a 1.6-mile segment of Highway 412 in west Siloam Springs. Of those
crashes, 17 were classified as a fatal or suspected serious injury, equating to a
crash rate nearly three times higher than similar roadways across the state.
To improve the roadway’s safety and reduce congestion, in 2012, ArDOT
widened this segment of Highway 412 to six lanes and replaced the center
turn lane with a raised median. As a result, over the next five years, the total
number of crashes was reduced by 20 percent, and the number of fatal and
serious injuries was reduced by more than 80 percent.
20
15
10
5
0
2006-2010 2012-2016
Fatal or Suspected Serious Injury Crashes
100
80
60
20
0
40
2006-2010 2012-2016
TOTAL CRASHES PER YEAR 82%
Reduction in all
FATAL and SUSPECTED
SERIOUS INJURY CRASHES
46%
REDUCTION
IN ANGLE
CRASHES
HIGHWAY 412 CASE STUDY
U-TURNs TO REACH DESTINATION
Raised medians can be designed to allow U-turns to occur
at periodic median breaks. U-turns reduce the number of
conflict points along a corridor and have been proven to
improve safety. Research has shown U-turns can reduce
crash rates by 20 percent by removing direct left-turns
from driveways. Often, a right turn from an unsignalized
driveway followed by a U-turn is easier for drivers. This is
because they only have to yield to one direction of traffic
at a time rather than crossing two directions of traffic.
Case studies in Texas and Iowa suggest 95 percent of
business owners reported no change or an increase in
retail sales after the construction of a raised median.
Property values studied along the corridor were also
reported as either unchanged or increased.1
Pedestrian Refuge
Island
reduction in
pedestrian crashes.2
Median with
Marked Crosswalk
reduction in
pedestrian crashes.2
FHWA-SA-21-044
Medians and
Pedestrian Refuge Islands in Urban
and Suburban Areas
A median is the area between opposing lanes of traffic, excluding turn
lanes. Medians in urban and suburban areas can be defined by pavement
markings, raised medians, or islands to separate motorized and non-
motorized road users.
A pedestrian refuge island (or crossing area) is a median with a refuge area
that is intended to help protect pedestrians who are crossing a road.
1 National Center for Statistics and Analysis. (2020, March). Pedestrians:
2018 data (Traffic Safety Facts. Report No. DOT HS 812 850). National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration
2 (CMF ID: 175) Desktop Reference for Crash Reduction Factors, FHWA-SA-08-011,
September 2008, Table 11.
Pedestrian crashes account for
approximately 17 percent of all traffic
fatalities annually, and 74 percent
of these occur at non-intersection
locations.1 For pedestrians to
safely cross a roadway, they must
estimate vehicle speeds, determine
acceptable gaps in traffic based
on their walking speed, and predict
vehicle paths. Installing a median
or pedestrian refuge island can
help improve safety by allowing
pedestrians to cross one direction of
traffic at a time.
Transportation agencies should
consider medians or pedestrian
refuge islands in curbed sections of
urban and suburban multilane
roadways, particularly in areas with
a significant mix of pedestrian and
vehicle traffic, traffic volumes over
9,000 vehicles per day, and travel
speeds 35 mph or greater. Medians/
refuge islands should be at least
4-ft wide, but preferably 8 ft for
pedestrian comfort. Some example
locations that may benefit from
medians or pedestrian refuge islands
include:
• Mid-block crossings.
• Approaches to multilane
intersections.
• Areas near transit stops or other
pedestrian-focused sites.
Example of a road with a median and
pedestrian refuge islands.
Source: City of Charlotte, NC
Median and pedestrian refuge island
near a roundabout. Source:
www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden
46%
56%
Safety Benefits:
OFFICE OF SAFETYProven Safety Countermeasures
For more information on this
and other FHWA Proven Safety
Countermeasures, please visit
https://highways.dot.gov/
safety/proven-safety-counter
measures and https://high
ways.dot.gov/sites/fhwa.dot.
gov/files/2022-08/techSheet_
PedRefugeIsland2018.pdf.
Mr. Brown,
On behalf of the 39 homeowners of Bradford Place Condominiums, we respectfully object to
the proposed raised median at our entrance and urge the City to install a continuous center turn
lane instead.
A raised median would block direct access, forcing residents, visitors, delivery trucks, school
buses, and—most critically—emergency responders to overshoot our drive and perform U-turns
onto Elm Street. This detour adds daily inconvenience, concentrates turning conflicts at a single
location, and lengthens response times when seconds matter.
Multiple studies confirm that center turn lanes are safer than raised medians on residential
arterials like ours. A peer-reviewed Tennessee crash study found fewer total crashes on high-
driveway, medium-to-low-volume roads with a center turn lane. The Minnesota DOT “road-diet”
evaluation recorded a 37 percent crash reduction after converting four-lane undivided roads
(fewer than 17,500 vpd) to three lanes with a center turn lane. Iowa’s Access-Management
Handbook states that center turn lanes “function well” on arterials carrying 10,000–28,000
AADT with numerous driveways—precisely the conditions on this stretch of Garland.
Conversely, the Oregon DOT safety guide warns that raised medians often increase U-turn
frequency and introduce new conflict points.
Installing a center turn lane would:
•Preserve direct, predictable driveway access.
•Remove turning vehicles from through lanes, smoothing traffic and reducing rear-end
crashes.
•Enable fire, EMS, and police to reach us without detours.
•Cost less to build and maintain than a landscaped median.
Given the research, operational realities, and safety of all corridor users, we respectfully request
the City choose a continuous center turn lane across the Bradford Place frontage.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Bradford Place Homeowners’ Association
References:
Federal Highway Administration. Safety Evaluation of Center Two-Way Left-Turn Lanes on Two-Lane Roads (FHWA-
HRT-08-042). https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/research/safety/08042/
“Accidents on Suburban Highways—Tennessee’s Experience.” Journal of Transportation Engineering. https://ascelibrary.org/doi/
10.1061/%28ASCE%290733-947X%281995%29121%3A3%28255%29
Minnesota Local Road Research Board. Safety and Operational Characteristics of Two-Way Left-Turn Lanes. https://
www.lrrb.org/pdf/200625.pdf
Iowa Department of Transportation. Access Management Manual (Section on TWLTL performance). https://iowadot.gov/traffic/
pdfs/MM1359-Access-Management-Manual.pdf
Oregon Department of Transportation. Crash Reduction Factor Manual—Countermeasure H64: Convert TWLTL to Raised
Median. https://www.oregon.gov/odot/Engineering/ARTS/CRF-Manual.pdf
City’s Proposed Plan:
Bradford Place Homeowners’ Association’s Proposal: