
THE UNCLOG NYC PLAN
INTRODUCTION
This plan addresses one of our biggest problems in New York City: Our Car Problem. It is a road map for change and pledge for mayoral candidates.

Because currently... our streets are clogged.

And there is a far better way.
Executive Summary
APPROACH
⚡This plan includes street treatments and design philosophies that work together to create a street-scape that is functional beyond the sum of its parts. As such, it should be implemented with a whole-neighborhood approach.In other words, one neighborhood should be selected for a total neighborhood transformation, to demonstrate what the completed plan looks and feels like on a day to day basis and how this benefits those that live in the city.For the purposes of explaining the plan, we will use Astoria, Queens and assume that will be the first unclogged.
PEDESTRIAN CORES
The central location inside the neighborhood where businesses and restaurants are clumped will be identified and the area pedestrianized. This means private motor vehicle traffic will be reduced to only residents and deliveries, to encourage a livable urban space.This improves business and tax revenue, by generating foot traffic, (the number one determinant of an urban business's success.)Contrary to outdated business “wisdom,” car parking is not a major determinant in urban business success, it is detrimental to it. It wastes extraordinary amounts of space and creates an unpleasant environment hostile to pedestrians. In the age of online shopping, urban businesses can't compete on convenience and must instead compete on experience.

Naturally, deliveries by truck and access to city services will be allowed, and any bus service will be maintained (and flow far smoother.)

Access to parking for residents on the side streets can be maintained via a paid permit system if necessary to keep vehicle volumes extremely low in the pedestrianized zone. This will make parking for the residents nearby that want to drive easier and less stressful and greatly reduce or eliminate car traffic through residential streets.The pedestrianized core will also function as a central hub for a larger street design network of protected bike lanes and Neighborhood Streets.
CURRENT BIKE LANES
WITH PED CORE + FEEDER LANES
STREET TREATMENTS
- DAYLIGHTING
Daylighting is the process of keeping the space near crosswalks clear, so drivers and pedestrians can see each other. It is required by state law, but NYC has exempted itself from implementing it to maximize parking spaces. This leads to many unnecessary deaths, especially children who are not tall enough to see over car hoods, and often can not be seen by drivers before being hit. Every intersection in NYC will be daylit, enforced by filling the space with bike share racks, curbs, bioswales and small plants, or bollards to prevent car parking.
Being killed by a car is the leading cause of death in children under 13 by a wide measure. Daylighting every intersection is a moral imperative.Many other treatments will be widely used. These include:
Bulb outs
Chicanes
Pinchpoints
🌕UNIVERSALITY
These treatments will be applied at scale, universally.The city's current approach of doing them in small numbers, sporadically located, is like renting an apartment and realizing the landlord didn't finish the floor renovations. Instead, there are unsafe conditions everywhere with nails popping up through the floorboard. In such a situation, nobody would go around bending a nail flat here and there and maybe covering another. We’d fix all the nails. We’d make the entire floor safe. And we shall.

Traffic control
If we are going to truly solve the Car Problem in New York City we must admit a fundamental flaw at the heart of our urban design over most of the past century. At its most basic level, we have built our city so that cars can travel everywhere, at all times, via the most direct route.Instead, we must begin strategically controlling the movement of cars, so that long-distance travel between neighborhoods (or further) happens on designated streets of our choosing and residential streets are protected from them.This is not hypothetical or untested. Consider the city of Ghent, Belgium:

The majority of the work required to implement this plan was simply switching the direction of streets, utilizing easy-to-install signage. This ensures that drivers looking to traverse the city can only do so on designated routes, instead of cutting through anywhere.

New York City is obviously a far larger city than Ghent, but the principle is the same, and the process of applying this logic to NYC begins at the neighborhood level. First, we select the streets on which through traffic will be permitted. That is to say, which will allow long distance travel (between neighborhoods or long distance within a single neighborhood.)

After these streets have been identified, direction of travel on the remaining streets should be changed so that traffic is always routed back towards one of these thoroughfares. In this way, every point within the grid can still be accessed, yet only some of the streets are major traffic corridors.

This process has already been implemented in small measures in NYC, most famously on the wildly successful 31st Ave, which reduced a 2-way street (for cars) down to 1, and then strategically switched the direction of travel every few blocks.

All vehicular based services (fire trucks, police, trash trucks, etc) are still permitted and those that live on the street can still drive to their homes if they choose, but those that want to simply use the street to drive long distances in a car, cannot – and must choose a different route.

The end result is a “Neighborhood Street” with virtually no motor traffic besides the occasional resident or delivery. This enormously benefits those that live on and near it. Suddenly, the residential Neighborhood Street is far quieter, easier to traverse, and more enjoyable for walkers and micromobility riders. This is how quality of life can be drastically improved for city residents.

Strategically alternating the direction of travel forces drivers to move towards the main car streets.This also brings some streets that are currently 2-way down to 1-way. The reclaimed space can then be used for expanded sidewalks and pedestrian spaces, tree pits, bioswales for drainage, bike lanes, and many other more beautiful and beneficial purposes for residents.It makes many trips by car less direct at the very beginning or end of a journey. This is intentional. Converting urban streets to indirect, less immediately accessible routes is not a weakness, it is a strength. It prioritizes local residents' quality of life by minimizing traffic.
Neighborhood streets
Far too many residential neighborhoods in NYC are overrun by cars, pushing out the vital functions of urban life. Kids are lagely unable to play or have independence outside the home, residents are in danger merely walking outside, and fumes and noise permeate everything.
A typical NYC street
Neighborhood streets fix these issues by removing all but the most necessary of vehicular travel. They still maintain access for all vehicular based services and car access for residents, yet prevent through traffic via the aforementioned traffic diverters and directional switching.Neighborhood Streets also encourage and enable urban appropriate methods of transportation. According to the city’s own data, there are typically over 600,000 trips taken by micromobility per day, and nearly 1 in 8 residents ride regularly.

This is despite less than 1% of the road surface being dedicated to micromobility, and a general feeling among many that the activity is unsafe. With infrastructure that actually allows all ages and abilities to participate (which our bike lanes are supposed to be) this number will be exponentially higher.These streets will also enable freedom of movement for many who are typically excluded now, including children, the elderly, and disabled who will in the coming years have access to long range electric wheelchairs that can serve as full transportation systems if they have access to safe, car-light infrastructure.

The climate crisis, livability standard, and basic fairness require us to make the city safe, appealing, and accessible for these groups as well.
You are encouraged to show support for or sign on to this plan! This is a roadmap for New York, and its success depends on us rallying behind it.
You can see all responses, including yours, here.

THE UNCLOG NYC PLAN
This plan was lovingly constructed by Miser, the founder and organizer of the MicromobilityNYC community.
You may contact him by DMing on Bluesky, or by emailing [email protected]