Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In

New York has them. San Francisco has them. Portland, too. Now St. Louis might be getting its own version of Summer Streets.

Streetsblog Network member St. Louis Urban Workshop is happy with Mayor Francis Slay's proposal to close some of the city's streets to motor vehicles on summer weekends. But the blog calls for more substantive changes that will improve access for pedestrians and cyclists every day of the year:

2748746997_5f9edceb3b.jpgSummer Streets in New York. Photo by Northcountry Boy via Flickr.

The Mayor clearly understands that people, not automobiles, really
own the streets in our city, and that closing streets to cars and giving
them over to people to enjoy for recreational and social uses makes
sense. If this is understood, why not take a step towards doing real,
lasting, permanent work to make our streets safer and more inviting to
people every day?

[W]hy not open many of the roads in our major parks to
pedestrians and cyclists only? There's novelty in closing Lindell for
four hours on a Saturday, but there's real utility in making a park
more of a park.

Why not address the streets in our city that are
particularly uninviting or even dangerous for pedestrians?
Kingshighway, Gravois, Chippewa, Market and others have been completely
given over to the car. Closing a short stretch of one of these for a
few hours will make them no less dangerous when car traffic resumes.

The Urban Workshop has covered this issue on several levels, calling for St. Louis streets to be put on a diet, expressing disgust at streets designed to kill and advocating for pedestrian priority

over simple traffic measures for the ongoing South Grand lane reduction
test. So, "Summer Streets" is a good idea, but let's not be satisfied
with neat, fun and novel, let's make our streets better for pedestrians
all the time.

Of course, in New York and San Francisco, Summer Streets have been a precursor to more extensive experiments in truly livable streets. We'll keep an eye on developments in St. Louis.

Another hot topic on the network today is bike safety. How We Drive looks at a study about how bike lanes might encourage motorists to pass cyclists more closely. Biking in LA laments the bad behavior of cyclists who ride without respect for their fellow cyclists or the law, endangering themselves and others. And after a ghost bike memorial in Washington, DC, was removed by police, an artist has responded with 22 ghost bikes. The WashCycle has that story.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Here’s Everything Wrong With the Judge’s Order to Rip Up the 31st Street Protected Bike Lane

A Queens judge overstepped her jurisdiction when she ordered the city to rip up a protected bike lane in Astoria, experts said.

December 9, 2025

MTA Still Won’t Embrace Open Gangway Subway Cars

The see-through cars have been standard across the globe for a generation, but to the MTA, it's still untested technology.

December 9, 2025

How Much Will New Yorkers Pay For Trump’s Penn Station Redevelopment Scheme?

New Yorkers could wind up paying twice for the new Penn Station: once when Amtrak comes asking for money and then when a private developer makes their money back from the project.

December 9, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines: Clearing the Air Edition

We've been clear that congestion pricing is working. Turns out, congestion pricing was, too! Plus other news.

December 9, 2025

NYPD Finds Mysterious Corpse in Car With Illegal Tints Parked at a Hydrant Near Stationhouse

The discovery is a gruesome demonstration of the NYPD's systemic failure to enforce parking rules around its own station houses.

December 8, 2025

Who Rides on the Sidewalk? To NYPD, Just Blacks and Hispanics

The NYPD has ramped up its enforcement against cyclists for squeezing pedestrians, but in a very suspect manner.

December 8, 2025
See all posts