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

Can Snow Inspire Better Streets? It Already Has.

Before
In Philadelphia, a snowy neckdown at Baltimore and 48th Street in 2011 inspired permanent upgrades to the pedestrian environment at the intersection. Photo courtesy of Prema Bupta
false

Sneckdowns are having a big moment. In case you've missed the viral blog posts and major press coverage, sneckowns (a contraction of "snowy neckdowns" popularized by Streetfilms' Clarence Eckerson Jr. and Streetsblog founding editor Aaron Naparstek) are leftover snow piles on city streets that show space that could easily be reclaimed for pedestrians.

As a visual tool, sneckdowns can be powerful. At least one city has already used snow formations as the inspiration for better streets.

After a winter storm in Philadelphia in 2011, snow piles became the basis for a major pedestrian upgrade at Baltimore and 48th Street in the University City District, according to Prema Gupta, the district's director of planning.

Gupta said her organization, inspired by New York City's example, was already looking around for potential spaces for pedestrian plazas when a staffer produced the above photo. "That very quickly made the case that there’s right-sizing to do here," she said. At the time, no one had heard the word "sneckdown."

"For us it was just a really compelling way of showing there was way too much street and not nearly enough place for people," she said.

Based on the snow patterns, the city produced a plan to expand pedestrian space at the intersection:

The plans
false

The final design was implemented this summer:

The finished result
false

After the recent snow storms this year, Gupta says, her organization has continued to search for unnecessary pavement "because it’s so obvious that there’s need here."

It's possible that we'll soon be hearing similar stories from places all over the United States. Public officials in places like Raleigh and Boulder are getting in on the #sneckdown hashtag, soliciting sites for potential road diets via social media. Chances are, there are plenty of good examples of this wherever you live. It's definitely worth Tweeting at or emailing your your photos of #sneckdowns to local officials.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Mamdani ‘Fully Confident’ in DOT Commissioner Despite Daylighting U-Turn

Mamdani declined to to follow through on his campaign pledge to "push back" on DOT's anti-daylighting position.

March 6, 2026

HungryPanda Pressured Delivery Workers in Dangerous Blizzard, Workers Say

A delivery worker with HungryPanda recounted a harrowing experience of working during last month's historic blizzard.

March 6, 2026

Make Biking Great Again: Conservatives Should Embrace The Right Wing Values Of Cycling

Cycling remains aligned in the national mind with progressive causes — but conservatives can find plenty to love about bikes.

March 6, 2026

Friday’s Headlines: NYPD Placard Chaos Edition

It was been a rough day for New York's Finest. Plus more news.

March 6, 2026

Hit-And-Run Driver Kills 4-Year-Old On Dangerous Brooklyn Corridor

The driver didn't stop while a child lost his life.

March 5, 2026

Mamdani Deputy Mayor On Charging For Street Parking: ‘It’s Not a No’

Dean Fuleihan said on Thursday that the city is discussing charging fees for currently free on-street parking.

March 5, 2026
See all posts