I've been thinking a lot about alternative or interim improvements
short of full pedestrianization of Elm Street, and while waiting for
our next Elmway meeting to be announced, I wanted to share details and
solicit feedback on one quick-build option I'm starting to like: close
Dover Street at the main intersection with Davis Square/Holland Street.
Dover is one-way toward Mass Ave, so to keep parts of it from becoming
inaccessible, I think the one-way flow of at least some of Meacham Road
would need to be reversed. (It's two-way in Cambridge, which does not
work well.) This would enable trucks to service the rear of the
Somerville Theater and the side of the CVS by entering through Buena
Vista Road from Holland, and exit via Dover as they do now.
Reasons for doing this:
1.) Discourage vehicles from passing through Davis (and the residential
neighborhood to the southeast) on the way to Mass Ave if they aren't
stopping here. Vehicles coming from the north and east would be
diverted to Beech Street or Cameron Ave, or avoid Davis altogether by
using more car-centric roads via Porter or Alewife Brook Parkway.
(There's no left turn onto Mass Ave from Chester Street due to the
median.)
2.) Make Davis safer for pedestrians by turning one of the most
dangerous crosswalks into a sidewalk. Cars currently curve into this
crosswalk from three different directions, sometimes at high speed
trying to beat the long light. Jaywalking is very common, which can
cause minor gridlock if cars yield to pedestrians and then the light
changes. This crosswalk is heavily used and on a main path to the
western subway entrance.
3.) Improve throughput of the main intersection. Pedestrians get the
walk light when Holland does, meaning right-turning cars blocked by
pedestrians can block the bus lane for a full green light cycle.
If Dover is closed here, Holland Street could get a green light at the
same time as either Highland or College Ave. In the short term, this
involves a merge at the entrance to Elm Street. The 2018-2020 versions
of the Davis Square Neighborhood Plan show a long-term plan for the
intersection being squared off in all directions, opening a massive
amount of outdoor dining and performance space. That makes going from
Holland to Elm a right turn, with right on red possible. (Day Street
would still be connected to Elm but not the main intersection.) If Elm
is also pedestrianized, then Davis would become an efficient T-
intersection and stop being a traffic bottleneck for cars and buses due
to scarce green light time.
4.) Encourage mode shift to bikes. In cities that intentionally make
car routes longer and bike routes shorter, more people bike. Even
though cars go further, they have a smoother trip with less waiting in
pedestrian-heavy areas and fewer other cars on the road. This requires
separated, high-comfort bicycle infrastructure, which we now have on
Holland Street and College Ave, with the Somerville Community Path
paralleling Highland for those coming from that direction. Eliminating
Dover as a vehicle cut-through makes the neighborhood streets in that
direction more bike-friendly.
5.) Create a cozy new pedestrian plaza. Outdoor dining for Mr. Crepe
could expand, BSC could have an outdoor exercise zone, film festival
patrons would have a nicer place to line up, HONK! could have a new
performance area, or there could be new street vendors. Or it could
remain mostly on-street parking; simply closing the entrance at Davis
doesn't force pedestrianization of the full block. The CVS side is
currently signed as a loading zone only from 8am to noon.
To make up for whatever number of parking spots are lost, parking
meters could be added further down Dover in front of apartment
buildings that have underground garages. The private lot behind CVS is
also under-used, especially in the evening which is peak demand time
for restaurant and theater parking. It would be nice to see the city
make an arrangement for metered parking there in certain spots or at
certain times, regardless of what happens with Dover Street. Opening
the Dover Street driveway of that lot would also let drivers exit to
Mass Ave while bypassing Davis Square.
Presumably the city would want to do a traffic study before putting up
the sawhorses and electronic traffic diversion signs, but it's the sort
of thing that could be piloted for say, a month, and reversed if there
are too many unintended negative consequences. It could also be done
intermittently (e.g. high-pedestrian times like evenings and weekends),
but I think drivers would probably alter their behavior more if it were
continuously blocked. And having actual physical barriers seems
necessary for safety and to prevent people from just ignoring a hard-
to-read sign allowing passage only at certain times. That's also why
I'm leaning away from a "DO NOT ENTER (AUTHORIZED VEHICLES ONLY)" sign
or even a gate at the beginning or end of the block that delivery
trucks could activate.
What are your thoughts? Should we push the city to try this?
-B.
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On Thu, 2025-03-13 at 19:16 -0400, Roger Levy wrote:
> If the entire Somerville portion of Meacham Road had its traffic flow
> reversed, wouldn't Meacham still be a cut-through, just in the
> opposite direction, from Mass Ave to Holland Street?
That's a good point. There's a few ways I can think of to respond to
that, though perhaps there are others:
* Make Buena Vista one-way (away from Holland) south of the Somerville
Community Path. This would reduce the number of vehicles conflicting
with pedestrians and bikes, while still allowing vehicle access to the
parking garage and delivery/dumpster area behind the medical building.
The downside is that residents would also not be able to exit to the
north; the nearest exit would be Day Street, via Orchard. But I suppose
they are not able to use Buena Vista as an exit now anyway.
* Make part of Meacham one-way in the opposite direction, for example,
the Cambridge portion south of Locke Street.
* Add a "no trucks" restriction as there is on the Cambridge part of
Day Street.
* Add a "do not enter except residents" restriction for some or all
times. (I expect a lot of people ignore those signs, though I have seen
them in Somerville and actually seen the Cambridge police enforcing one
near Alewife Brook Parkway.)
* Do nothing, on the assumption that the number of cut-throughs on
Meacham will be roughly the same as they are now, if residents are
happy with that.
I like it.
It was included in the 2019 Davis Sq Neighborhood Plan.

The plan centered on a re-design of roads to reclaim non-car space and better regulate traffic. At the time, there was discussion of doing a trial run, so some study of traffic flow most have been completed.

The plan should be updated.
Where are the City planners?
g.
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I'm afraid this would actually increase traffic on Elm st. I actively try to avoid driving down Elm, but if I miss the turn at Buena Vista, I would now be forced to go down Elm.
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-B.
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Anand Y. Patil A'26
Major, Community Health | Minor, Urban Environmental Policy
Emergency Medical Technician - Cataldo/Somerville
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Building that connection and two-waying Day St. could be a solution to this conundrum. Personally, I would prefer a more direct extension of Mecham over to Day St. not aligned with Herbert, and two-waying Day just between there and the central Davis intersection, minimizing how much of Day needs to be two-way. Not perfectly to scale, but the ideas are roughly these (the latter being my preference):<><>
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On Mar 17, 2025, at 5:41 PM, 'Carol' via Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
On Mar 17, 2025, at 11:45 AM, 'Elizabeth Merrick' via Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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On Sun, 2025-03-16 at 23:16 -0400, Chris Lahey wrote:
> Would the next step be getting the city to hire a professional to do
> a study? How does this sort of thing work?
I was wondering about next steps, too. I'll bring this question to the
Elmway meeting on Monday.
Anand's idea of funding a traffic study is interesting, though I don't
know who would be willing to pay for that, the city seems pretty
willing to look into these things on its own, and the city may prefer
to do the work in-house so it can trust the results and have them
conform to other city policies and plans.
There are a few other possible steps:
* Discuss at a monthly DSNC meeting and get broader opinions
* Invite city Mobility staff to a DSNC meeting to discuss
* Go door-to-door with Roger's excellent map and a concrete proposal;
quantify how the neighborhood actually feels about this and gather any
additional suggestions and concerns
* Take a DSNC vote on asking the city to do a traffic study so we can
make a more informed decision
* Take a DSNC vote on asking the city to implement the proposal
I'm not sure what "ask the city" means - if that's the mayor or city
council or a specific department or what. Talking to staff about how
they determine what to work on might be helpful, unless someone in the
DSNC or on this list can fill us in.
> After looking at the map, I'm a little concerned that this would
> drive a lot of traffic onto Buena Vista, and thus across the
> community path at an intersection with no light. I know the current
> situation is untenable though.
I agree. I think Anand's suggestion of raised pavement, combined with
cutting the width of the road in half will make a big difference to
pedestrian safety, and we should do those things regardless of Dover
Disconnect. STOP signs and even red lights at pedestrian-only crossings
are sadly often ignored.
As for mitigating the volume of cut-through traffic, maybe some
additional signage would help - how about "NOT A THRU STREET" at the
entrance to Buena Vista, with "RESIDENTS AND DELIVERIES ONLY" after the
medical center parking garage entrance? We could also add "MASS AVE VIA
CAMERON" and "MASS AVE VIA BEECH" signs in or before Davis to encourage
routing along car-centric streets.