Traffic & Transit

This Wash Heights Street Is Among Deadliest In The Nation: Study

A stretch of road between West 173rd and 185th Street is one of the nation's deadliest for walkers, according to a study.

An image of a section of blocks within a route that a new study says is one of the nation's deadliest for walkers.
An image of a section of blocks within a route that a new study says is one of the nation's deadliest for walkers. (Google Maps)

WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, NY — A corridor in Washington Heights has a new, unfortunate honor: it's one of the most dangerous streets in the nation for pedestrians, according to a recent study.

The report, published earlier this year in the Journal of Transport and Land Use, identified dozens of "hot spots" across the U.S. where at least six pedestrians lost their lives between 2001 and 2016, when the most recent federal data was available.

Among the worst spots — U.S. Highway 9 and Broadway between West 173rd and West 185th Streets — where seven people were killed during that 18-year span.

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The roadway goes on Broadway from just above Kung Fu Tea, through the red marker and ends above Staples. (Google Maps)

The rating will likely come as no surprise to Washington Heights residents near the roadway. The stretch of Broadway has been the site of hundreds of crashes in recent years, according to city data recorded in NYC Crash Mapper.

Aside from the fatalities, there have been 227 total crashes on the roadway since 2011, the first year of which the mapper has recorded data.

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In those crashes, 48 cyclists, 95 pedestrians, and 132 motorists were hurt, the data shows.

The stretch of Washington Heights blocks from West 173rd to West 185th Streets has four lanes, a speed limit of 25 mph, and a bus route.

There were 10 other Manhattan corridors to make the deadliest street list, the study shows.

The study on fatalities was conducted by researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Arizona State University and the planning firm Toole Design Group. It was first reported on by Streetsblog, who said it may be "the only attempt to map the U.S. corridors with the highest numbers of pedestrian deaths ever conducted."

Authors found that pedestrian fatalities are "at their highest level in nearly three decades" and make up an increasing share of total traffic deaths.

"To achieve the vision of a future transportation system that produces zero deaths, pedestrian safety must be improved," they wrote.

Almost all of the "hot spots" identified in the study are multi-lane roads, most of which force pedestrians to cross at least five lanes of traffic. Most bordered low-income neighborhoods.

Patch reporter Nick Garber contributed to this report.

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