Skip to Content
Streetsblog San Francisco home
Streetsblog San Francisco home
Log In
Streetfilms

Moving Beyond the Automobile: Road Diets

What's a road diet? Quite simply, traffic-calming expert Dan Burden told Streetfilms, "A road diet is anytime you take any lane out of a road."

The first time people hear about a road diet, their initial reaction likely goes something like this: "How can removing lanes improve my neighborhood and not cause traffic backups?" It seems counterintuitive, but taking away lanes can actually help traffic flow smoother while improving safety for everyone.

Road diets are good for pedestrians: They reduce speeding and make vehicle movements more predictable while shortening crossing distances, usually through curb extensions or center median islands. They're good for cyclists: Many road diets shift space from car lanes to create bike lanes. They're good for drivers: Less speeding improves safety for motorists and passengers, and providing left-turn pockets allows through traffic to proceed without shifting lanes or waiting behind turning vehicles.

And here's something to keep in mind during this era of lean budgets: Road diets are a highly-effective infrastructure improvement that can be implemented quickly and at low cost.

Streetfilms would like to thank The Fund for the Environment & Urban Life for making this series possible.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog San Francisco

2025 End-of-Year Post: Great Milestones Despite a Tough Year

The Valencia bike lanes are now mostly fixed. There was real progress in Alameda. And Clipper II launched ... the culmination of over a decade or advocacy

December 23, 2025

It’s Official: New Supe Wants to Destroy Sunset Dunes

The mayor wants to slash $400 million from the budget to try and close the deficit. But District 4 Supervisor Wong wants to waste money on a third vote over the future of Sunset Dunes. Make this make sense

December 22, 2025
See all posts