Design complete streets with proper cross-sections, lane allocation, pedestrian and cycling infrastructure, intersection design, and streetscape elements using NACTO and global standards. Use when the user asks to design a street, create a cross-section, determine road width, design an intersection, plan a bike lane, design a sidewalk, create a boulevard, design a shared street, plan traffic calming, or specify streetscape elements. Also use for street hierarchy classification, right-of-way allocation, or any question about street dimensions and standards.
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Design complete streets with proper cross-sections, lane allocation, pedestrian and cycling infrastructure, intersection design, and streetscape elements using NACTO and global standards. Use when the user asks to design a street, create a cross-section, determine road width, design an intersection, plan a bike lane, design a sidewalk, create a boulevard, design a shared street, plan traffic calming, or specify streetscape elements. Also use for street hierarchy classification, right-of-way allocation, or any question about street dimensions and standards.
Street Design Skill
This skill provides comprehensive street design guidance based on NACTO Urban Street Design Guide, Global Designing Cities Initiative (GDCI), AASHTO Green Book, and international best practices. It covers the full workflow from street hierarchy classification through cross-section dimensioning, intersection design, streetscape specification, and traffic calming.
Street Hierarchy Classification
Use the following decision tree to classify any street. Start with the Average Daily Traffic (ADT) count, then apply contextual modifiers.
Primary Classification by ADT and Function
Arterial (>15,000 ADT)
Right-of-Way (ROW): 30-40m
Lanes: 2-3 per direction (3.0-3.3m each)
Design speed: 40-50 km/h (urban), 50-60 km/h (suburban)
Transit: dedicated bus/BRT lanes strongly recommended
Cycling: protected bike lanes required (physically separated)
Pedestrian: wide sidewalks 3.6-6.0m, pedestrian refuge islands at crossings
Median: 3.0-6.0m landscaped or transit median
Signal spacing: 200-400m typical
Role: city-wide movement, connects districts, carries transit trunk routes
Collector (3,000-15,000 ADT)
ROW: 22-30m
Lanes: 1-2 per direction (3.0-3.3m each)
Design speed: 30-40 km/h
Transit: on-street bus stops with boarding islands
Cycling: protected bike lanes or buffered bike lanes
Pedestrian: generous sidewalks 2.4-3.6m
Median: optional, 1.8-3.0m where present
Role: connects neighborhoods to arterials, local commercial corridors
Local Street (<3,000 ADT)
ROW: 15-22m
Lanes: 1 per direction (2.7-3.0m each)
Design speed: 30 km/h
Transit: typically no fixed-route transit
Cycling: shared lane markings (sharrows) or separated bike lanes depending on context
Pedestrian: standard sidewalks 1.8-2.4m
Parking: parallel one or both sides
Role: neighborhood access, residential frontage, low-speed environment
Shared Street / Woonerf (<1,000 ADT)
ROW: 8-15m
Lanes: single surface, no lane markings
Design speed: 10-20 km/h
Cycling: shared surface, cyclists and pedestrians together
Pedestrian: priority over vehicles, no curb separation
Surface: textured paving, bollards, planters as speed controls
Role: residential living streets, market streets, festival routes
Pedestrian Priority Street (variable ADT, typically <500)
ROW: variable (4-20m)
Vehicles: no through-traffic, emergency and service access only
Design speed: 5-10 km/h (service vehicles only)
Surface: high-quality paving, level, no curbs
Role: retail promenades, civic spaces, historic cores
Contextual Modifiers
Apply these modifiers after primary classification to adjust cross-section priorities:
Context
Modifier
Commercial / Retail
+1.2-2.4m sidewalk width, continuous retail frontage, on-street parking or loading zones, wider furnishing zone for outdoor dining
Residential
Prioritize tree canopy coverage (>40%), reduce travel lane widths to minimum, add traffic calming, reduce noise through surface treatment
Mixed-Use
Adaptive curbside management (flex zones for parking/loading/transit by time of day), wider pedestrian zones at ground-floor retail
Industrial / Logistics
Wider travel lanes (3.3-3.6m) for trucks, larger corner radii, reinforced pavement, limit pedestrian/cyclist exposure to truck movements
School Zone
20-30 km/h speed limit, raised crossings at every intersection, flashing beacons, wide clear sidewalks, no on-street parking within 30m of entrance
Hospital / Institutional
Accessible design priority, generous drop-off zones, clear wayfinding, audible pedestrian signals, level surfaces throughout
Historic District
Narrower ROW acceptable, special materials and furnishings, heritage lighting, preservation of existing tree canopy and setbacks
Waterfront / Park Edge
Wider promenade (4.5-6.0m+), separated multi-use path, enhanced landscape buffer, view corridor preservation
相关技能
Cross-Section Design Methodology
Design cross-sections layer by layer, working from the building face toward the street centerline. Each layer has a defined function and dimensional range.
Layer Sequence (Building Face to Centerline)
BUILDING FACE
|
|--> [A] Building Setback (context-dependent)
|--> [B] Frontage Zone (0.3 - 0.9m)
|--> [C] Pedestrian Clear Zone (1.8 - 3.6m)
|--> [D] Furnishing / Planting Zone (0.6 - 1.8m)
|--> [E] Cycle Track + Buffer (optional: 1.5-2.5m track + 0.3-0.6m buffer)
|--> [F] Parking Lane (optional: 2.1 - 2.4m parallel, 4.5-5.5m angled)
|--> [G] Travel Lane(s) (3.0 - 3.3m each)
|--> [H] Median (optional: 1.2 - 6.0m)
|
CENTERLINE (mirror layers G through A for opposite side)
Layer Definitions
[A] Building Setback
Not part of the public ROW but affects street enclosure. Zero setback for urban retail frontage, 1.5-3.0m for residential, 3.0-6.0m+ for suburban or institutional.
[B] Frontage Zone (0.3 - 0.9m)
The strip immediately adjacent to the building face. Accommodates door swings, window displays, awning drip lines, basement vault covers. In commercial areas, may include outdoor dining or merchandise display (with permit, requiring wider dimension of 1.2-2.4m).
[C] Pedestrian Clear Zone (1.8 - 3.6m)
The unobstructed walking path. This is the most critical pedestrian dimension. No street furniture, signs, trees, or other obstructions. Minimum 1.8m allows two wheelchairs to pass. Recommended 2.4m for residential, 3.0m for commercial, 3.6m+ for high-volume pedestrian areas. Must comply with ADA/accessibility requirements: maximum cross-slope 2%, smooth and continuous surface.
[D] Furnishing / Planting Zone (0.6 - 1.8m)
Contains street trees, light poles, sign posts, parking meters, benches, trash receptacles, bicycle racks, utility access covers. Serves as a buffer between pedestrians and the roadway. Tree wells minimum 1.5m x 1.5m, continuous tree trench preferred. Bioswales and rain gardens can be integrated here.
[E] Cycle Track + Buffer (optional)
One-way protected bike lane: 1.5m minimum, 2.0m recommended, 2.5m for high-volume. Two-way cycle track: 2.4m minimum, 3.0m recommended, 3.6m+ for high-volume. Buffer between cycle track and travel/parking lane: 0.3m minimum (painted), 0.6m recommended (with vertical elements such as bollards, planters, or curb).
[F] Parking Lane (optional)
Parallel parking: 2.1m minimum, 2.4m recommended (allows door opening without encroaching on bike lane). Angled parking (45-degree): 4.5-5.5m. Angled parking (60-degree): 5.2-5.8m. Perpendicular parking (90-degree): 5.5-6.0m. Consider flex zones: parking by day, loading in morning, outdoor dining in evening.
[G] Travel Lane(s)
General travel lane: 3.0m minimum urban, 3.3m standard (NACTO). Bus/transit lane: 3.3-3.6m. Right-turn lane: 2.7-3.0m. Left-turn lane: 3.0-3.3m. Never exceed 3.6m for any urban lane (wider lanes induce higher speeds). Reduce to 2.7m for yield streets and very low-speed environments.
[H] Median (optional)
Pedestrian refuge: 1.8m minimum (2.4m with accessibility), allows stroller or wheelchair to wait. Landscaped median: 2.4-6.0m, with trees, ground cover, stormwater management. Transit median: 3.6-5.0m for center-running BRT/LRT with platforms. Left-turn pocket in median: 3.0-3.3m wide, 30-45m long.
Worked Example: Urban Collector Street (26m ROW)
2.4m | 3.0m | 1.2m |2.0m|0.6| 2.4m | 3.0m | 3.0m | 3.0m | 2.4m |0.6|2.0m| 1.2m | 3.0m | 2.4m
Frontage | Ped CZ | Furn |Bike|Buf| Park | Lane | Lane | Lane | Park |Buf|Bike| Furn | Ped CZ | Frontage
| | Zone | | | | EB | EB | WB | | | | Zone | |
BLDG ---+--------+------+----+---+------+------+------+------+------+---+----+------+--------+--- BLDG
Wait -- the above totals to more than 26m. Let me provide a corrected, realistic example:
Worked Example: Urban Collector (26m ROW, Commercial Context)
0.6 | 3.0 | 1.2 | 2.0+0.6 | 2.4 | 3.0 | 3.0 | 2.4 | 0.6+2.0 | 1.2 | 3.0 | 0.6
Front|PedCZ | Furn | Bike+Buf | Park | Lane | Lane | Park | Buf+Bike | Furn | PedCZ|Front
| | Zone | | | EB | WB | | | Zone | |
BLDG-+------+------+----------+------+------+------+------+----------+------+------+-BLDG
= 0.6+3.0+1.2+2.6+2.4+3.0+3.0+2.4+2.6+1.2+3.0+0.6 = 25.6m (~26m)
Worked Example: Residential Local Street (18m ROW)
0.3 | 1.8 | 1.2 | 2.1 | 3.0 | 3.0 | 2.1 | 1.2 | 1.8 | 0.3
Front|PedCZ | Furn | Park | Lane | Lane | Park | Furn | PedCZ|Front
| | Zone | | NB | SB | | Zone | |
BLDG-+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+-BLDG
= 0.3+1.8+1.2+2.1+3.0+3.0+2.1+1.2+1.8+0.3 = 17.8m (~18m)
Worked Example: Arterial Boulevard (36m ROW)
0.6 | 3.6 | 1.5 | 2.0+0.6 | 3.3 | 3.3 | 3.3 | 4.8 | 3.3 | 3.3 | 0.6+2.0 | 1.5 | 3.6 | 0.6
Front|PedCZ | Furn | Bike+Buf | Lane | Lane | Lane | Med | Lane | Lane | Buf+Bike | Furn | PedCZ|Front
| | Zone | | EB | EB | EB | | WB | WB | | Zone | |
BLDG-+------+------+----------+------+------+------+------+------+------+----------+------+------+-BLDG
= 0.6+3.6+1.5+2.6+3.3+3.3+3.3+4.8+3.3+3.3+2.6+1.5+3.6+0.6 = 37.9m (~38m, adjust median to 2.9m for 36m)
Worked Example: Shared Street / Woonerf (12m ROW)
1.5 | 9.0 single shared surface | 1.5
Planter| pedestrians + cyclists + vehicles at 15km/h |Planter
zone | textured paving, flush, no curbs, bollards | zone
BLDG---+----------------------------------------------+---BLDG
= 1.5+9.0+1.5 = 12.0m
Complete Street Elements Table
Pedestrian Zone Elements
Element
Minimum
Recommended
Maximum
Notes
Sidewalk clear zone (residential)
1.8m
2.4m
3.0m
Unobstructed walking path
Sidewalk clear zone (commercial)
2.4m
3.0m
4.5m
Higher pedestrian volumes
Sidewalk clear zone (high-volume)
3.0m
3.6m
6.0m+
Transit stations, stadiums
Frontage zone (retail)
0.3m
0.6m
0.9m
Door swings, display
Frontage zone (dining)
1.2m
1.8m
2.4m
Outdoor seating permitted
Furnishing zone
0.6m
1.2m
1.8m
Trees, lights, furniture
Curb ramp width
1.2m
1.5m
--
ADA minimum
Curb ramp slope
--
6.0%
8.3%
ADA maximum
Cycling Infrastructure
Element
Minimum
Recommended
Maximum
Notes
Protected bike lane (1-way)
1.5m
2.0m
2.5m
Physical separation required
Protected bike lane (2-way)
2.4m
3.0m
3.6m
Centerline marking required
Conventional bike lane
1.5m
1.8m
2.1m
Painted, no physical barrier
Buffered bike lane
1.5m + 0.6m
1.8m + 0.9m
2.1m + 1.2m
Lane + buffer width
Shared bus-bike lane
3.6m
4.0m
4.5m
Wide enough for passing
Shared lane (sharrow)
3.6m
4.0m
--
Full lane width, low speed only
Separation buffer (painted)
0.3m
0.6m
0.9m
Hatched markings
Separation buffer (physical)
0.6m
0.9m
1.5m
Bollards, planters, curbs
Cycle track vertical separation
50mm
100-150mm
200mm
Curb height above roadway
Travel Lanes
Element
Minimum
Recommended
Maximum
Notes
Travel lane (urban)
2.7m
3.0m
3.3m
Never exceed 3.6m urban
Travel lane (bus route)
3.0m
3.3m
3.6m
Accommodates bus width
Dedicated bus lane
3.3m
3.5m
3.6m
Exclusive use
BRT guideway
3.5m
3.6m
4.0m
May need platforms
Turn lane
2.7m
3.0m
3.3m
Pocket length 30-45m
Yield street (2-way, 1 lane)
4.5m
5.0m
6.0m
Cars yield to pass
Parking
Element
Minimum
Recommended
Maximum
Notes
Parallel parking
2.1m
2.4m
2.7m
Door zone consideration
Angled parking (45-deg)
4.5m
5.0m
5.5m
Stall depth
Angled parking (60-deg)
5.2m
5.5m
5.8m
Stall depth
Perpendicular parking (90-deg)
5.5m
5.8m
6.0m
Stall depth
Parking stall length (parallel)
5.5m
6.0m
6.6m
End-to-end
Loading zone width
2.4m
3.0m
3.6m
Wider for trucks
Loading zone length
9.0m
12.0m
18.0m
One to two vehicles
Medians
Element
Minimum
Recommended
Maximum
Notes
Pedestrian refuge island
1.8m
2.4m
3.0m
Width perpendicular to crossing
Landscaped median
2.4m
3.6m
6.0m+
Trees, planting, drainage
Transit median (BRT/LRT)
3.6m
4.5m
6.0m
Includes platform width
Raised median (no planting)
1.2m
1.8m
2.4m
Concrete or paved
Street Furniture and Fixtures
Element
Minimum
Recommended
Maximum
Notes
Tree well (individual)
1.2x1.2m
1.5x1.5m
2.0x2.0m
Open or grated
Tree trench (continuous)
0.9m wide
1.2m wide
1.8m wide
Shared soil volume
Street tree spacing
6.0m
7.5-9.0m
12.0m
Center to center
Lighting pole (pedestrian)
--
4.0-6.0m ht
6.0m ht
Warm white 3000K
Lighting pole (roadway)
8.0m ht
10.0-12.0m ht
15.0m ht
Mount above canopy
Bench
0.6m depth
0.45x1.8m
--
With armrests and back
Bollard spacing
1.2m
1.5m
1.8m
Allow wheelchair passage
Bicycle rack
0.6x1.8m
0.6x2.0m
--
Per inverted-U rack
Trash receptacle
--
0.6x0.6m
--
One per block face
Transit shelter
1.5x3.0m
1.5x4.5m
1.5x6.0m
Clear of pedestrian path
Intersection Design
Compact Intersection Principles
Design intersections to be as compact as possible. Smaller intersections reduce pedestrian crossing distances, slow turning vehicles, improve sight lines, and reduce conflict points. Key principles:
Minimize curb radii (tightest feasible for design vehicle)
Eliminate unnecessary turn lanes
Use curb extensions (bulb-outs) to shorten crossings
Align crosswalks with pedestrian desire lines
Provide pedestrian refuge islands for crossings >3 lanes
Set back stop bars 1.2-2.4m from crosswalk (4.0m at signalized with bike box)
Curb Radius Standards
Context
Effective Radius
Notes
Tight urban (no buses)
1.5-3.0m
Car-only turns, slow speed
Standard urban
3.0-4.5m
Accommodates SUVs and vans
Urban with buses
7.5-10.5m
Or use mountable truck apron
Suburban
6.0-9.0m
Higher speed turns
With frequent trucks
9.0-12.0m
Design vehicle WB-50 or WB-67
Note: Effective turning radius is often larger than the physical curb radius due to parking lane and bike lane setbacks. A 3.0m physical curb radius with a 2.4m parking lane yields an effective radius of approximately 7.5m, sufficient for buses and delivery trucks.
Pedestrian Crossing Types
Type
Application
Key Dimensions
Marked crosswalk (standard)
All intersections, low-speed streets
1.8m minimum width, 3.0m standard
High-visibility continental
Arterials, collectors, school zones
3.0m minimum, white bars 0.3-0.6m wide, 0.3-0.6m gaps
Raised crossing
Speed reduction desired, school zones, pedestrian priority areas
Full crosswalk width, 75-100mm raise, 1:10 to 1:25 approach ramps
Signalized crossing
Arterials, >6,000 ADT, >3 lanes
Pedestrian signal head, push button or automatic detection
HAWK / PHB
Mid-block crossings, high-speed roads
Overhead beacon, pedestrian-activated, dark until activated
Pedestrian scramble
High pedestrian volumes, complex intersections
All-walk phase, diagonal crossing permitted
Crossing Width Standards
Context
Minimum
Standard
High-Volume
Residential
1.8m
2.4m
3.0m
Commercial
3.0m
3.6m
4.5m
Transit station / arena
3.6m
4.5m
6.0m+
Signal Timing for Pedestrians
Minimum pedestrian walk phase: 7 seconds
Pedestrian walking speed for clearance calculation: 1.2 m/s (standard), 1.0 m/s (elderly/school zones), 0.9 m/s (accessible design)
Leading Pedestrian Interval (LPI): 3-7 seconds head start before parallel vehicle green
Exclusive pedestrian phase (scramble): 15-25 seconds depending on crossing distances
Pedestrian recall: recommended at all urban intersections (automatic pedestrian phase every cycle)
Maximum wait time: 60-90 seconds (longer waits lead to non-compliance)
Roundabout Design
Type
Inscribed Diameter
Capacity (veh/day)
Speed
Application
Mini
13-25m
<15,000
15-25 km/h
Low-volume local streets, traffic calming
Single-lane
25-30m
15,000-25,000
25-35 km/h
Collectors, neighborhood gateways
Multi-lane
45-55m
25,000-45,000
30-40 km/h
Arterials, suburban intersections
Roundabout pedestrian crossings: set back one car length (6.0m) from yield line, marked crosswalk, splitter island refuge minimum 1.8m wide.
Streetscape and Materials
Surface Materials by Zone
Zone
Primary Material
Alternative
Notes
Pedestrian clear zone
Cast-in-place concrete
Unit pavers (special areas)
Broom finish, scored joints at 1.5m
Frontage zone
Match building material
Concrete, stone pavers
Coordinate with property owner
Furnishing zone
Concrete, decomposed granite
Permeable pavers, planting
Integrate tree wells and bioswales
Cycle track
Asphalt (smooth)
Colored concrete, resin surface
Distinct color (green preferred) at conflict zones
Travel lanes
Asphalt (hot-mix)
Concrete (bus stops, intersections)
Concrete at bus stops prevents rutting
Parking lanes
Asphalt
Permeable pavers, permeable asphalt
Reduce stormwater runoff
Medians
Planted (ground cover, trees)
Concrete, unit pavers
Low-maintenance, drought-tolerant planting
Shared streets
Unit pavers, textured concrete
Natural stone, brick
Visual and tactile differentiation, flush surface
Street Tree Selection Criteria
Select species based on all of the following:
Canopy spread
: minimum 6m mature spread for shade, 8-12m for boulevards
Root behavior
: non-invasive root systems, deep-rooting species preferred, avoid surface root species near pavement
Climate suitability
: USDA hardiness zone compatible, drought tolerance for urban heat island, salt tolerance for winter-maintained streets
Clearance
: minimum 2.4m trunk clearance (pedestrian), 4.2m over bike lanes, 4.5m over roadways
Soil volume
: 15-20 cubic meters per tree minimum for healthy growth (use structural soil, silva cells, or continuous trenches)
Maintenance
: deciduous preferred for seasonal solar access, avoid messy fruit species over sidewalks, disease-resistant cultivars
Spacing
: 6.0-9.0m on center for continuous canopy, stagger with light poles
Lighting Standards
Zone
Illuminance (lux)
Uniformity Ratio
Pole Height
Color Temperature
Residential sidewalk
5-8
4:1 min:avg
4.0-5.0m
3000K (warm white)
Commercial sidewalk
10-20
3:1 min:avg
4.5-6.0m
3000-3500K
Pedestrian-priority area
15-30
3:1 min:avg
4.0-5.0m
3000K
Local roadway
6-10
6:1 min:avg
8.0-10.0m
3000-4000K
Collector roadway
10-14
4:1 min:avg
10.0-12.0m
3000-4000K
Arterial roadway
14-20
3:1 min:avg
10.0-12.0m
4000K
Intersection
1.5x approach road lux
3:1 min:avg
Match adjacent
Match adjacent
Crosswalk
20-30 (enhanced)
--
4.0-6.0m or overhead
3000-4000K
Green Infrastructure Integration
Tree trenches
: Continuous below-grade soil cells connecting multiple tree pits, shared soil volume, structural support for pavement above
Bioswales
: Located in furnishing zone or median, 0.6-1.8m wide, 150-300mm deep, planted with native grasses and sedges, accept road runoff through curb cuts
Permeable paving
: Use in parking lanes and furnishing zones, reduces runoff by 70-90%, requires regular vacuum sweeping
Rain gardens
: At curb extensions and median ends, capture and filter first flush of stormwater, sized for local rainfall intensity
Stormwater planters
: Contained planting areas with underdrains, suitable where infiltration is not feasible (high water table, contaminated soil)
Traffic Calming Toolkit
Measures by Target Speed Reduction
50 to 40 km/h (Arterial/Collector Transition)
Road diet: convert 4 lanes to 3 (2 travel + center turn lane), reclaim space for bike lanes and wider sidewalks
Curb extensions at intersections: narrow roadway from 12m to 9m at crossing points
Median islands: 1.8m minimum width, planted, with pedestrian refuge
Signal coordination at 40 km/h progression speed
Roadway surface change at gateway (asphalt to textured)
40 to 30 km/h (Collector/Local Transition)
Chicanes: alternating curb extensions that deflect the travel path laterally, 3.0-3.6m deflection
Raised crossings: full-width speed tables at pedestrian crossings, 75-100mm height, 6.0m long platform
Speed tables: flat-topped speed bumps, 6.0-7.5m long, 75-100mm height
Gateway treatments: visual and physical narrowing at neighborhood entries
Neckdowns: narrow roadway to one lane at pinch points, with priority signs
30 to 20 km/h (Local/Shared Street Transition)
Pinch points: narrow roadway to 3.0-3.6m, one vehicle at a time, yield condition
Raised intersections: entire intersection at sidewalk level, vehicles mount gentle ramp
Horizontal deflection: S-curves using alternating parking or planting islands
Surface material changes: transition from asphalt to unit pavers, textured concrete
Vertical elements: trees, bollards, planters placed to reduce apparent width
20 to 10 km/h (Shared Street / Woonerf)
Shared surface: remove curbs entirely, single-level surface
Textured paving: cobblestone, unit pavers, or stamped concrete to create visual and physical friction
Removable bollards: allow event closure and emergency access while defining edges
Planting and furniture: place obstacles (planters, benches, play elements) in the vehicle path
Tight geometry: no straight runs longer than 30-50m
Output Format
When producing a street design, deliver the following specification package:
Cross-Section Specification Template
STREET NAME: [Name]
CLASSIFICATION: [Arterial / Collector / Local / Shared / Pedestrian]
CONTEXT: [Commercial / Residential / Mixed-Use / Industrial / Other]
DESIGN SPEED: [km/h]
ADT: [vehicles/day]
ROW WIDTH: [m]
CROSS-SECTION (one side, building face to centerline):
+-----------+--------+-----------+
| Element | Width | Notes |
+-----------+--------+-----------+
| Frontage | X.Xm | |
| Ped CZ | X.Xm | |
| Furnishing| X.Xm | |
| Bike Lane | X.Xm | + X.Xm buffer |
| Parking | X.Xm | |
| Travel Ln | X.Xm | x N lanes |
| Median | X.Xm | |
+-----------+--------+-----------+
TOTAL (half): XX.Xm
TOTAL (full): XX.Xm
ASCII CROSS-SECTION:
|BLD|Front| Ped CZ |Furn| Bike |Buf|Park| Lane | Lane |Med| Lane | Lane |Park|Buf| Bike |Furn| Ped CZ |Front|BLD|
| | 0.6 | 3.0 |1.2 | 2.0 |0.6|2.4 | 3.0 | 3.0 |3.0| 3.0 | 3.0 |2.4 |0.6| 2.0 |1.2 | 3.0 | 0.6 | |
INTERSECTION TREATMENT:
Curb radius: X.Xm
Crosswalk width: X.Xm
Crossing type: [marked / raised / signalized]
Pedestrian refuge: [yes/no, width]
STREETSCAPE:
Trees: [species], [spacing]m o.c., [soil volume]m3 per tree