05/25/2026
NACTO Day 2 Recap:
The Cville team got a special tour of some bike lanes and trails in the city that can serve as models for what we’re trying to do back home. Water Street and Rose Hill Drive projects are currently in the planning and design phases, with protected bike lanes and traffic calming on the menu to make it safer for all road users. The materials and styles of these projects will matter to the neighborhood, so experiencing options live instead of on paper will better inform our team and how they share with the community.
I attended two great sessions:
- From Scramble to Strategy: Making Quick-Build Work at Scale: “Through examples from peers, you’ll see how organizational shifts turn isolated projects into durable programs.” Thanks to , , , , and for sharing their experiences, challenges, and ideas!
- Beyond Petitions: Rethinking Traffic Calming Programs to Advance Equity: “The session looks at how cities design, fund, and prioritize traffic calming projects—from speed humps to mini-roundabouts—highlighting programs that center equity and effectiveness. Panelists will explore alternatives to complaint-driven, petition-based programs that often favor high-resource neighborhoods, consume significant staff time, and have limited safety impacts.“ , , discussed better ways to organize projects.
The day ended with the NACTO After Dark, where Minneapolis Public Works invited attendees to watch and help repaint lines, crosswalks, and bike lanes at night, when the roads are less busy. Cville’s own Transit Planner, Zoe, even got to add the reflective material to the BUS lane stencil. We also saw the inside of a traffic signal box that operates the stoplights at an intersection. What a blast!