Neighborhood Traffic Calming Program

If you are looking for a way to make cars drive slower on your neighborhood street, the City of Ann Arbor Traffic Calming Program may be a good fit. Traffic Calming slows traffic through physical changes (such as speed humps and curb bump-outs) that impact the behavior of people driving cars and improve conditions for people living, walking, and bicycling in local neighborhoods.

What is Traffic Calming?

This program is a formal process for residents and property owners to engage the city in a partnership to explore traffic concerns, and potential solutions, on local streets. To see examples of traffic calming around Ann Arbor and locate specific project materials, visit the Projects page.

For more information, please review the Traffic Calming Guidebook or check out the Program FAQ

See Traffic Calming Projects

Click the button below to see a map of the city's on going and archieved traffic calming requests. Streets are color-coded to identify streets where traffic calming work has been constructed, is on going, or not qualified.

Traffic Calming Request Process

Petitions are considered on a first-come first-served basis. The Traffic Calming Process may take more than one year from petition submittal to construction.

Process Overview Diagram (Subject to change)

Process is as follows:

1) Resident initiated Petition: Define project limits and establish community buy-in early.

2) Initial Questionnaire: Collect feedback about existing conditions.

3) Meeting #1 orientation/workshop: Advance understanding of program and options while gathering additional feedback.

4) Meeting #2 onsite/workshop: Visualize draft plan on-site.

5) Final polling: determine project area response to proposed plan.


Disclaimer

Resolution R-23-330 directs staff to update the Traffic Calming Program. Our dedicated team is diligently working on these updates, which will impact the current petition process as outlined in the guidebook. However, the city wants to emphasize that residents should not be discouraged from submitting a petition. Applications will be placed in queue, and upon update, petitioners will be notified of additional information required for a qualifying petition.