Over the past three years, an intersection in north Wheaton has seen at least nine reported crashes, the cityβs traffic engineer says.
The city has done its own speed studies at or near Harrison Avenue and Washington Street.
βThe staff conducted a number of studies over the last year or two about this intersection. And really, the solutions that weβve relied on in the past, we really donβt think are good enough,β City Manager Michael Dzugan said. βWe wanted to spend a little more time looking at this from a traffic calming effort.β
So the Wheaton City Council has tasked an engineering consultant with studying potential traffic calming measures. The council approved an agreement to hire Hampton, Lenzini and Renwick, Inc., for a total cost not to exceed $17,600 plus a 10% contingency.
βGenerally, the studies tell us that the drivers traveling on Harrison are speeding, and the drivers on Washington are not patient β¦ so weβre looking for a potential infrastructure change that will address those concerns,β Dzugan said.
The firm will produce a traffic calming report aimed at improving safety and reducing speeding as well as crash frequency at the intersection, per a memo from the cityβs traffic engineer. The scope of work includes reviewing data, analyzing current conditions and preparing a formal report with findings and recommendations. The firm also will provide preliminary, βengineering-levelβ cost estimates for each proposed measure.
More broadly, βit might lead to some other areas that we will look at, depending on what we find,β Dzugan said.
City Councilman Bradley Clousing also said heβs hopeful that βthis will be a little bit of a road map.β
Roughly 8,000 vehicles per day use Harrison Avenue, while Washington Street, currently designated as a north-south βlocal road,β sees daily traffic volumes ranging between 2,500 and 4,000 vehicles, suggesting it may warrant reclassification, according to the engineerβs memo.
There are stop signs on Washington. The south leg of Washington also βpresents a sight-distance issue,β meaning that drivers βmust pull forward past the stop bar, after checking for pedestrians, to gain adequate visibility for safe turning decisions,β the engineer wrote.
βIβm very happy that weβre moving forward on this,β Councilwoman Erica Bray-Parker said of the new study, βand I really appreciate the neighborhoodβs patience so we can get this right.β
https://www.dailyherald.com/20250722/news/wheaton-commissions-study-of-intersection-with-speeding-impatient-drivers/