Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate speed humps. Perhaps they have their use in a suburban subdivision but why do we need them in a city? The street east of the Giant off of Wilsonsin has like six humps. Can anything be done except to avoid them and find other routes?
Don't tell me, let me guess. Your's is a Maryland vehicle that comes into our neighborhoods in DC every day?
Anonymous wrote:People shouldn't speed in residential neighborhoods anywhere, city or suburbs. So on that basis I'm a fan of speed humps.
But the PPs insisting that you shouldn't cut through neighborhoods and that all traffic must stick to main roads need to grow up and shut up. You live in a highly congested urban area. You do not live in a gated community. Cars and other vehicles may and should traverse past your precious home. Forcing all traffic on a few main roads doesn't improve anyone's lives.
Personally I hate the workarounds that have been developed in the old money neighborhoods of Chevy Chase MD to make it difficult for traffic to cut through -- so I do so (at the posted speed limit) every single chance I get. And I might honk a little too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honk as I go over them. My own little protest to the residents on the street who petitioned the city to have a speedbump installed. The city only puts them in by request, so wherever you see one, it's because someone on that street asked for it. So now they get to hear my horn at all hours of the day or night. I hope it annoys them as much as their bumps annoy me.
My DH does this too.
So he thinks it’s ok to wake up people - and their sleeping kids - because the neighborhood wanted to keep their children safe by having DC install traffic calming?
Anonymous wrote:Some people see speed humps as another manifestation of NIMBYism. The public streets belong to all.
Anonymous wrote:Some people see speed humps as another manifestation of NIMBYism. The public streets belong to all.
Anonymous wrote:Do you all call them speed humps in DC?