Sudbury city-wide corridors study to start with Lasalle Boulevard - Action News
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Sudbury

Sudbury city-wide corridors study to start with Lasalle Boulevard

The City of Greater Sudbury plans to ask for citizens' input on ways to improve Lasalle Boulevard, a busy east-west thoroughfare. It is the first street to be studied as part of the city-wide nodes and corridors study.

City to seek out input from residents during idea-jamming session next month

Lasalle Boulevard is the first major street to be a part of the city's larger corridors study. The City of Greater Sudbury will be seeking input from citizens on how the busy street can be improved. (City of Greater Sudbury)

How can Sudbury, Ont., improve the busy and noisy Lasalle Boulevard?

That's what the City of Greater Sudbury plans to determine over the next few months.

The majoreast-west street is the first thoroughfare to be studied in the city-widenodes and corridorsstudy.

Future streets to be studied include theKingsway, Notre Dame Avenue,BarrydowneRoad andLorneStreet says senior planner Ed Landry.

The study costs $200,000, but Landrysays half of that is funded by the provincial and federal governments. Because of this the report must be wrapped up by March 2018.

LasalleBlvd not pedestrian friendly

Landrywas part of asmall group who recently walked a portion ofLasalleBoulevard aspart ofearly information gathering.

The group consisted of representatives from the roads, transit, economic development, planning and communications departments, along with consultants.

The walking tour was meant to record initial reactions to the street.
Sudbury senior planner Ed Landry was one of several city staff and consultants who took a walking tour of Lasalle Boulevard this month to gather initial reactions for the corridors' study. (Olivia Stefanovich/CBC)

Landry admits the noise from the street is loud, particularly at certain times of the day.

"There's opportunities for shade, so we're looking also at bus shelters. Where can we best put them," Landrysays.

"Some of those [problems] you could ... really only tell while you're walking the corridor ...How you're feeling and the noise, the sun, or if we were doing this in the wintertime, how cold we could get."

Maley to take truck traffic from Lasalle

The work currently going on to extend Maley Drive is one of the reasons why Lasalle is now being studied. Maley and Lasallerun parallel to one another.

"It's one of the major drivers, to take a look at Lasalle first because it`s anticipated that Maley Drive will reduce the truck traffic along Lasalle."

Landrysays the MaleyDrive work means that the city needs to come up with a new vision for Lasalle,Boulevard.

As for positives from the initial walking tour, Landry says there have been a few new developments along the street and the road connects a number of residential areas.

"Lasalle, very much is a spine to the surrounding neighbourhoods. How do we bring the surrounding neighbourhoods to the spine?"

Idea-jamming coming soon

There will be an idea-jamming session held in September for residents to add their input. Landry says the city is just working out the date and venue for this meeting.

"Just put all your ideas, what do you like about Lasalle, what could be improved, what can be capitalized on, what should we be doing more of?"

A full strategy and an action plan will go to Sudbury city council inMarch.

Landry says this report will be divided into items that could be fixed or changed easily in the first year. While other suggestions could take longer since they would require policy recommendations, for example changing zones of certain sites or community improvement plans.