![DCR proposal shows Murray Circle turned more into Murray Square, with traffic lights.](https://universalhub.com/files/styles/main_image_-_bigger/public/images/2025/arborway-murray_0.jpg)
DCR proposal shows Murray Circle turned more into Murray Square, with traffic lights.
Unlike the weather, DCR says this time it's really going to do something to make the Arborway safer for drivers, pedestrians and bicyclists, possibly in 2027, through a host of improvements that will include changing the giant circle of doom by the Arboretum known as Murray Circle and the smaller ellipsoid of confusion up by Jamaica Pond known as Kelley Circle into large intersections, with traffic lights and turn lanes and "highly visible" crosswalks and pedestrian-crossing signals.
At a Zoom community meeting this evening, planners from DCR and its traffic consultant said they're also looking at adding dedicated pathways along the roughly mile of highway from the pond to Forest Hills for pedestrians and bicyclists - and possibly separate paths for each - reducing the number of crosswalks where pedestrians can now get pancaked by speeders and ensuring the lights at the new signalized intersections mostly don't put walkers in the way of turning cars.
As one example, they pointed to the proposed re-do of Kelley Circle, where people who want to walk to Jamaica Pond from the south now have to hope motorists will stop for them at three separate unsignalized crossings in a short space - one at Prince Street and two at Parkman Drive. Under the proposal, parkland around the pond would be extended south, with the current parkway route eliminated and Parkman Drive extended to a new intersection with Pond Street - which would have pedestrian-crossing lights.
Before and after:
![Before and after maps of pedestrian crossings in area of Parkman Drive](/images/2025/arborway-parkman.jpg)
Signals would be timed to try to encourage motorists to go no faster than 25 m.p.h. along the stretch of roadway, they said, adding that just south of Murray Circle, they are looking at adding what would appear to be a mini-rotary but which would actually be two u-turn lanes so motorists could avoid Murray.
Possible dedicated bike lanes on what is now a little used median:
![Possible new path along median southbound](/images/2025/arborway-sbcarriageway.jpg)
Also in the works: Returning the carriageways to their original purpose as local roads to handle mainly people going to and from all the homes along the Arborway, rather than serving as congested throughways for people who only find themselves in Jamaica Plain as a way to get somewhere else.
Eliminating the two rotaries would all by itself make the roads safer for motorists, who would no longer get into sideswipe crashes due to all the confusing weaving they currently have to do to get through rotaries - a task not helped by DCR itself a few years back when it reconfigured Murray Circle itself and put in a southbound sort-of bike lane without much signage telling motorists which lanes to take to go where.
Planners added that between Murray Circle and Forest Hills, they are looking at removing the narrow median and using the land gained that way for bolstering pedestrian and bicycle pathways along the Arboretum. However, the plans call for continued Arborway parking along the stretch of road past what is now Murray Circle.
DCR project manager John Cavanaro said the current Arborway configuration, which dates back several decades "has sort of outlived its useful life" and that DCR wants to try to make it safer for people using it to get somewhere and to "support Olmsted's vision for the parkway as a green, recreational space."
In total, planners said, the revised parkway would lose three acres of pavement and another 1.5 acres of currently impervious areas, letting them use the land for passive recreational areas people could actually use - as opposed to the current large areas inside rotaries or along medians that no sane person would ever try to get to.
Planners said this would include planting new trees that would ultimately provide a canopy for as much as 10,000 square feet of currently bare land. Some current trees might have to be uprooted, but Cavanaro said the plans would try to minimize that through steps such as shifting the new Murray Circle intersection away from the current rotary to protect the trees now growing in the middle.
Cavanaro said the current timeline calls for DCR and its consultant, Howard Stein Hudson, to analyze comments from tonight's meeting, better refine the plans, hold another public hearing this fall and begin to draw up "100% design" plans that would be used to solicit construction bids by late 2026.
Residents and drivers, who have been complaining about the stretch of road for years, seemed mostly pleased that DCR was heading in the right direction at the meeting.
However, residents of Pondside - the area between roughly the Arborway and Centre Street across from Jamaica Pond, expressed concern that the new road configuration would make it harder for them to get between their homes and areas to the north, such as downtown, without going through a convoluted set of turns or, in the case of coming home at night, being forced to try to make a left turn through an intersection with no traffic signals across northbound traffic.
Residents on the other side of the Arborway and Centre Street heading towards Faulkner also worried if the changes would send more motorists down their roads as shortcuts to avoid the Arborway. One resident also expressed concern that eliminating even the thin median between Murray Circle and Forest Hills would be a problem given that motorists particularly love to speed on that stretch - and the lack of a barrier could lead to head-on crashes.
Resident Eric Herot, though, said he's concerned that if the state does too good a job easing congestion on the Arborway, online route planners such as Google Maps would start sending drivers back onto the parkway, meaning it could return to its current state of congestion. He also urged DCR to ensure the new crosswalks are well lit at night - he said that in other areas where DCR has put in new crosswalks, it's often skimped on ensuring the crosswalks have adequate lighting.
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Comments
Make Jamaicaway one lane each
By anon
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 5:12am
Make Jamaicaway one lane each way
More here:
By Robert Winters
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 5:59am
https://www.mass.gov/info-details/arborway-improve...
Great
By Anon
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 7:06am
For your next trick do K circle at JFK. In all seriousness, with rotary’s being back in vogue I am glad that there are still some sensible people that realize when and where they do not work like here and the aforementioned K Circle.
And THIS time, plant
By anon
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 9:35am
And THIS time, plant healthier trees. What's the plan for the March through October club music and dragracing with scooter entourage up and down the Arborway every night until dawn? Maybe the Soccer Dream with its Armies of loud white people coming in to Franklin Park from the suburbs will be able to stop it.
Resident Concern
By JBAL
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 12:04pm
I've got bad news for Eric Herot about induced demand.
This seems awesome!!
By Snoofy
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 2:20pm
Make use of the available land in a more user-friendly way!!
"ellipsoid of confusion"
By Saddlebrook7
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 3:13pm
Now that you've named it perfectly, maybe we should keep it?
(not)
Sideswipe crashes
By Sator
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 7:52pm
Sideswipes cause fewer injuries and deaths than T-bones or head-on collisions.
That is literally why we use them.
Rotaries calm traffic
By Waquiot
Wed, 01/15/2025 - 10:40pm
I'll never get how across America the rotary, rebranded, is being embraced while in Massachusetts it's being done away with.
The answer for the stretch between the rotaries is to reconfigure what would be the carriageways so that only local traffic goes into them. Doing that will save the DCR millions.
Small, one lane rotaries calm traffic...
By epeemike81
Thu, 01/16/2025 - 3:08pm
Giant circles of death like Murray Circle, on the other hand, cause accidents.
And leaving aside the effect on drivers, it's fucking awful for pedestrians. Try to take a walk from JP Center to the Faulkner sometime and let me know how you fare.
And Murray Circle isn't a rotary
By Just walkin'
Thu, 01/16/2025 - 6:03pm
Murray Circle is a rotary with a traffic signal and another intersection bolted onto it. It's really quite something.
I did that walk last spring
By Waquiot
Thu, 01/16/2025 - 9:32pm
I also run the Emerald necklace once or twice a year, skirting the Arboretum going to and from the Fenway. I’ve had no problems crossing Centre or the Arborway.
Rotaries reduce conflict points. Not having to gun it due to a light calms drivers down. The statistics say that rotaries are better than signalized intersections. Read up about Carmel, IN. They’ve gone all in on the concept.
Rotaries are safer than signaled intersections
By necturus
Thu, 01/16/2025 - 9:12am
The whole point of rotaries is that if you have a collision, it's likely to be a sideswipe and not a T-bone. In a signaled intersection, someone running a red light can easily cause a fatality.
Moreover, rotaries only require you to yield, not stop. Traffic flow through a rotary is usually smoother than through a signaled intersection, where red lights can cause backups that keep people stopped for several light cycles before they get through.
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