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===Traffic issues===
====Congestion causes and remedies====
Most [[traffic engineering (transportation)|traffic engineers]] consider the street hierarchy to be optimal, since it eliminates through traffic on all streets except arterials. However, some have contended that it actually exacerbates [[traffic congestion]], leading to [[air pollution]] and other undesirable outcomes.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/
A more precise image of the prevalent thinking about structuring road networks can be found in the 2006 ITE/CNU recommended practice for the design of urban thoroughfares.<ref>http://www.ite.org/bookstore/RP036.pdf -Context Sensitive Solutions in Designing Major Urban Thoroughfares for Walkable Communities</ref> In it, the functional, traffic-engineering classifications of roads are replaced by three basic road types: boulevard, avenue and street with the addition of a second type of boulevard – the multi-way. These road types reflect familiar names and images of roads and also real conditions in an urban environment, where each type normally performs multiple functions but only up to a hierarchical limit. For example, a boulevard can function as a principal and minor arterial but not as a collector or local access street; an avenue, as principal/minor arterial and a collector but not as a street; while a street can serve as minor arterial, a collector and a local (access road) but not as a principal arterial. These exclusions of functional roles derive from the design intention to put an emphasis either on mobility or access; both cannot be accommodated concurrently in every case.
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