Welcome! We're Happy You're Here!
Note: The meeting is no longer accepting survey responses.
Thank you for helping us shape transportation in Denver. If this is your first time hearing about Denver Moves Everyone — welcome! If you've provided input on previous phases — thank you!
Denver Moves Everyone 2050 is a citywide plan for the future of transportation in our city, where everyone can get where they need to go — safely, conveniently, equitably, and sustainably.
Please spend 10 minutes with us to learn about how Denver will spends its transportation dollars in the short term to advance us toward our goals. Your feedback will help us refine our draft plan of transportation improvements.
(Próximamente video en español)
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If you require this information in a different format, please submit your request by emailing info@denvermoveseveryone.com or calling 303-524-8340.
Where We're At
Over the past year and a half, thousands of Denverites have weighed in on Denver's transportation future.
Your input has helped us to establish a vision and goals for our city's transportation future. Now, we are seeking your input on how we will be planning transportation improvements to advance our shared vision and goals.
You Talked. We Listened.
Your feedback set Denver's shared values for the future of transportation in Denver. Now we're aligning how and where we will invest to achieve Denver's vision and goals.
Denver's 2050 Transportation Vision: Denver moves everyone and everything with respect and care. Denver is a city of safe streets connected by sustainable mobility options, providing equitable access and opportunity for the people who need it most.
Denver Moves Everyone includes six goals, with equity being the common thread linking each goal.
Click each goal to learn how each goal reflects the values important to Denverites
Equity: Achieving transportation equity means living in a city where your identity no longer impacts your ability to thrive; where transportation is accessible and affordable to all; and where everyone has the opportunity to travel easily no matter their race, ethnicity, income, or physical ability.
Mobility: A city that provides transportation choices that move all people, goods, and services reliably, easily, and affordably.
Safety: A city with zero traffic deaths and serious injuries, where everyone feels safe and comfortable traveling throughout the city, regardless of their age, gender, race, ethnicity, or how and when they travel.
Sustainability: A city with a transportation system that is pollution free and resilient in the face of climate change, making Denver healthier for all people with health inequities caused by the transportation system eliminated.
Community: A city where neighborhoods are connected to all the places people go, with streets designed for people and shaped by communities and cultures.
Quality: A city where the transportation system is maintained in a consistent state of good repair, using robust data to prioritize investments in neighborhood that need it most and to minimize cost across the system.
Equity: Achieving transportation equity means living in a city where your identity no longer impacts your ability to thrive; where transportation is accessible and affordable to all; and where everyone has the opportunity to travel easily no matter their race, ethnicity, income, or physical ability.
How Will Denver Invest?
Between now and 2050 Denver is planning improvements that will meet our goals and make it easier and safer to travel in your neighborhood and around Denver.
By 2050, Denverites want a world class transportation system where all neighborhoods have access to safe and high-quality mobility options. Through Denver Moves: Everyone we now understand what we need to do to get there.
Click each icon to learn more about the types of improvements DOTI needs to make to provide an equitable transportation system that is affordable, reliable, safe, comfortable, and sustainable.
Walking & Rolling
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
By improving everything that helps make walking a safe and comfortable option, including:
- Sidewalks
- Safe intersections to cross the street
- Curb ramps for people using wheelchairs or mobility devices
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals?
By completing Denver's pedestrian system, including:
- Complete the pedestrian network by filling 300 miles of sidewalk gaps
- Widening 830 miles of narrow sidewalks
Bicycling & Micromobility
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
By providing bicyclists, electric scooters, and people using other forms of small personal vehicles — micromobility — a safe and comfortable place to ride. This includes:
- Bikeways that are separated from traffic
- Bikeways that are comfortable to ride with slow traffic on neighborhood streets
- Safe ways to navigate intersections
- Places to park bikes and other small personal vehicles
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals?
By completing Denver's bikeway and micromobility system, including:
- Complete the high-comfort bikeway network by building 410 miles of new bikeways with permanent materials
- Upgrade 135 miles of existing bikeways to be more comfortable, using permanent materials
- Upgrade 34 miles of existing high-comfort bikeways from temporary to permanent materials
Transit
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
Providing frequent, reliable, and quick public transit options and comfortable areas to wait including:
- Bus rapid transit corridors, which match the experience of taking light rail
- Dedicated bus lanes and street designs that prioritize buses
- Shelters and stations that feel safe and comfortable
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals?
By completing Denver's bus and train system, including:
- Build Denver's vision for a fast, frequent, reliable and comfortable bus and train system by building 100 miles of Bus Rapid Transit corridors, which will match the experience of taking light rail
- Install 80 miles of bus lane improvements to make buses quicker and more reliable
- Upgrading 2,500 bus stops with lighting and shelters
Signals & Crossings
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
By installing more places to cross the street for all forms of travel, and keeping traffic signals in good shape. This means:
- Replacing old traffic signals with new ones
- Building more traffic signals to provide more crossings
- Adding more bike and pedestrian signals
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals?
By installing safer crossings at most intersections in Denver, including:
- Adding 1,500 new signals on busy streets and installing 11,000 new safe places to cross along less busy streets, so people can cross the street most every block
- Upgrading 900 signals to make it easier for people walking, bicycling, and taking transit to cross the street
- Replacing 400 old signals with updated technology, and continuing to upgrade all signals to keep them in good shape
Bridges & Structures
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
By providing access across barriers, such as highways, railroads, or rivers. This includes:
- Replacing bridges, overpasses, and underpasses
- Building new structures to connect neighborhoods
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals??
By keeping our bridges and structures in good shape, and providing more options to cross barriers in Denver, including:
- Keeping 95% or more of Denver's bridges in good condition
- Enhance connectivity citywide by constructing 10 new bridges across highways, railroads, or rivers and build 65 bicycle and pedestrian bridges across major barriers
Streets, Alleys, Striping & Signs
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
By building and maintaining Denver’s street systems. This means:
- Maintaining streets and alleyways
- Building new streets and alleyways
- Installing and maintaining street signs and striping
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals?
By keeping our street system in good shape, including:
- Maintain 95% of Denver's streets, alleys, striping, and signs in good condition
Streetscape & Curbspace
How Does Denver Build and Maintain This Part of Our Travel System?
By providing space for all the needs at the edge of streets, such as infrastructure to provide shade, cool streets, and improve air and water quality, as well as lighting. This also means space for loading, deliveries, and parking. This includes:
- Trees, plants, and landscaping
- Pick up and drop off zones
- Space for delivery vehicles
- Metered parking
- Street lighting
How Will Denver Improve this Part of the System to Reach our Goals?
Maximize the highest-and-best use of street space, and help to manage a changing climate, by:
- Cooling and providing shade on 1,310 miles of Denver’s streets by planting trees and installing landscaping improvements
- Maximizing the best use of the curbspace everywhere by using innovative solutions to manage competing needs, including mobility, parking, loading, and freight access
Let's Get Moving!
To help get us closer to our goals in the short term, a draft plan of improvements is recommended to help achieve a transportation system that helps you move better in your neighborhood and around the city. Though projects will be programmed throughout the city, improvements will be focused in areas with the greatest need. Click here to see the draft list of improvements planned for the short-term.
Click on each icon to see where improvements are proposed to each part of Denver's transportation system in the short-term. Scroll down to see the map.
- Major Multimodal
- Walking & Rolling
- Bicycling & Micromobility
- Transit
- Signals
- Bridges & Structures
This map highlights Denver’s draft plan for large transportation projects to advance in the short term, including existing bond-funded projects and new projects prioritized by feedback collected through Denver Moves Everyone. These are “complete street” projects and will include enhancements that benefit all street users, such as new and wider sidewalks, trees, high-comfort bikeways, new and enhanced crossings, or dedicated bus lanes and improved bus stops. Click on the project in the map to learn more about each.
Click on the map and drag to change the view. Use the “+” or “-“ on the upper left corner of the map to zoom in or out.
This map highlights Denver’s draft plan to improve walking and rolling in the short term. The map highlights existing bond-funded sidewalk projects, priority locations to build new sidewalks, as well as priority locations for safer crossings. Based upon feedback collected through Denver Moves Everyone, Denver prioritized new walking & rolling projects in Denver’s priority areas for transportation equity, along streets where there are currently higher proportions of severe crashes, and where crossing demand and crash risk for pedestrians is higher.
Click on the map and drag to change the view. Use the “+” or “-“ on the upper left corner of the map to zoom in or out.
This map highlights Denver’s draft plan to improve infrastructure for bicycling and micromobility (such as riding scooters) in the short term. The map highlights existing bond and city-funded bikeway projects, as well as priority locations to improve and expand Denver’s bicycling network. Based upon feedback collected through Denver Moves Everyone, Denver prioritized new bikeway projects in our priority areas for transportation equity, upgrades to a few key existing bikeways, as well as several projects in Downtown Denver, where bicycling and scooter use is highest.
Click on the map and drag to change the view. Use the “+” or “-“ on the upper left corner of the map to zoom in or out.
This map highlights Denver’s draft plan to improve buses and trains — or transit - in the short term. The map highlights existing bond and city funded transit projects, as well as new priority locations to improve and expand Denver’s transit network. Based upon feedback collected through Denver Moves Everyone, Denver prioritized new transit projects along key corridors where bus ridership is high, but where improvements are needed to make buses run more quickly and reliably.
Click on the map and drag to change the view. Use the “+” or “-“ on the upper left corner of the map to zoom in or out.
This map highlights Denver’s draft plan to improve traffic signals in the short term, which provide safer crossings of busy streets. The map shows existing bond and city funded signal projects, as well as new priority locations to improve and expand Denver’s traffic signal system. Based upon feedback collected through Denver Moves Everyone, Denver prioritized new traffic signal improvements along Denver’s streets where there are the highest proportion of severe crashes, as well as in locations where the distance between traffic signals is far.
Click on the map and drag to change the view. Use the “+” or “-“ on the upper left corner of the map to zoom in or out.
This map highlights Denver’s draft plan to improve bridges and underpasses in the short term. The map shows existing bond funded bridge projects, as well as new priority locations to improve bridges and underpasses, and create new multimodal and bicycle and pedestrian bridges in Denver. Based upon feedback collected through Denver Moves Everyone, Denver prioritized bridge and underpass projects in our priority areas for transportation equity, in areas that have less access because of highways, rivers, or railroads, as well as locations where an existing structure needs to be replaced due to its condition.
Click on the map and drag to change the view. Use the “+” or “-“ on the upper left corner of the map to zoom in or out.
Tell Us What You Think!
The comment period has now closed.
Thank You For Taking the Time to Help Us!
Your engagement continues to be critical as we finish planning & prioritizing Denver's transportation future. We’ll come back later this winter to share our draft plan that will make Denver a better place to live and travel within.
Visit our website to learn more about the project and previous engagement efforts.