Fairfax-Bolinas Road CONDITION UPDATES, thank you for your patience: At milepost 5.73, Fairfax-Bolinas Road will be open on weekdays and weekends from 12/16/24 through 1/1/25 (weather permitting), with traffic controlled through a single lane with alternating access. This is to accommodate the holiday traffic. From 1/2/25 through 1/5/25, the road will be closed at milepost 5.73 to allow for construction activities as the project nears completion, weather permitting. After 1/5/25, it is anticipated that the road will be closed from Azalea Hill to Ridgecrest on weekdays only. By mid-January, the project is expected to be completed and the roadway will fully reopen. See project webpage for details.

Pedestrian Hybrid Beacon (HAWK) on Point San Pedro Road

Description

Overview

Currently, pedestrians traveling between the north and south side of the intersection of Point San Pedro Road and Summit Ave have to use a crosswalk that traverses 5 lanes of traffic.  Installation of a Pedestrian Hybrid Beacon, also called a High Intensity Activated Crosswalk (HAWK), at the intersection of Point San Pedro Road and Summit Ave in unincorporated San Rafael, will provide an improved alert to vehicular traffic of pedestrians crossing, forcing vehicular traffic to slow down and stop while pedestrians are crossing the street.

What is a HAWK?

A HAWK system provides a pedestrian safety improvement for crossing streets. The proposed HAWK signal to be installed here is the same type of device that was installed on Point San Pedro Rd at San Rafael High School and on Sir Francis Drake Blvd at Ash Ave.  The signal indicators for the roadway remain dark until a pedestrian pushes the button to cross.  At that time, the signal will briefly flash yellow, then solid yellow, then solid red at which point the pedestrian will get a walk signal.  During the solid red phase, vehicles are required to remain stopped, just as with a regular traffic signal.  When the pedestrian signal goes to the flashing hand ("don’t walk") phase, the vehicle signal will go into wig-wag ("flashing lights") mode, similar to a railroad crossing signal.  With this indication, motorists may proceed, once they have stopped, if it is safe to do so.  When the pedestrian signal goes to the solid hand the vehicle signals go dark.  For multilane roadways, the HAWK is a superior treatment for pedestrian safety as it requires motorists to stop as opposed to flashing yellow lights.

Funding

Estimated project cost is $2M,  of which $1.8M is HSIP grant funded and the remainder will be funded from the County's Road and Bridge Fund.

Public impacts

During the construction phase, expect short delays between the hours of 8 am to 5 pm. There is a possibility of lane closures with traffic control measures in place.

Timeline

Fall 2025

  • Expected construction phase
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