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NEW: The presentation from the June 4 meeting has been added to the "Documents" section. A photo from the meeting has been uploaded, too.
Hoylake Drive has been identified by a traffic study as having vehicles operating at speeds higher than desirable. The City of Columbia Public Works department is beginning a traffic calming project for the corridor and is seeking public input on potential solutions.
An informal open house meeting was held June 4 at City Hall. Residents and community members were able to review potential traffic calming concepts, ask questions and share feedback with City engineering staff.
Project information and diagrams were available for public review at the meeting and are on this page. Public comments may be submitted through June 19 and will be considered as designs are developed.
In the Documents section, you can find the following files:
Hoylake Drive Presentation from June 4, 2026, meeting – A PowerPoint document from the June 4, 2026, meeting that shows different options for traffic calming, such as speed humps, speed tables, raised crosswalks, bulb-outs, medians, and roundabouts. It lists common concerns, such as emergency vehicles, maintenance and snow removal. It also lists the cost for each of these types of traffic calming.
Hoylake Drive traffic calming project location – A map showing the project area on Hoylake Drive between East Broadway and South Rolling Hills Road.
Hoylake Drive speed study data – A map showing traffic volumes (the number of vehicles) traveling in the northbound and southbound directions, along with the 85th percentile speed measured during the traffic study. The 85th percentile speed is a commonly used traffic engineering measurement that represents the speed at or below which 85% of vehicles were traveling. For example, an 85th percentile speed of 38 mph means that 85% of drivers were traveling 38 mph or slower, while 15% were traveling faster than 38 mph.
Members of the public may attend any open meeting. For requests for accommodations related to disability, please call 573.874.CITY (2489) or email City@CoMo.gov. In order to assist staff in making the appropriate arrangements for your accommodation, please make your request as far in advance of the posted meeting date as possible.
NEW: The presentation from the June 4 meeting has been added to the "Documents" section. A photo from the meeting has been uploaded, too.
Hoylake Drive has been identified by a traffic study as having vehicles operating at speeds higher than desirable. The City of Columbia Public Works department is beginning a traffic calming project for the corridor and is seeking public input on potential solutions.
An informal open house meeting was held June 4 at City Hall. Residents and community members were able to review potential traffic calming concepts, ask questions and share feedback with City engineering staff.
Project information and diagrams were available for public review at the meeting and are on this page. Public comments may be submitted through June 19 and will be considered as designs are developed.
In the Documents section, you can find the following files:
Hoylake Drive Presentation from June 4, 2026, meeting – A PowerPoint document from the June 4, 2026, meeting that shows different options for traffic calming, such as speed humps, speed tables, raised crosswalks, bulb-outs, medians, and roundabouts. It lists common concerns, such as emergency vehicles, maintenance and snow removal. It also lists the cost for each of these types of traffic calming.
Hoylake Drive traffic calming project location – A map showing the project area on Hoylake Drive between East Broadway and South Rolling Hills Road.
Hoylake Drive speed study data – A map showing traffic volumes (the number of vehicles) traveling in the northbound and southbound directions, along with the 85th percentile speed measured during the traffic study. The 85th percentile speed is a commonly used traffic engineering measurement that represents the speed at or below which 85% of vehicles were traveling. For example, an 85th percentile speed of 38 mph means that 85% of drivers were traveling 38 mph or slower, while 15% were traveling faster than 38 mph.
Members of the public may attend any open meeting. For requests for accommodations related to disability, please call 573.874.CITY (2489) or email City@CoMo.gov. In order to assist staff in making the appropriate arrangements for your accommodation, please make your request as far in advance of the posted meeting date as possible.