Sloat Blvd Quick-Build Project

Construction is Coming!

 

Installation of new transportation safety improvements on Sloat Blvd from Great Highway to Skyline Blvd will begin October 2025.

This project will add a two-way protected bikeway on the south side of Sloat Blvd, upgrade crosswalks, and construct new bus boarding islands. These changes will better connect users to the San Francisco Zoo and Sunset Dunes Park and make revisions to the Lincoln and Sloat Quick-Build Connections Project, which made initial changes to the intersection of Sloat Boulevard and the Great Highway in Spring 2025.

Existing angled parking on the south side of Sloat Blvd will be converted to parallel parking. This will result in the reduction of approximately 40 on-street parking spaces. To offset this, approximately 50 new off-street parking spaces have been striped in the parking lot at the intersection of Sloat Boulevard and Skyline Boulevard. There will also be changes to passenger loading zones near the Zoo entrance. No changes to parking or loading on the north side of Sloat Blvd or in the median will occur.

Construction impacts are limited to the south side of Sloat Blvd and the intersection of Sloat Blvd and Great Highway. New facilities will open in November, with final changes by the end of 2025.

Map showing that the project impacts are limited to the Great Highway and Sloat Boulevard intersection and the south side of Sloat Blvd from Great Highway to Skyline Blvd.

For questions, please email SloatQB@SFMTA.com

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Présentation du projet (Project Introduction)

The Sloat Quick-Build Project aims to improve safety for all users and enhance active-transportation options on Sloat Boulevard between Skyline Boulevard and Great Highway, connecting Lake Merced, the San Francisco Zoo, and Sunset Dunes Park. The project was designed and approved before the creation of Sunset Dunes Park and the closure of Upper Great Highway north of Sloat Boulevard. These changes led to revisions to the project to strengthen connections to the new park. The SFMTA will implement the project in fall 2025, aligning with the planned closure (to vehicle traffic) of the Great Highway south of Sloat Boulevard, to protect stormwater infrastructure from ongoing coastline erosion.

The project will upgrade pedestrian crossings, add a two-way protected bikeway, install transit boarding islands, improve accessibility, and consider other measures to reduce vehicle speeds while keeping traffic moving. It will not reduce the number of vehicle travel lanes on Sloat Boulevard. The project supports implementing goals and priorities identified in the Ocean Beach Master Plan, SFMTA's Vision Zero Program, and District 4 Westside Study. It is part of a suite of changes ahead of the planned Great Highway Extension closure. It is coordinated with several adjacent projects, including traffic-signal upgrades at Sloat Blvd & Skyline Blvd (by SFMTA), Sloat Blvd & Great Highway (by SFMTA), and Skyline Blvd & Great Highway (by Caltrans), and SFPUC's Westside Pump Station Project.

Project Timeline
Winter - Early Summer 2023
Outreach
Completed
2023-2024
Approvals
Completed
Fall 2025
Implementation
Pending
Fall 2025
Evaluation
Pending
Statut du Projet (Project Status)
  1. Detailed Design
  2. Legislated
Améliorations Prévues (Improvements)
bike
walking
SFMTA Drive and Parking icon
Bus Routes and Rail Lines
Quartiers (Neighborhoods)
Streets
Sloat Boulevard

What is a quick-build project?

Quick-build projects focus on implementing safety improvements on streets identified on San Francisco's Vision Zero High-Injury Network.

Quick-build projects are adjustable and reversible traffic safety improvements that SFMTA crews can install quickly. Unlike major capital projects that may take years to plan, design, bid, and construct, quick-build projects are buildable within weeks and months and are intended to be evaluated and reviewed within 24 months of implementation.

Typical quick-build type improvements include:

  • Paint, traffic delineators, and street signs
  • Parking and loading (curb management) adjustments
  • Traffic signal timing changes and small modifications

Background & scope

The Great Highway south of Sloat Boulevard will be closed to all vehicle traffic in the coming years as part of efforts to harden stormwater infrastructure and limit erosion along the coastline. The Sloat Quick-Build Project's principal goal is to improve safety for active modes of transportation in anticipation of additional traffic traveling on Sloat Boulevard. Project staff will develop intersection pedestrian safety changes and a design for a two-way protected bikeway along the corridor.

In addition to safety upgrades, the project intends to better connect recreational and institutional spaces in the area for people on foot and bikes, including Lake Merced, the San Francisco Zoo, and Ocean Beach. The Lake Merced Quick-Build Project is underway with proposals to establish new and add physical protection for existing on-street bicycle facilities, thereby relieving pressure on the shared-use path which rings the lake. The temporary COVID-era "Great Walkway" has expanded space for active mobility along the shoreline. The Sloat Quick-Build aims to connect these recreational destinations and make active transportation safer in southwest San Francisco.

Further, the project is coordinated with traffic-signal upgrades at either end of the project. Work at Sloat Blvd & Skyline Blvd is informed by the Sloat & Skyline Intersection Alternatives Study, and signal changes at Sloat Blvd & Great Highway are tied to post-pandemic planning for the Great Highway. The quick-build improvements with this project may provide interim connections with these intersections while the signal work is designed and constructed, with more robust integration informed by evaluation added later.

Importantly, Sloat Boulevard between Skyline Boulevard and 45th Avenue (approximately 2/3rds of the project area) is on the Vision Zero High-Injury Network – the 13% of San Francisco's streets on which 75% of severe and fatal traffic-injury collisions occur. Addressing safety issues on these streets is the focus of the SFMTA. In June 2019, the SFMTA Board of Directors passed a resolution that enables the SFMTA to deliver quick-build projects more efficiently to achieve its Vision Zero goals.

Goals & objectives

  • Improve safety for people walking and bicycling by upgrading street infrastructure to best-practice designs
    • Update pedestrian crossings
    • Add a physically-protected bikeway
    • Reduce vehicle speeds while keeping traffic moving, thereby reducing the likelihood of severe-injury collisions for people driving and people walking
    • Optimized curb management
  • Improve reliability for the 18 46th Avenue and 23 Monterey bus routes by installing level, in-lane bus boarding island and removing the existing eastbound and westbound stops at 43rd Avenue.
  • Reduce the number of conflicts between those who walk, bike, and drive on the corridor
  • Manage additional traffic diverted from the to-be-closed Great Highway Extension to and from Skyline Boulevard
  • Improve connections between recreational destinations, the San Francisco Zoo, and public transit
San Francisco County Transportation Authority logo
Vision Zero SF logo
Coordonnées pour nous contacter (Contact Information)
Sloat Quick-Build Project Team