Lakewood, Dallas · Loving Avenue

Make Loving Hills Safer

Hundreds of cyclists ride Loving Hills every day. Cut-through traffic at 40+ MPH puts them — and the families who live here — at risk. The City of Dallas already recommended a fix. Help us get it done.

Submit a Comment
Public comment deadline Friday, March 27, 2026
47
MPH — 85th percentile speed on Gaston
10+
Years residents have reported the problem
71%
Public support for traffic calming
0
Improvements implemented to date

A residential street used as a highway bypass

Loving Avenue connects Gaston Avenue to Winsted Drive in Lakewood. Because it sits between the congested Tucker Street and 3G intersections, non-resident drivers use it as a high-speed cut-through — turning off Gaston, racing down a steep blind hill, and shooting through a neighborhood where children live and play.

Dangerous for cyclists

Known as "Loving Hills" in the Dallas cycling community, this is one of the most popular training routes connecting White Rock Lake, the Santa Fe Trail, Tokalon Park, and the YMCA. Cyclists climbing the hill share the road with vehicles traveling 40+ MPH in the opposite direction on a blind grade.

Dangerous for families

Residents have documented years of close calls involving children, pets killed by speeding vehicles, cars losing control into yards, and collisions before 7 AM caused by non-residents cutting through. Children who once played in front yards have been confined to backyards.

Getting worse, not better

The 3G intersection reconstruction was supposed to help. It didn't. Now the City is planning Tucker Street improvements one block east — construction that will push even more bypass traffic onto Loving Avenue.

A city-recognized issue, unfixed

The Gaston Avenue Corridor Study (October 2024) recommended traffic calming on Loving Avenue as a "quick-response" priority — budgeted at $50,000 with 71% public support. Seventeen months later, nothing has been done.

Photo 1
Looking up Loving Hills
from Winsted
Photo 2
The blind crest at
Gaston & Loving
Photo 3
Cyclists on the route to
White Rock Lake

Close Loving at Gaston Parkway — not at Gaston Avenue

A traffic diverter at Gaston Parkway eliminates the cut-through route while preserving residential access from Winsted Drive and full emergency vehicle access from Gaston Avenue. This is what the neighborhood has requested since 2022.

GASTON AVENUE ← Eastbound to Tucker / 3G ← W. Shore Dr 47 MPH AVERAGE SPEED → GASTON PARKWAY LOVING AVENUE WINSTED DRIVE YMCA → WHITE ROCK LAKE → Santa Fe Trail DIVERTER PROPOSED CLOSURE at Gaston Parkway CUT-THROUGH BLOCKED ✕ 🚲 Cyclists Resident Access ✓ Emergency Access DFR reaches Gaston Pkwy from Gaston Ave. Neighborhood accessible from Winsted. Tokalon Park Cut-through (blocked) Cyclist route Resident access Homes

Proposed diverter at Gaston Parkway eliminates cut-through traffic while preserving all residential and emergency access.

Safer for everyone. Better for property values.

🚲

Cyclist Safety

Eliminates high-speed opposing traffic on one of Dallas's most popular cycling routes connecting White Rock Lake and the Santa Fe Trail.

👧

Child Safety

Removes 40+ MPH non-resident cut-through traffic from a street where families live. Kids can play in their front yards again.

🚶

Pedestrian Access

Supports the city's planned Pedestrian Hybrid Beacon at the YMCA and trail extension connecting to the Santa Fe Trail at Loving Avenue.

🏠

Property Values

Research shows cul-de-sac conversions and cut-through elimination increase property values, while speed bumps can reduce them 1–3%.

🚒

Emergency Access Preserved

DFR maintains access to Gaston Parkway from Gaston Avenue. The neighborhood remains fully accessible from Winsted Drive. Battalion Chief Jones assessed this in 2022.

🛑

No Speed Bumps Needed

The diverter solves the root cause — non-resident traffic has no reason to be on the street at all. No ongoing enforcement needed.

What this is — and what it isn't

Closure at Gaston Parkway — blocks the cut-through route while preserving DFR access to Gaston Parkway from Gaston Avenue.

Not closing at Gaston Avenue — the Gaston/Loving intersection stays open. Emergency vehicles can still reach Gaston Parkway.

City-funded traffic calming — the Gaston Corridor Study already budgeted $50,000 for Loving Avenue improvements.

Not privatizing the street — no HOA required, no gate, no maintenance fees for residents. Loving Avenue stays a public street.

Resident access preserved — all residents enter and exit via Winsted Drive, which is how most already travel due to the dangerous Gaston intersection.

Not speed bumps — speed bumps treat the symptom, not the cause, and can reduce property values. A diverter eliminates the problem entirely.

The City already agreed this needs to happen

This isn't a new request. Residents, city planners, and Dallas Fire-Rescue have been discussing Loving Avenue safety for years. Here's where things stand.

March 2021
Gaston Avenue Corridor Study technical memo identifies Loving Avenue cut-through as a safety concern and proposes closure as an option.
April 2022
Battalion Chief Michael Jones (Dallas Fire-Rescue) visits the neighborhood and indicates he is amenable to closure, recommending the city wait until 3G construction is complete to reassess.
July 2022
Public survey shows 71% support for traffic calming on Loving Avenue.
2022 – 2023
Residents correspond with City Transportation Department requesting action. City confirms both speed humps and closure are available options. A neighborhood meeting is offered but never scheduled.
October 2024
Gaston Avenue Corridor Study published. Recommends traffic calming on Loving Avenue as a "quick-response" improvement — $50,000, 0–2 year timeframe.
March 2026
Tucker Street intersection improvements announced. Public comment open through March 27. No Loving Avenue improvements have been implemented. Tucker construction will increase cut-through traffic on Loving.

Submit a public comment by March 27

One email makes a difference. Tell the City of Dallas you support traffic safety improvements on Loving Avenue as part of the Tucker Street project. Mention cyclist safety, pedestrian access, or your own experience riding Loving Hills.

Send your comment to

Comments accepted through Friday, March 27, 2026

Clicking the email address above opens a pre-filled draft you can customize. Or write your own — even two sentences help. This is public comment on the Tucker Street intersection project.