Seattle's
morning rush hour
gridlock vanishes amid
coronavirus preps
A
day after King County and state health officials recommended that
those at higher risk from COVID-19 stay at home and encouraged
businesses to allow employees to work remotely, evidence was clear
Thursday morning that many were taking the advice.
Freeways
around the Seattle area weren't empty, but they featured considerably
less volume than a typical Thursday morning rush hour commute.
At
8 a.m. -- typically about the peak of gridlock around here, estimated
travel times looked more like weekend morning readings, especially
from the North End.
It
was an estimated 35 minute drive from Everett to Bellevue along I-5
and I-405 -- a drive that WSDOT says normally is 62 minutes though
even that's conservative on many mornings. Sometimes it seems it's 35
minutes just to get to Bothell from Lynnwood.
Seattle-bound
drivers from Everett also found freeway speeds all the way in with an
estimated 36 minute commute over the 27-mile drive. The average is 67
minutes.
South
Sound commuters also found light traffic heading into Seattle and
Bellevue -- just 45 minutes from Federal Way to Bellevue (24 miles)
-- normally a 72 minute drive. Federal Way to Seattle was 36 minutes;
usually a 56 minute drive. It was roughly just 20 minutes to get from
Bellevue to Seattle along either the 520 or I-90 floating bridges.
Some
other easier commutes:
-
Woodinville to Seattle (SR 522->I-405->SR 520->I-5) 33 mins (49 min average)
-
Tukwila to Lynnwood (I-5) 41 mins (48 min average)
-
Lynnwood to Tukwila (I-5) 37 mins(!) (66 min average)
-
Lynnwood to Tukwila (I-405) 43 mins (69 min average)
-
Lynnwood to Seattle: 23 mins (50 min average)
-
Renton to Bellevue: 31 mins (40 min average)
Only
seven of the 58 routes WSDOT tracks had a commute that was considered
"longer than average" -- all by one minute.
Several
companies in King County told
employees to stay home and
work remotely if they can, including major employers Amazon,
Microsoft and Facebook.
And
all students in the Northshore School District which spans both King
and Snohomish Counties were
told that schools are closed for the next two weeks and
students will be getting lessons remotely.
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