09/02/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/02/2025 11:35
IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 2, 2025 Contact: (212) 839-4850, [email protected]
A Record-High Number of Open Streets at Schools Enhance Safety, Accommodate Smoother Pick-Ups and Drop-Offs, and Create Additional Outdoor Space for Students To Gather, Learn, and Socialize
"We're Walking Here!" Contest Challenged Students To Create Videos Related to Street Safety; Winning Videos Came From Elementary and High School Students From Brooklyn, Staten Island, and the Bronx. Registration for 2025 Contest Is Now Open.
School children participate in activities with Street Lab at the P.S. 059 The Community School of Technology Open Street. Credit: Street Lab
NEW YORK - New York City Department of Transportation (NYC DOT) Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez today kicked of the back-to-school season with the launch of a record-high 72 Open Streets at schools across the city. New York City's Open Streets program transforms streets into public space open to all. Open Streets at schools enhance safety for kids, help facilitate smoother pick-ups and drop-offs for parents and guardians and create new space for outdoor play and learning.
NYC DOT also shared the winners of a safety education contest for public school students, known as "We're Walking Here!" The contest challenged New York City school students to create public-service announcement videos to warn of the dangers of reckless driving and traffic fatalities. The winning videos will be featured online and incorporated into a new Vision Zero traffic safety curriculum to be used this academic year. Registrations are now open for the 2025 contest cycle.
"As a former teacher myself, I understand the importance of doing our part to keep kids safe and to teach them about street safety," said NYC DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez. "Through our Open Streets program, we have created a new framework to reimagine the use of street space outside schools so students can safely learn, develop new skills, and their parents and guardians can have easier pick-ups and drop-offs. I also want to thank teachers from dozens of schools for taking on We're Walking Here group projects: these videos are a timely reminder of all that we are fighting for in Vision Zero."
Open Streets for Schools
As part of the program, the Full Closure: Schools type of Open Street allows participating schools to temporarily close streets to vehicles for drop-off and pick-up operations, recess, and outdoor learning. Once called 'Playstreets,' New York City has a roughly 100-year-history of closing streets for children to play and to support educational opportunities. Open Streets for Schools follows in this tradition and, for the first time, established a legal structure to create streets for play and to support schools through the Open Streets program, which was codified into law in the spring of 2024.
Partnerships
The growth in Open Streets at schools has also been fueled by a partnership between NYC DOT and the nonprofit Street Lab, which works directly with schools in low-income neighborhoods to launch new Open Streets. Street Lab works with schools in these neighborhoods to help pilot and operate new Open Streets, helping with permits, planning with the school and community, and transforming streets during the school year with furniture, activities, and staff. Street Lab's efforts have yielded 15 new Open Streets for schools, with another 22 sites currently in process.
2025 OPEN STREETS: SCHOOLS LOCATIONS
2025 Open Street: Schools | Borough | Street |
P.S. 811 The Academy for Career and Living Skills | Bronx | LONGFELLOW AVENUE |
Success Academy Charter Schools - Kingsbridge Heights | Bronx | EAMES PLACE |
Success Academy Charter Schools - Williamsbridge | Bronx | CAPUCHIN WAY |
P.S. 032 The Belmont School | Bronx | BEAUMONT AVENUE |
*South Bronx Academy for Applied Media | Bronx | FOREST AVENUE |
P.S. 028 Mount Hope | Bronx | MOUNT HOPE PLACE |
Bright Leaders Group Family Day Care Inc. | Bronx | GRAND AVENUE |
Leaders In Our Neighborhood Charter School | Bronx | LONGFELLOW AVENUE |
P.S. 083 The Donald Hertz School | Bronx | RHINELANDER AVENUE |
P.S. 059 The Community School of Technology / Street Lab | Bronx | BATHGATE AVENUE |
P.S. 109 Sedgwick / Street Lab | Bronx | PALISADE PLACE |
P.S. 018 The John Peter Zenger School | Bronx | EAST 148 STREET |
St. Saviour Catholic Academy | Brooklyn | Seventh STREET |
The Dock Street School for STEAM Studies | Brooklyn | DOCK STREET |
Mary McDowell Friends School | Brooklyn | SUMMIT STREET |
The Little Brooklyn PreK Center @ Third Avenue | Brooklyn | WHITWELL PLACE |
Brooklyn RISE Charter School | Brooklyn | HANOVER PLACE |
*P.S. 284 The Gregory Jocko Jackson School | Brooklyn | OSBORN STREET |
Brooklyn High School for Law and Technology | Brooklyn | MADISON STREET |
P.S. 090 The Magnet School for Environmental Studies & Community Wellness | Brooklyn | WEST 12 STREET |
P.S. 146 The Brooklyn New School | Brooklyn | RAPELYE STREET |
P.S. 169 Sunset Park School | Brooklyn | 43 STREET |
P.S. 137 Rachel Jean Mitchell | Brooklyn | CHAUNCEY STREET |
Hellenic Classical Charter Schools | Brooklyn | 18 STREET |
LEEP Dual Language Academy Charter School | Brooklyn | 54 STREET |
Riverdale Avenue Community School | Brooklyn | STRAUSS STREET |
Central UTA | Brooklyn | PENN STREET |
P.S. 118 The Maurice Sendak School | Brooklyn | SEVENTH STREET |
*P.S. 031 Samuel F. Dupont | Brooklyn | LORIMER STREET |
The Dalton School | Manhattan | EAST 91 STREET |
The École | Manhattan | EAST 22 STREET |
P.S. 042 The Benjamin Altman School | Manhattan | HESTER STREET |
The Nightingale Bamford School | Manhattan | EAST 92 STREET |
Academy of St. Joseph | Manhattan | WASHINGTON PLACE |
The Buckley School | Manhattan | EAST 73 STREET |
Saint David's School | Manhattan | EAST 89 STREET |
Manhattan Day School | Manhattan | WEST 75 STREET |
P.S. 343 The Peck Slip School | Manhattan | PECK SLIP |
Collegiate School | Manhattan | FREEDOM PLACE SOUTH |
P.S. 003 Charrette School | Manhattan | GROVE STREET |
P.S. 003 Charrette School | Manhattan | BEDFORD STREET |
The Allen-Stevenson School | Manhattan | EAST 78 STREET |
Friends Seminary | Manhattan | RUTHERFORD PLACE |
City-As School | Manhattan | CLARKSON STREET |
Community Health Academy of the Heights | Manhattan | WEST 158 STREET |
I.S. 528 Bea Fuller Rogers School | Manhattan | WADSWORTH AVENUE |
P.S. 112 Jose Celso Barbosa | Manhattan | EAST 119 STREET |
Ballet Tech School | Manhattan | BROADWAY |
Washington Irving Educational Campus (NYCPS) | Manhattan | IRVING PLACE |
*Harlem Children's Zone Promise Academy II Elementary School | Manhattan | EAST 111 STREET |
The Birch Wathen Lenox School | Manhattan | EAST 77 STREET |
Global Community Charter School | Manhattan | WEST 142 STREET |
P.S./I.S. 116 The William C. Hughley School | Queens | WREN PLACE |
The Young Women's Leadership School of Astoria | Queens | NEWTOWN AVENUE |
The Young Women's Leadership School of Astoria | Queens | 23 STREET |
Thomas A. Edison CTE High School | Queens | 84 AVENUE |
P.S. 134 The Langston Hughes School | Queens | 109 AVENUE |
P.S. 129 The Patricia Larkin School | Queens | NINTH AVENUE |
P.S. 095 The Eastwood School | Queens | 90 AVENUE |
P.S. 144 Col Jeromus Remsen | Queens | JUNO STREET |
P.S. 012 James B. Colgate | Queens | 72 STREET |
J.H.S. 008 Richard S. Grossley | Queens | 167 STREET |
*The Emerson School (28Q287) | Queens | 167 STREET |
Mosaic 3K/Pre-k Center | Queens | 41 AVENUE |
P.S. 143 The Louis Armstrong School | Queens | 113 STREET |
P.S. 174 William Sidney Mount School | Queens | DIETERLE CRESCENT |
P.S. 176 The Cambria Heights School | Queens | 235 STREET |
Moving Up Children Center | Queens | 94 STREET |
P.S. 014 The Fairview School | Queens | OTIS AVENUE |
P.S. 014 The Fairview School | Queens | VAN DOREN STREET |
Our World Neighborhood Charter School | Queens | 37 STREET |
P.S. 005 The Huguenot School | Staten Island | DEISIUS STREET |
Stills from first and second-place winning videos in the "We're Walking Here" contest, submitted by P.S. 69K, left, and P.S. 194k, right.
"We're Walking Here!" Competition
NYC DOT hosts an annual "We're Walking Here!" competition, in which schools compete to develop creative public-service announcements (PSAs) that encourage walking and give young New Yorkers the platform to communicate with New York drivers. The competition encourages fitness and builds on the city's Vision Zero efforts that aim to educate New Yorkers about our shared responsibility when it comes to street safety. Students were encouraged to submit lyrics, informal videos and even dances they have created to express their ideas. Schools participated in the competition with classroom teachers leading activities and students using pedometers to count steps and increase their walking.
In total, 101 schools registered for the "We're Walking Here" competition in 2024, with a final group of 34 elementary, middle, and high schools, representing every borough, submitting PSA entries, which were evaluated by NYC DOT's Safety Education unit for their creativity and messaging.
This year's winners are:
First Place
PS 69 K Vincent Grippo School, Brooklyn
Second Place
PS 194 K Raoul Wallenburg School, Brooklyn
Third Place
Tottenville High School, Staten Island
Honorable Mention
Theatre Arts Production Company School (TAPCo), the Bronx
2025 Competition
Registration for the 2025 competition is open until October 3, 2025. All New York City schools, K-12, are eligible to participate. The nine-week contest begins on International Walk and Roll to School Day, October 8, 2025, and ends when submissions are due on December 12, 2025. Registration can be submitted online.
"Of all the types of Open Streets that Street Lab supports across New York City, Open Streets for schools hold a special promise for the future of the city," said Leslie Davol, Street Lab's executive director. "We're seeing students, families, teachers, and community members, side-by-side bringing a new vision for streets to life, using these new public spaces to strengthen communities and make the city better."
"Having the NYC Open Street next to our century-old school building has managed to reinvigorate a city block footprint with the energy of an entire school community, in all of it's hustling and bustling beauty, by allowing our 650+ families to gather in the open air, share stories while meeting and greeting teachers and classmates," said Shelley Bissessar, community coordinator, The Brooklyn New School, PS 146. "Access to Rapelye St. during our school day continues to encourage and support the joy of learning safely outside of the walls of their school building - an expansiveness that is so rare in our city."
"Open Streets has brought new energy and joy to our school community," said Genelly Cornelio, assistant principal, Bea Fuller Rodgers Intermediate School 528. "It's given our students space to learn, play, and connect in fresh and meaningful ways - turning each day into an opportunity for movement, creativity, and togetherness."