An interesting shift in traffic is playing out in the Twin Cities area as highways and freeways have become more crowded during midday hours and stay busier longer into the evenings. Night owls have lots of company as motorists are driving substantially more miles when most people are sleeping.
Data from the Minnesota Department of Transportation shows traffic this year has increased at nearly all hours of the day compared with pre-pandemic levels with one exception — the morning rush.
Traffic planners and officials surmise the combination of flex and hybrid work brought on by the pandemic and a huge decline in transit use that has been slow to rebound has led the shift away from traditional traffic patterns in which volumes peaked in the morning followed by a midday lull and a late-afternoon surge.
"We are now seeing a general rise through the day, not just in the morning and evening peaks," said Garrett Schreiner, a freeway operations engineer with MnDOT. "It's not the same commute."
Morning rush
While still some of the busiest hours to travel, freeways are far less crowded between 5 and 8 a.m. than they were before the pandemic. Traffic is down 18% between 6 and 7 a.m. and 12% between 7 and 8 a.m. this year when compared with average traffic volumes in the three years leading up to the onset of COVID, according to the latest counts.
MnDOT measures the number of vehicle miles traveled by using sensors embedded in the pavement, and counts show motorists are putting on 346,000 fewer miles between 6 and 7 a.m. and are logging about 282,000 fewer miles a day between 7 and 8 a.m.
Even a small percentage change in the number of vehicles on the road can mean the difference between free-flowing conditions and congestion.
"That is huge," Schreiner said.