Manhattan Community Board 4
Crash Narratives
Manhattan Community Board 4: Traffic Crash Statistics
Crash Counter for Manhattan CB4 148 crashes • 0 deaths
About these crash totals
Counts come from NYC police crash reports (NYPD Motor Vehicle Collisions on NYC Open Data). We sum all crashes, injuries, and deaths for this area across the selected time window shown on the card. Injury severity follows DOT's KABCO definitions mapped from the NYPD Person table (injury status, injury type, and injury location).
- Crashes: number of police‑reported collisions (all road users).
- All injuries: people with any reported injury (KABCO A/B/C or generic "injured").
- Moderate / Serious: suspected minor + suspected serious injuries (KABCO B + A).
- Deaths: killed or apparent death reported by police (KABCO K).
Change badges (arrows and percentages) compare the selected window with the same period last year whenever we have enough history. The “From 2022” view shows totals across the full span since 2022. When a comparison window isn’t available the badge shows an em dash.
Notes: Police reports can be corrected after initial publication. We cannot verify "death within 30 days" or hospital outcomes, so small differences from DOT totals are possible. Minor incidents without a police report are not included.
CloseDangerous Schools in CB 104 Loading school hotspots...
| School | Crashes
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Child injuries
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Dangerous Streets in CB 104 Loading street hotspots...
| Street | Crashes
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Dangerous Intersections in CB 104 Loading intersection hotspots...
| Intersection | Crashes
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CB 104 Hot Spots Danger zones and recent crashes
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Carnage in CB 104 3 Minor Bleeding (Head)
▸ Severe Bleeding 1
▸ Severe Lacerations 1
▸ Concussion 1
▸ Fracture/Dislocation 3
▸ Internal Injury 1
▸ Whiplash 2
▸ Contusion/Bruise 7
▸ Abrasion 3
▸ Pain/Nausea 3
Crashes by Hour in CB 104 6 PM • 9 injuries ↑800%
Who is getting hurt? Kids 0 injuries ↓100% Seniors 3 injuries ↓50%
Toggle on at least one mode to see people totals.
Totals count people injured or killed. Use the mode filters above to focus the stacks.
Dangerous Bike Lanes in CB 104 Loading bike lane hotspots...
| Bike lane | Crashes
Cyclist injuries
Child injuries
Cyclist deaths |
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What Crashes Cost Here Loading estimate...
Loading crash cost estimate...
The three blocks below show direct costs, other harm, and the total for crashes with injuries, crashes without injuries, and all crashes together.
How we calculate this
We calculate these costs using a method developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, or NHTSA. It gives one set of costs for crashes with injuries and another for crashes with no reported injuries.
Crashes with injuries cost much more because the method includes things like lost work, medical care, and long-term harm. NHTSA says crash costs include "lost productivity, medical, legal and court costs, emergency service, insurance administration, congestion, property damage, and workplace losses."
These are estimates, not bills. "Other harm" is the part of the broader estimate that goes beyond direct bills and insurance claims. It captures pain, disability, and lost quality of life.
Download the math (CSV) · Download the math (JSON) · Method and sources
Preventable Speeding 298 16+ offenders ↓56%
Repeat School-Zone Speeding Offenders
- ≥ 6: 826 (2026 year-to-date) • Prev: 1,748 2025 year-to-date
- ≥ 16: 298 (2026 year-to-date) • Prev: 680 2025 year-to-date
Pedestrian Injuries 83% by Cars and Trucks ↓29%
About this chart
We group pedestrian injuries and deaths by the vehicle type that struck them (as recorded in police reports). Use the year selector to compare the current window with the prior period.
- Trucks/Buses, SUVs/Cars, Mopeds, and Bikes reflect the broad categories we use to track vehicle harm.
- Counts include people on foot only; crashes with no injured pedestrians do not appear in this card.
Notes: Police classification can change during investigations. Small categories may have year-to-year variance.
CloseAssembly Member Tony Simone F (50)*

District 75
- 2022-06-17 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeStreetsPAC backs challengers and some incumbents in the 2022 Assembly primaries. The group slams officials who ignore street safety. They praise candidates who push for bike lanes, better buses, and less car dominance. Endorsements target real change for vulnerable road users.
- 2023-08-18 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly bill A 7979 targets reckless drivers. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers a speed limiter. Lawmakers move to curb repeat danger. No more unchecked speeding. Streets demand it.
- 2023-08-18 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSimone co-sponsors bill to change registration fees for some vehicles.
- 2023-06-06 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAlbany gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers pass A 7043. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. The program runs until 2028. Streets near schools face new watchful eyes.
- 2023-06-06 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAlbany gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers pass A 7043. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. The program runs until 2028. Streets near schools face new watchful eyes.
- 2023-02-21 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly Bill 4637 would use cameras to keep cars out of bike lanes. The bill targets drivers who block protected lanes. Sponsors say it will protect cyclists from deadly crashes.
- 2023-02-13 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly and Senate passed A 602. The bill sets state funding rules for federally assisted and municipal complete street projects. Lawmakers moved fast. Streets shaped by budgets, not safety.
- 2023-02-09 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly bill A 4057 orders new safety tech in cars. DMV must set rules. Lawmakers push for machines to see, sense, and stop. Streets demand more than hope. The bill stands at sponsorship.
- 2023-01-26 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly bill A 2610 targets bus lane cheaters. Sponsors back cameras and owner liability. The goal: keep bus lanes clear, speed up buses, cut crashes. No votes yet. The fight for safer streets rolls on.
- 2024-06-27 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeCity leaders cut the ribbon on Plaza33. Once a car-choked block, now a pedestrian haven. Trees, tables, and open space replace exhaust and noise. Years of work. A new chapter for Midtown. People walk, sit, and breathe. Cars banished. Safety reclaimed.
- 2024-06-07 · Leadership · nypost.com · ↑ helps gradeAlbany lawmakers shut down a last-ditch MTA funding plan after Governor Hochul paused congestion pricing. No replacement for the lost $1 billion. Transit riders and street users face uncertainty. Lawmakers call the move reckless. The city waits. Danger lingers.
- 2024-06-07 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly passes A 7652. Schenectady gets school speed cameras. Law aims to slow drivers near kids. Cameras expire in 2028. Vote split. Streets may get safer for children on foot.
- 2024-06-07 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly passes A 7652. Schenectady gets school speed cameras. Law aims to slow drivers near kids. Cameras expire in 2028. Vote split. Streets may get safer for children on foot.
- 2024-01-19 · Leadership · streetsblog.org · ↑ helps gradeElecteds launched 'Bike Safe' to urge cyclists to respect pedestrians. They named cars as the main killers. Delivery workers face pressure from apps. The campaign puts blame where it belongs: on reckless drivers and the systems that push workers to risk lives.
- 2024-01-19 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeCouncil Member Bottcher and colleagues launched ‘Slow Your Roll, Respect The Stroll’ to urge cyclists to respect pedestrians. They admit cars are the main killers. Five died in Bottcher’s district last year—three were pedestrians hit by drivers. The campaign runs citywide.
- 2024-01-11 · Leadership · nypost.com · ↓ hurts gradeSubway derailments hit a decade high. Five crashes since January 2023. Two dozen hurt in one. Assemblyman Tony Simone demands hearings. Riders lose trust. MTA claims safety, but investigations mount. Danger rides the rails. Riders wait for answers.
- 2025-06-17 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate passes S 8344. School speed zone rules in New York City get extended. Lawmakers make technical fixes. The bill keeps pressure on drivers near schools. Streets stay a little safer for kids.
- 2025-06-16 · Vote · Open States · ↓ hurts gradeSenate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
- 2025-06-16 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeWhite Plains gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers move fast. Most vote yes. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. Program ends 2030. Streets may slow. Danger faces children every day.
- 2025-06-13 · Vote · Open StatesSenate and Assembly clear S 6815. MTA workers get a pass for driving in bus lanes while on duty. Law shields agency vehicles from tickets. Streets grow more crowded. Vulnerable users face more risk.
- 2025-02-24 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly Bill 5857 orders state agencies to fit their fleets with speed control tech. No loopholes. No delay. Sponsor Tony Simone pushes to keep state drivers in check. Machines will obey the law. Streets may breathe easier.
- 2025-02-14 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly bill A 5440 targets reckless drivers. It makes car owners pay when their vehicles run red lights. Cameras catch the lawbreakers. The aim: fewer crashes, safer streets for all.
- 2025-02-02 · Leadership · amny.com · ↑ helps gradeTransit advocates and officials rallied at Grand Central. They demanded Governor Hochul fill a $33 billion gap in the MTA capital plan. Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal called transit vital for the region. Advocates stressed accessibility and equity. The state’s budget leaves riders exposed.
- 2025-01-21 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly bill A 2642 orders new safety tech in every car. The DMV must set rules. Lawmakers push for change. Streets could see fewer crashes. The fight for safer roads moves to Albany.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↓ hurts gradeRes 0043-2026 moved to Transportation Committee. It backs state licensing for commercial e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers. The aim is traceable bikes and fewer injuries.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↓ hurts gradeRes 0043-2026 moved to Transportation Committee. It backs state licensing for commercial e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers. The aim is traceable bikes and fewer injuries.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeCity Council sent Res 0043-2026 to committee. It urges Albany to register and license delivery e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers, not riders.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↓ hurts gradeRes 0043-2026 moved to Transportation Committee. It backs state licensing for commercial e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers. The aim is traceable bikes and fewer injuries.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↓ hurts gradeRes 0043-2026 moved to Transportation Committee. It backs state licensing for commercial e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers. The aim is traceable bikes and fewer injuries.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeCity Council sent Res 0043-2026 to committee. It urges Albany to register and license delivery e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers, not riders.
- 2025-06-17 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate passes S 8344. School speed zone rules in New York City get extended. Lawmakers make technical fixes. The bill keeps pressure on drivers near schools. Streets stay a little safer for kids.
214 W. 29th St. Suite 1401, New York, NY 10001
Room 326, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Council Member Erik Bottcher —
District 3
224 West 30th St, Suite 1206, New York, NY 10001
212-564-7757
250 Broadway, Suite 1785, New York, NY 10007
212-788-6979
State Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal C (58)

District 47
- 2022-12-16 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeGovernor Hochul killed a bill to let New Yorkers sue over helicopter noise. The veto blocks a ban on non-essential flights from W. 30th Street. Noise complaints keep rising. Lawmakers and advocates slam the move. Relief for battered West Siders stalls again.
- 2022-12-12 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeCouncil members push to ban non-essential helicopter flights. Noise and fumes choke neighborhoods. Lawmakers cite climate justice, but federal rules block action. Complaints soar. The city’s deal fails. Residents and activists demand relief. The sky remains loud.
- 2022-10-13 · Leadership · streetsblog.org · ↑ helps gradeMayor Adams’s ‘City of Yes’ zoning plan aims to cut parking minimums. Lincoln Restler backs the move. The proposal would free space for homes, not cars. Advocates say it means safer, cheaper streets. Council Speaker stays cautious. The fight is on.
- 2022-10-13 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeMayor Adams moves to cut parking mandates. The plan aims to put people before cars. Advocates say this will clear streets, lower rents, and open space for homes. Some council members back the change. Others hesitate. The fight over parking heats up.
- 2022-02-16 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeKwok Kwan, an e-cyclist, died after a taxi passenger doored him on 11th Avenue. No summons issued. The strip is notorious for crashes. Council Member Bottcher and Senator Hoylman rallied for protected bike lanes. The city’s deadly streets claim more lives.
- 2022-02-04 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeManhattan lawmakers call for seats at Moynihan Train Hall. Passengers sit on floors. Seniors left standing. Officials say exclusionary design punishes transit users. They demand benches for all, not just ticketed riders. Amtrak stays silent. The hall remains bare.
- 2022-01-31 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeState lawmakers push to end mandatory parking in new buildings. The bill targets car dominance, aims to cut congestion, and free space for homes. Sen. Hoylman leads the charge. The move could shift city streets, making room for people, not just cars.
- 2023-12-31 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeCouncil calls for state action on Sammy’s Law and SAFE Streets Act. The bills would let New York City lower speed limits and give crash victims new rights. Lawmakers push to curb deadly driving and protect those on foot and bike.
- 2023-12-14 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeUpper West Side’s board voted 8-1 to demand crackdowns on unregistered mopeds. The resolution urges city and state to punish illegal dealers, enforce laws, and back Albany’s registration bill. Lawmakers say loopholes fuel chaos. Immigrants often misled. Streets stay dangerous.
- 2023-10-23 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeAlbany lawmakers move to force moped registration before sale. The bill aims to block illegal, unregistered mopeds from city streets. Dealers, not riders, would handle paperwork. Advocates say this targets bad actors and protects pedestrians from rogue machines.
- 2023-10-11 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeCouncil Member Holden’s e-bike license bill piles red tape on riders but leaves pedestrians exposed. The proposal skips real fixes—wider sidewalks, protected lanes, safer work rules. It targets e-bikes, not the cars and street chaos that truly endanger walkers.
- 2023-02-13 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly and Senate passed A 602. The bill sets state funding rules for federally assisted and municipal complete street projects. Lawmakers moved fast. Streets shaped by budgets, not safety.
- 2023-02-13 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeAssembly and Senate passed A 602. The bill sets state funding rules for federally assisted and municipal complete street projects. Lawmakers moved fast. Streets shaped by budgets, not safety.
- 2023-01-31 · Vote · Open StatesHoylman-Sigal votes yes in committee on motor carrier safety information bill.
- 2023-01-30 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate bill S 3304 aims to keep cars out of bike lanes. Photo devices would catch violators. Sponsors say it’s time to protect cyclists. The bill stands at the sponsorship stage.
- 2024-09-26 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↑ helps gradeE-bike use surges. Streets stay deadly. Calls for licensing miss the mark. Advocates demand protected lanes, clear intersections, and employer accountability. Restrictive rules push riders to riskier modes. Real safety comes from design, not blame.
- 2024-09-26 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeCouncil pushes Albany to let New York City ticket drivers who block bike lanes. Cameras would catch violators. Cyclists face death and injury. Lawmakers want action. Streets remain dangerous. The fight for safety continues.
- 2024-09-26 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeCouncil pushes Albany to let New York City ticket drivers who block bike lanes. Cameras would catch violators. Cyclists face death and injury. Lawmakers want action. Streets remain dangerous. The fight for safety continues.
- 2024-09-26 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeCouncil pushes Albany to let New York City ticket drivers who block bike lanes. Cameras would catch violators. Cyclists face deadly risk. Lawmakers demand action. Streets must protect the vulnerable.
- 2024-02-21 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeMore delivery workers now register their mopeds. Police crackdowns and ticket threats push them to comply. Advocates step in, guiding new immigrants through red tape. Sellers rarely warn buyers about legal requirements. Workers pay steep fees to keep earning and avoid losing their rides.
- 2024-02-13 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate passes S 2714. Bill pushes complete street design. Aim: safer roads for all. Pedestrians, cyclists, and riders get space. Car dominance challenged. Lawmakers move to cut street carnage.
- 2024-01-30 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate passes S 6808. The bill creates first responder safety zones. It sets speed limits in these zones. Lawmakers act after crashes and close calls. The vote is strong. The danger is real. The streets demand change.
- 2024-01-19 · Leadership · streetsblog.org · ↑ helps gradeElecteds launched 'Bike Safe' to urge cyclists to respect pedestrians. They named cars as the main killers. Delivery workers face pressure from apps. The campaign puts blame where it belongs: on reckless drivers and the systems that push workers to risk lives.
- 2025-08-08 · Leadership · streetsblog.org · ↑ helps gradeMayor approved a car-free busway on 34th Street after walkers beat the crosstown bus in a 1.2‑mile race. The move targets faster, more reliable service for nearly 30,000 daily riders and to clear jams caused by congestion and illegal parking.
- 2025-07-08 · Leadership · Streetsblog NYC · ↓ hurts gradeAustin Celestin blasts city’s e-bike crackdown. Says car-first streets endanger walkers and riders. Calls for real redesign. Enforcement alone leaves vulnerable users exposed.
- 2025-06-13 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate passes S 8344. School speed zone rules in New York City get extended. Lawmakers make technical fixes. The bill keeps pressure on drivers near schools. Streets stay a little safer for kids.
- 2025-06-12 · Vote · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
- 2025-02-18 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenators move to guard bike lanes. Cameras will catch drivers who block or invade. The city’s cyclists and walkers get a shot at safer streets. No more hiding behind the wheel.
- 2025-02-02 · Leadership · amny.com · ↑ helps gradeTransit advocates and officials rallied at Grand Central. They demanded Governor Hochul fill a $33 billion gap in the MTA capital plan. Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal called transit vital for the region. Advocates stressed accessibility and equity. The state’s budget leaves riders exposed.
- 2025-01-31 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeHoylman-Sigal co-sponsors bill to change registration fees for some vehicles.
- 2025-01-30 · Sponsor · Open States · ↑ helps gradeSenate bill S 3832 orders advanced safety tech in all New York vehicles. DMV must set rules. Sponsors push for stricter standards. No direct safety impact analysis for pedestrians or cyclists yet.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeRes 0047-2026 went to the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. It presses Albany to make moped dealers check a proper driver’s license and complete DMV registration before sale, aiming to curb unregistered vehicles on city streets.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeRes 0047-2026 went to the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. It presses Albany to make moped dealers check a proper driver’s license and complete DMV registration before sale, aiming to curb unregistered vehicles on city streets.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeRes 0047-2026 hit the Transportation committee. It presses Albany to force moped dealers to check licenses and register bikes before sale. A paperwork gap keeps unregistered motor vehicles on city streets, near walkers and riders.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↓ hurts gradeRes 0043-2026 moved to Transportation Committee. It backs state licensing for commercial e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers. The aim is traceable bikes and fewer injuries.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeRes 0047-2026 went to the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. It presses Albany to make moped dealers check a proper driver’s license and complete DMV registration before sale, aiming to curb unregistered vehicles on city streets.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeRes 0047-2026 went to the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. It presses Albany to make moped dealers check a proper driver’s license and complete DMV registration before sale, aiming to curb unregistered vehicles on city streets.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↑ helps gradeRes 0047-2026 hit the Transportation committee. It presses Albany to force moped dealers to check licenses and register bikes before sale. A paperwork gap keeps unregistered motor vehicles on city streets, near walkers and riders.
- 2026-01-29 · Leadership · NYC Council – Legistar · ↓ hurts gradeRes 0043-2026 moved to Transportation Committee. It backs state licensing for commercial e-bikes. It shifts some sidewalk-violation costs to employers. The aim is traceable bikes and fewer injuries.
322 8th Ave. Suite 1700, New York, NY 10001
Room 310, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies See nearby areas
▸ Other Geographies
Manhattan CB4 Manhattan Community Board 4 sits in Manhattan, Precinct 10, District 3, AD 75, SD 47.
It contains Chelsea-Hudson Yards, Hell'S Kitchen.
▸ See also