A Safe and Quiet Houston Acres

A neighbor-led request to the City Commission

Same goal. Safer streets. A solution that doesn't shake our homes.

Two rumble strips were installed on Houston Boulevard this spring without warning. The homes beside them now hear and feel the impact every day. We support slowing traffic — but the fix should not shake a few families' homes.

Taylor Springs Apts …Wy Taylor Cove 4206 3003 3005 3007 3009 3011 4201 4203 4205 3002 3004 3006 3008 3010 3012 4121 4110 Taylorsville Rd 155 155 Houston Blvd Houston Blvd Martha Ave N Houston Boulevard — where the noise is felt Two rumble strips on the roadway send noise & vibration into the homes beside them. Rumble strip (noise source) — at 3005 & 3011
The two rumble strips on Houston Boulevard — and the homes that absorb the noise. Red roofs mark the houses directly beside each strip (3004, 3005, 3010 & 3011).

If you only have a minute

Help ask for slower cars, quieter streets, and a decision residents get to weigh in on before rumble strips spread to other blocks.

01  What happened

Two rumble strips, installed without a word to homeowners

In April 2026, the City of Houston Acres installed two rumble strips on the first block of Houston Boulevard, at a cost of about $3,000. The goal was to slow speeders cutting through the neighborhood — a goal the residents beside the strips genuinely share.

The problem is how it was done, and what it has done to the homes next to it. The roughly fourteen households directly affected were not notified, polled, or asked. At the May Commission meeting, the board acknowledged that speed humps would have required a resident vote — but that rumble strips required none. In effect, the City chose the quicker, cheaper path without first asking whether it was the right fit for the residents who would live beside it.

Whether any city ordinance required notice before this kind of installation is a question we've now put to the City in writing through a formal open-records request. We'll post what we learn here.

See what the open-records request asks for

The request asks for public records only, including:

  • traffic-calming ordinances, policies, and any notice or resident-approval rules;
  • meeting minutes where speed control, rumble strips, or Houston Boulevard were discussed;
  • engineering guidance, professional consultation, or recommendations the City relied on;
  • bids, estimates, invoices, and contractor records for the installation;
  • speed-sign data, device details, calibration records, and the method used to interpret the results.

02  The impact

This isn't ordinary road noise. It's felt inside the house.

Residents have documented the effects on daily life. The vibration travels through the structure — it is felt, not just heard.

Heard indoors, windows shut

The noise is clearly audible inside the home even with storm windows fully closed.

Felt through the structure

Large trucks and trailers send vibration strong enough to shake windows and rattle the roof — and it's felt through the floors and walls, so headphones and earplugs give no relief.

Delivery trucks land like a boom

Heavy delivery vehicles produce a sudden impact residents describe as a thunderclap, startling everyone in the house.

No relief outdoors

The noise carries into the backyard too — there's no part of the property that escapes it, and a quiet midday rest is no longer possible.

03  In the Commission's own words

The board has already acknowledged the core problems

These points came directly from the May meeting. They are the foundation of a fair, good-faith conversation — not accusations.

The noise and vibration were “completely unforeseen.”

— City Commission, stated repeatedly at the May meeting

Rumble strips, unlike speed humps, required no resident vote and no notification.

— Acknowledged by the board when asked about process

The board agreed that residents living beside the strips should be included in the one-year study.

— A commitment we intend to hold them to

When residents asked which engineer reviewed the strips, the board could not name one.

— The concrete guidance identified at the meeting came from the installer: don't block driveways

A Kentucky Transportation Cabinet employee stated that rumble strips are not used in residential neighborhoods because of noise.

— Stated on the record at the May meeting by a resident who works for KYTC

04  What we're asking for

A collaborative fix — not a fight

We're not asking the City to abandon traffic safety. We're asking it to solve the speeding problem without forcing a few families to absorb the cost in noise.

Acknowledge the impact on adjacent homes

Formally recognize the noise and vibration burden on the households directly beside the strips.

Bring affected residents into the decision

Include us in the one-year study and any decision about Houston Boulevard, as the board agreed to do.

Seriously evaluate alternatives

Explore speed humps through the Louisville Metro program and work with our Metro Council representative on cost and options.

Show the due-diligence record

Share the engineering basis, the traffic-sign data and methodology, and the meeting record behind the decision.

Notify residents before any expansion

Commit to notifying and consulting affected residents before installing strips elsewhere in the city.

Remove or replace the Houston Boulevard strips

Ultimately, replace the current strips with a solution that slows traffic without shaking our homes.

Why this concerns the whole city

Today it’s Houston Boulevard. Tomorrow it could be your street.

The Houston Boulevard strips are a one-year trial, and the City has said any expansion would depend on how this test goes. If you don't live beside them now, this is still the moment to weigh in — before this becomes the model for other streets.

The trial should measure the full impact

A successful traffic fix should count more than speed readings. It should also account for the families living beside the device, the noise inside their homes, and whether quieter alternatives can solve the same problem without shifting the burden onto one block.

Residents should hear about it first

If this trial becomes a model for other streets, the process matters. Neighbors should be notified and consulted before a device is installed outside their homes, not asked to live with the consequences after the fact.

Be there

Numbers in the room help

The Commission meets in public once a month — it's the official forum where comments go on the record. The more neighbors who show up, the harder it is to set this aside. This could be your street next: the board said it hasn't decided about the rest of the city, and any expansion would follow these same meetings.

Last Thursday of the month · June 25th · 7:00 PM

McMahan Firehouse · 4318 Taylorsville Road

05  Add your name

Sign the petition

“We, the undersigned residents of Houston Acres, ask the City Commission to work with affected neighbors to resolve the noise and vibration caused by the Houston Boulevard rumble strips — including evaluating quieter alternatives and committing to notify residents before any future installation.”

Our goal: every household on Houston Boulevard, plus neighbors across Houston Acres who want a say before noisy rumble strips arrive outside their homes. Your name and address help show the Commission this is a real, organized neighborhood concern.

Stand with your neighbors

We use your details only for this petition and to keep you posted on the rumble-strip issue and the meeting. Your address may appear on the petition presented to the Commission; your email and phone are never shared or published.

Thank you for signing.

Your name has been added. Watch for a reminder before the June meeting — the strongest next step is to show up in person. Bring a neighbor.