An analysis of the relationship between road improvements and road safety.

Author(s)
Nelson English, Loxton & Andrews Pty Ltd
Year
Abstract

The report identifies aggregations of crashes by location (black spot), or by other common characteristics. Further work involved correlating crash occurrence with road parameters such as alignment, roughness etc, on a selected sample of road and the feasibility of automating the procedures nationwide was examined. It was concluded that (I) roughness and road width did not appear to have any effect upon crash frequency; and (II) horizontal alignment and road grade appeared to have an effect upon crash frequency, in so far as certain road sections experience higher than average crash frequencies. These road sections are those for which some proportion of the horizontal alignment is curved or consists of grades greater than 2 per cent. Attempts to further quantify the relationship between crash frequency and road environment proved inconclusive.

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Publication

Library number
C 2089 [electronic version only] /82 /10 /81 / IRRD 814648
Source

Canberra, Act., Federal Office of Road Safety FORS, 1988, 37 + 48 p., 8 ref.; Report No. CR 75 - ISSN 0810-770X / ISBN 0-642-51179-9

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.