The contribution of traffic volumes, speed, congestion, road section block length, abutting land use and kerbside activity to accidents on urban arterial roads.

Author(s)
Del Mistro, R. & Fieldwick, R.
Year
Abstract

Urban arterials constitute only fifteen per cent of the road network in South African cities, yet sixty per cent of road accidents take place on them. One-third of the accidents occur between intersections, and this paper attempts to identify the environmental factors contributing to the accidents on the road sections. A small number of heavily trafficked arterials is safer than a larger number of more lightly trafficked arterials. Direct access to arterials should be restricted. One-way streets are safer than two-way streets.

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Publication

Library number
B 20773 (In: B 20762) /81/82/ IRRD 257246
Source

In: Roads into the future : documentation 9th IRF World Meeting, Stockholm, June 1-5, 1981, Session TS-3, p. 135-150, 5 fig., 5 tab., 5 ref.

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