Converting Intersections to Roundabouts: Effects on Accidents with Bicyclists.

Author(s)
Daniels, S. Wets, G. & Nuyts, E.
Year
Abstract

A before-and-after study of injury accidents with cyclists on 95 roundabouts in Flanders- Belgium was carried out. The study design accounted for effects of general safety trends and regression-to-the-mean. Conversions ofintersections into roundabouts turn out to have caused a significant increase of 29% in the number of injury accidents with bicyclists on or nearbythe roundabouts. The increase is even higher for accidents involving fatal or serious injuries (50%). Compared to the formerly proven favourable effects of roundabouts on safety in general, this result is unexpectedly poor. However, the effects of roundabouts on bicycle accidents differ depending on whether these roundabouts are built inside or outside built-up areas. Inside built-up areas the construction of a roundabout did increase the number of injury accidents involving cyclists by 48%. For accidents insidebuilt-up areas with fatal or serious injuries, there was an average increase of around 80%. However, outside built-up areas the zero-hypothesis of 'no safety effect for bicyclists' cannot be rejected, but also there the best estimate is an increase of accidents by 5% (not significant). For the covering abstract see ITRD E139491.

Request publication

5 + 8 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
C 48976 (In: C 48739 DVD) /80 / ITRD E139732
Source

In: Proceedings 23rd World Road Congress, Paris, 17-21 September 2007, 16 p., 16 ref.

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.