Does modern urban road layout improve road safety : which assessment?

Author(s)
Millot, M. & Hiron, B.
Year
Abstract

Urban transport policies aim to reduce the car use in town, in favour of public transport, cycling and walking. It involves a new share of public space and new road layout: creation of a tramway or a corridor lane for bus, reduction of the width of arterial road in order to reduce speed and to improve walking and cycling, creation of cycle lane, etc. The first aim ofthese improvements is seldom road safety. But they may have an influence on road safety, as vulnerable road users are concerned. Moreover they involve new practices of public space which may also have an influence on roadsafety. This study is based on the analysis of seven types of improvements in several French towns : a tramway lane in Nantes, a bus lane in Rouen,a bus lane shared with cyclists in Lyon, a reduction of the width of arterial road with creation of cycle lane in Lille, Martigues and Bordeaux, the share of pavement between pedestrian and bicycle and the implementation of separated road lane in Toulouse. The methodology was based on several approaches: a detailed analysis of accident reports to identify accident scenarios before and after the improvement, a detailed analysis of the road layout, several interviews of road designers, users of the road improvement, technical services of the town, shopkeepers, etc. The use of these crossed approaches enables us to better understand how the road layout functions and its influence on road safety. At first, the results show the necessity to keep data of urban project and the history of road management. It is indispensable to evaluate the tools used. Then the analysis of several road improvements show the effect on road safety linked to the uses of the road management. For example analysis of cycle lanes often deals with accidents of cyclists. And for this type of users, road safety is assured. Butthis improvement is often used by motorised two-wheelers in traffic jams and this involves typical accidents. For example drivers do not appreciatethe difference of speed between bicycle and motorised two-wheelers and may cross the trajectory of the motorised two-wheeler. So this research reveals the necessity to evaluate road layout improvements, in particular whenthey are systematically applied in favour of a transport policy. For the covering abstract see ITRD E145999

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Publication

Library number
C 49476 (In: C 49291 [electronic version only]) /72 / ITRD E146188
Source

In: Proceedings of the European Transport Conference ETC, Leeuwarden, The Netherlands, 6-8 October 2008, 9 p.

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