Improving traffic behaviour and safety through urban design.

Author(s)
Hamilton-Baillie, B. Jones, P.
Year
Abstract

Recent experiments in mainland Europe and more recently the UK have found that removing the traditional separation between traffic and people in urban areas can make streets safer and less congested. Removing standard items, barriers, highway signs and road markings forces motorists to use eye contact with other road users and pedestrians, for which they , need to be travelling at less than around 30 km/h. As this paper reports, the result is slower; more careful traffic, increased safety for cyclists and pedestrians and a more attractive urban environment overall - in which local architecture and culture prevails over standard traffic infrastructure. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 32464 [electronic version only] /72 /73 / ITRD E125571
Source

Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Civil Engineering, Vol. 158 (2005), No. 2 (May), p. 39-47, 10 ref.

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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.