Could have sworn I'd seen a post about this in another thread, but can't find it now.
It must be me age or me eyes.
Or what's that other thing?
Will The First Naked Street Make Drivers Slow Down?
By Ben Webster, The Times Transport Correspondent
06 January 2005
Road signs, barriers and even traffic lights could disappear from Britain’s streets if an
experiment on one of London’s most famous thoroughfares is adopted around the country.
Exhibition Road, home of the Science, Natural History and Victoria & Albert museums, is to be the showcase for a street design in which cars and pedestrians will be
encouraged to mingle.
All traditional signals and barriers used to separate the carriageway and pavement will be removed and the question of who has priority will deliberately be left open. Even the kerb will be eliminated as part of the scheme to create Britain’s first such “shared space”.
The theory is that all street-users are
equal. Drivers will be
forced to slow down and establish eye contact with pedestrians because they will no longer be able to assume that they have right of way.
Traffic managers traditionally have taken the view that pedestrians and vehicles must be separated at all costs. But research from the Netherlands, Denmark and Germany has shown that traffic lights and road signs deter road-users from taking responsibility for their actions. A driver simply looks at the colour of the light rather than at people wanting to cross. Far from making junctions safer, the array of signs and markings on modern roads distract road-users from the task of safely negotiating a route past other people.
The concept of “shared space” was pioneered in the Netherlands, where traffic lights and signs were removed from several junctions. Despite widespread predictions of chaos and carnage, the approach has reduced the number of crashes and made car journeys quicker.
The maximum speed through the shared space will fall to 20mph, as it is impossible to establish eye contact when travelling any faster, but drivers will save time by no longer having to wait for a green light if there is a gap at the junction. Pedestrians will be able to cross anywhere.
Ben Hamilton-Baillie, an urban designer who has helped to draw up the plans for Exhibition Road, said that motorists would still have full access to the road, but it would be like driving through a campsite. “You don’t need signs everywhere on a campsite telling you to give way or stop or slow down, because its blindingly obvious what you need to do,” he said.
Drivers would also be more responsible for any accidents as they would no longer be able to argue that people “just stepped out into the road”.
Kensington & Chelsea Council, the lead authority on the Exhibition Road project, also plans to apply shared space principles to Sloane Square by removing the roundabout and creating two large pedestrian areas outside the Royal Court Theatre and Peter Jones department store.
Wiltshire County Council has tested removing white lines from the centre of urban roads and found that accidents fell by 35 per cent.
From:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0, ... 60,00.html
My
emphasis
What these self styled "experts" forget is that on the continent pedestrians are taught to cross the road safely or get fined.
If they're lucky.
They also forget that these places also have proper road infrastructure for traffic to travel on.
Streets that have this kind of treatment are access roads, not the major highways!
Denmark has a third more motorway per acre and nearly three times the length of motorway per head
Germany has more than two times the length per acre, nearly two and a half times the length per head and more than three times the total length of motorway (as well as nearly three times the length of national standard road).
The Netherlands has nearly three times the length of motorway per head and four times as much per acre.
Oh, and weren't those Wiltshire stats rubbished when they first came out?