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How safe are zebra crossings these days? Personally I can't think of one that I know where pedestrian controlled lights wouldn't be more appropriate. I'm also curious about what proportion of pedestrian injuries occur on zebra crossings. There's a reason I've been thinking about this.
A couple of years ago I saw a learner driver run someone over on a zebra crossing in west London. I'd been following the learner for a couple of miles or so, feeling very glad that they were ahead of me as they were pretty erratic. Sometimes in the gutter, sometimes on the central white lines, and speed highly variable without any real need. Needless to say this wasn't a proper dual-control learner car with a real instructor, but that's a different issue that I could go on about at equal length so I'll do a seperate post. When we got to the zebra crossing the car slowed down, and a pedestrian seeing this assumed (as did everyone I spoke to while waiting for the police and an ambulance) that it was stopping to let her cross. Next thing the car accelerated and sent the poor woman flying. I was shocked, if not altogether surprised, to notice that the brake lights didn't come on until after the impact. Fortunately the learner didn't seem to know what half the gearbox was for, so the speed was fairly low, certainly under 30. Still, the way she bounced up off of the windscreen and landed in the road looked pretty nasty. (She made a full recovery by the way - I met her at court over a year later though I didn't her recognise without being covered in blood.)
Now up till then, as poor as the learner's driving was, stopping for red lights didn't seem to be a problem. Maybe if the zebra crossing had been a pelican/toucan crossing a nice bright red light would have prevented the whole thing. I’ve seen a quite a few near misses on zebra crossings in the London area. This usually seems to be in heavy traffic, especially when oncoming vehicles have passed the crossing before being forced to stop. This inevitably tends to obstruct a driver’s view of any pedestrians crossing from the right, admittedly to a lesser extent if it’s a Fiesta or something blocking your view. But the problem gets progressively worse with larger cars, doubly so with smaller pedestrians (i.e. children). As for child pedestrians obscured by vans, lutons and trucks… In these circumstances I find myself creeping across in 1st, knowing that sooner or later I’ll have to brake late for a pedestrian I couldn’t see before, and hope like hell the guy behind is awake enough not to park in my boot and ram me right over the poor sod who’s crossing. On the other hand, any form of pedestrian controlled lights lets everyone know where they stand. Red man for you and green light for me means you stay on the pavement and I keep going. Green man for you and amber or red light for me means I stop and you cross the road. And as it's stuck up on a big pole I'll see the red light, even if you're hidden behind an artic on the other side of the road.
Anyway, since then I've begun to think that zebra crossings have probably outlived their usefulness on our roads and should be replaced by other types. I'm sure they used to do the job whenever they were introduced, but the levels of traffic were so much lower then. Anybody know how many cars were on the road when the first zebras were put in? I've also begun to wonder recently if as many lives could be saved by binning all the zebra crossings as by sticking gatso cameras all over the place. Like others here I'm far from convinced that gatsos save any lives at all, so I suspect that improving crossings will have a much more beneficial effect on road safety. However, I can't prove it and don't know where to start. Does anyone have stats for locations of pedestrian injuries and crossing types, or alternatively know where I could find them? Or have I let one incident colour my thinking, and zebra crossing are okay after all? I'd be interested to know what you think.
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