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How To Build Roads To Control How Fast You Drive

An anonymous reader writes "They're the holy grail of transportation engineering: streets and highways specifically designed to encourage automobilists to drive less quickly, reducing the rates of passenger fatalities and generally encouraging a safer urban environment. And now new research shows that, if built right, they just might work. A new study out of the University of Connecticut suggests that minor reductions in vehicle speed are possible through changes in the street environment. Through the use of roadside parking, tighter building setbacks, and more commercial land uses, road designers can make drivers subconsciously drive more slowly." All of that is gonna work a lot better than my strategy of placing car-sized holes covered with twigs and branches randomly every half mile or so down the interstates.

14 of 801 comments (clear)

  1. From the No Duh Dept. by Lord+Grey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Good grief. From TFA:

    The surveys demonstrated that land use type, roadway type, and building setbacks all played significant roles in determining vehicle speeds. Most importantly, though, having cars parked along the side of streets accounted by itself for a reduction in travel speeds ...

    And:

    So the conclusion is this: People can be induced to reduce their driving speeds when cars are parked along the roadways, when buildings are close to the street, and when those buildings include commercial rather than residential activity.

    Who would have thought that by reducing a driver's visibility, the driver would go slower to give themselves time to react to surprises? You? You in the back? Are you some kind of smartass? The Connecticut Department of Transportation studied this for four years. There's no way you could have arrived at the same conclusion so quickly!

    This study was useful in determining how much people slowed down -- quantifying it at about 10% -- but sweeping on to claims like, "reducing the rates of passenger fatalities and generally encouraging a safer urban environment" is silly. Streets packed with parked cars, pedestrians, nearby buildings, et. al. are generally more dangerous precisely because clear lines-of-sight are cut off. Sane drivers know this, reduce their speed, and then -- making wild hand-waving guesses, here -- wind up with about the same overall level of "dangerousness" as when driving on uncluttered roadways.

    --
    // Beyond Here Lie Dragons
    1. Re:From the No Duh Dept. by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We'd probably do a better job in reducing "dangerousness" by making the penalty for repeated speeding and reckless driving something more serious than it is. Maybe death

      Doesn't work.

      The penalty for driving drunk is often death and some people don't seem to mind much.

    2. Re:From the No Duh Dept. by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's because of the American attitude of entitlement. It causes road rage where we "OWN" the road and you doing the speed limit is taking away my RIGHT to break the law dammit! ARRRGH!!!!

      so we drive really stupid here. we drove 2 feet from the car in front of us to "punish them" or to try and "force them to move" by bullying the other driver. We also blow the red lights really late because we are far more important that everyone else. Oops I killed a bicyclist or motorcyclist, they should have not been there!

      Couple that with incredibly inadequate driving education and almost no liability. (In Michigan we have no-fault. I can "accidentally" sideswipe your car and not get in any trouble, only pay for higher insurance rates)

      Death rates here in the USA are higher simply because many of us here really suck at driving and are a danger on the road. It's been that way for a really long time. Even in the 50's we had cartoons trying to educate against road rage and bad driving.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    3. Re:From the No Duh Dept. by jittles · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While I in no way support or encourage tail-gating, I can tell you that it does get really irritating in FL with grandma driving in the fast lane of a 3 or 4 lane freeway at 55-60mph. Of course people get irritated. It seems to be worse around here in the winter, when retired people from all over flock to FL.

      Tailgaters are part of the problem but the people who feel "entitled" to drive in the fast lane when they aren't passing someone are just as bad.

    4. Re:From the No Duh Dept. by spiritgreywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      we drove 2 feet from the car in front of us to "punish them" or to try and "force them to move" by bullying the other driver.

      In the USA, a majority of the "road rage" incidents could be avoided if the "Slowmo's" stop racing each other in the left lane and get the out of the passing lane. If you are going slower than the rest of the other traffic, move over. I don't care if you are doing the speed limit or 100MPH over it - if someone is coming up behind you, get over. Not hard - lose the ego and your sense of entitlement that just because you think you are going fast enough you can ride comfortably in the left lane. I don't give a damn if you're the only person on the road for 900 miles - if you are in the left lane and I am coming up behind you get the Hell over. That one little selfless act on your part will lessen the road rage factor. This goes for all you "hyper-milers" in your Priuses, too. STAY IN THE RIGHT LANE.

      Don't get me started on you idiots that can't merge to save your life. It's called an accelerator - grow a pair, get your cage up to speed and get it in there. It's the disparity of speed between drivers that usually cause accidents. I don't care if you are trying to save $0.0004 cents of gas by coasting off your batts and trying to keep your little eco-motor from kicking in - you merge on the highway, act like you mean it or stick to the side roads where people on all these new occluded streets can admire your choice of body panel colors.

      Cluttering up the road and removing sight-lines reduces speed? Wow. Brilliant. As a motorcyclist that's just what I need - more obstacles to dodge.

      sorry for the soapbox rant... :-)

      --
      Never have a philosophy which supports a lack of courage
    5. Re:From the No Duh Dept. by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A lot of this attitude comes from exceptionally rude drivers and exceptionally low speed limits. Most of our roads (compared to Europe) are wide, straight and multilane. You can drive far faster than the speed limit without any risk, and you factor this into account when determining where to live. We elect to live as far into the suburbs as we can to a) get the lowest cost house we can and b) avoid city congestion. The faster you can go, the farther you can live, the farther your income stretches, the happier you are. This is less true for young single people, who may like urban life at any cost.

      Next, particularly in the south, drivers are incredibly rude. They will sit in the left lane while traffic piles up behind them, and not think of getting to the right. My mom's attitude is "I'm going the speed limit, you all can just be patient", which is infuriating if you're behind her. This causes all sorts of bad behavior, the most systemic is the need to pass on the right. Passing on the right, or being the faster vehicle in the right lane, is dangerous precisely because visibility to the rear is limited. If slower traffic is always in the right lane, and you always pass in the left lane, when switching into the right lane you can be reasonably sure you won't hit someone you didn't see. If traffic is going arbitrary speeds in any lane, then it's a free for all, your eyes have to look everywhere and you reduce your margin of error.

      In any event this article makes us mad not because WE OWN THE ROAD, but because most of us want to go faster, not slower. The amount of time we spend on the road is pure overhead and something to reduce. The problem are the inevitable conflicts between small business interests, which tend to want main thoroughfares going right past their door and want this "town center" idea where you can park and wander through town from shop to shop; versus commuter interests, who mostly want to go from dense business area to residential area, with as limited access between as possible. The small business interests intentionally wish to impede your commute such that you're going slow, you may as well stop and shop on your way home, and are just using this pedestrian accident thing as a scapegoat. If they did not attempt to get in the way of commuters, there would also be fewer accidents. Even here in Texas, home of the land yacht, when they opened up the new tollway around Austin all you heard was business owners bitching and moaning that traffic didn't flow by them anymore. I had 0 sympathy since they were largely located halfway to nowhere, neither near residential centers nor business centers, where people may use free time to shop. But I'm sure they'd love to have had this study when they were trying to kill the road.

    6. Re:From the No Duh Dept. by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Autobahn isn't as well-constructed as the US Interstate system. Our interstates are probably the best highways in the world.

      The problem isn't the road, it's the drivers. US drivers are morons, because they'll give a license to anybody. In Germany, you have to spend thousands of dollars on a driving instructor, and take a rigorous test to prove you can actually drive. Not everyone drives; lots of people don't have cars, and just take public transit (which is readily available and convenient there, unlike here). I would imagine many people also only drive sometimes, perhaps for weekend trips and the like, while taking public transit in town.

      With well-trained drivers, and a lot of unskilled people simply not driving, it makes perfect sense they would have a lower accident rate.

      A lot of people simply shouldn't be driving; they have no talent for it. My wife, a helicopter pilot instructor, sees this in aviation. Some people try to become helicopter pilots, and simply can't. They don't have the feel for the controls, and can't manage all the different inputs and still handle the aircraft. (Helicopters aren't like planes; helicopters are inherently unstable, and require constant corrections to maintain controls.) A certain percentage of people who go to helicopter training school wash out because they simply can't do it, and can't perform within standard to pass the licensing tests. While cars are easier than helicopters in some ways (they go straight without wrecking unless you turn the wheel), they're more difficult than others (after all, most aircraft pilots don't fly in very close proximity to other aircraft, unless they're the Blue Angels) because of all the chaos on the street. Some people simply aren't going to be good drivers, no matter how much they train, and they have no business driving. But here in the USA, we view it as a "right" simply because it's so hard to get around without a car in most places, so we're stuck with the bad drivers it seems.

  2. Two basic ways to do it by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1) You can make the road look more dangerous, e.g. with optical illusions to make it look narrower

    2) You can make the road actually and obviously more dangerous, e.g. reducing sight lines and adding on-street parking

    Number 2 works, but it doesn't increase safety. Number 1 works... for a while. My concern with #1 is that drivers will realize they are being fooled, and start speeding up again. That's OK, except they may then interpret the real situation that the illusion was imitating as an illusion, and fail to take it into account, resulting in a net decrease in safety.

  3. pain bumps... by butterflysrage · · Score: 5, Insightful

    speed bumps also greatly slow down emergency vehicles. If you have ever been in an ambulance going over speed bumps you will curse the name of whoever came up with such a painful idea

    --
    the preceding post was not spell checked... suck it.
  4. It doesn't work. by SoTerrified · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As a former employee of an international road transportation company, we studied the exact same thing.

    Interesting fact. When someone is driving in a place they don't know, they drive slower. You can duplicate the effect by making changes to a known environment, like this study does by adding cars to the roadside. Second interesting fact? Once the changes become 'known', speeds return to what they were previously. I notice this part is somehow absent in the claims that "the lower speeds make things safer."

    If I was from the University of Connecticut, I'd be embarrassed to be releasing this study.

  5. Fuck this article by brxndxn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, "holy grail of transportation engineering"?? Bullshit. The goal of transportation engineering should be to achieve the best balance of maximized capacity, efficiency, and safety. You can always make roads safer by slowing things down - until you try to make them safer by causing congestion.. and the congestion causes frustrated and aggressive driving. The study basically says to throw more shit in the way of drivers to slow things down.. That's because it's creating an unsafe environment.. and drivers naturally try to compensate for it.

    Here in Florida, the transportation engineers have decided that old people react slower. Therefore, all traffic lights change slower.. So that causes inattentive driving since people can be waiting as much as 5 minutes between lights. Then, people are very slow to start proceeding through the intersection once lights turn green - partly because desperate drivers run all the yellow lights because they have to wait another 5 minutes between lights. My argument would be that traffic rules should not change to accomodate for people unable to follow the rules. Chicago's lights change quickly at an intersection..

    Also, our political wanker of a governor (Charlie Christ) decided he did not like the 'move over law' because he said it promoted speeding. So, people are free to sit in the left lane of major highways going under the speed limit while others try to get around them. Florida interstates are a clusterfuck.. Nobody moves over.. So you have a clump of cars bumper to bumper for a mile.. and then a mile of highway that hardly has anyone on it.. I would argue it would be safer to have an actual passing lane and allow people to spread out.

    Cars today have more horsepower, more traction, better safety, and more braking power than cars 20-30 years ago.. Yet, our speed limits have decreased.. Why?

    Traffic is an absolute mess.. and the idea that 'slower is safer' is contributing to that mess.

    --
    --- We need more Ron Paul!
    1. Re:Fuck this article by xdroop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Seriously?

      Cars today have more horsepower, more traction, better safety, and more braking power than cars 20-30 years ago.. Yet, our speed limits have decreased.. Why?

      Because the monkey behind the wheel hasn't improved any, is now distracted by his cell phone, GPS, and on-board DVD players, and statistically is older than the monkey behind the wheel was 20-30 years ago.

      Basically, the monkey is the critical part in the system, and it just isn't getting any better.

      (Well except for you. You are a MAGNIFICENT driver, and we should all just stay the hell out of your way when you drive.)

      --
      you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
  6. Re:Other strategies... by SoTerrified · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Portugese system goes further and makes other drivers angry with you for speeding.

    I think the Portuguese system is the future. Note that it shames you in front of other drivers, but that it also slows you as a penalty for speeding. People will naturally adopt the behavior that gets them where they are going fastest. If you make 'speeding' the slower option, people will just naturally drive safer.

  7. Re:I just don't see how this is a good idea. by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But the fact is, you are making the roads more dangerous! How can this be a good thing?

    Because drivers are more careful, and rarely careless, when conditions are dangerous. People being careless is usually what kills.

    Alaska sees dangerous, icy roads 2/3 of the year, yet our over-all accident and death rate is lower than the national average. Shouldn't it be the case that the nice, grippy streets of the lower 48 would be much safer?

    We also tend to drive individually and do less carpooling and the like because destinations are so far apart. So again, dangerous roads seem on the surface to mean people drive more carefully, for a net reduction in accidents and loss of life.

    --
    Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller