1 / 24

Traffic Calming: Introduction and Applications June 21st, 2007 by Indraneel Kumar, AICP

Transportation Planning and Traffic Calming- Part 2. Traffic Calming: Introduction and Applications June 21st, 2007 by Indraneel Kumar, AICP. Introduction. What is Traffic Calming? Several definitions- ITE, VTPI,. Source: VTPI.org. 3 Es- Education, Enforcement, and Engineering

shaina
Télécharger la présentation

Traffic Calming: Introduction and Applications June 21st, 2007 by Indraneel Kumar, AICP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transportation Planning and Traffic Calming- Part 2 Traffic Calming: Introduction and Applications June 21st, 2007 by Indraneel Kumar, AICP

  2. Introduction What is Traffic Calming? Several definitions- ITE, VTPI, Source: VTPI.org • 3 Es- Education, Enforcement, and Engineering • Police enforcement-engineering • options- street closure • Management of traffic by volume • and speed • Part of “Context Sensitive Design” • Flexible design standards

  3. History • 1960s first experiment commenced in Holland • 1970s- Implementation in Germany (Verkehrsberuhigung or Transportation Calming) • 1980s- Livable Streets by Appleyard, UC Berkeley • Institute of Transportation Engineer’s Guidebook • 1990s- Traffic Calming: State of the Practice, Reid Ewing, ITE • Thousands of Traffic Calming projects Control Speed; Control Volume; Control Volume / Speed

  4. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Bulb-Out Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden • Bulbs, Chokers, Neckdowns are interchangeable terms • Extension of the curb and sidewalk to narrow the roadway • Physical constraint • Visual traffic calming effects • Pedestrian crossing Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Bulb-Outs/ Curb Extensions/ Neckdowns

  5. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Choker Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Michael King Chokers Source: Making Streets That Work • Extension of the curb and planting • Midblock or intersection corners • Parallel, angled chokers, etc. • Planting to alert the motorist • Physical constraint • Visual traffic calming effects

  6. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Michael King Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Portland Office of Transportation • Chicanes- staggered curves • Alternate extension of the curb • Shift in alignment • Physical constraint • Visual traffic calming effects Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Portland Chicanes Source: ITE

  7. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Mark Lavergne Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Michael King • Cushions- Convenient for emergency vehicles Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Speed Tables, and Cushions

  8. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Source: PCRD / Kumar Speed Bumps and Humps Source: PCRD / Kumar

  9. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Peter Lagerway Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / City of Portland Curb Radius, Raised Crossings and Intersections • Tighter curb radius • Raised crossing and intersection- alerts drivers • Paving treatment + Raised surfaces • Visual traffic calming effects

  10. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden • Delineate users • Visual traffic calming effects Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Paving Treatments

  11. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Speed • Delineate the edge • ADA Guidelines • Visual traffic calming effects Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Source: PCRD / Kumar Paving Treatments

  12. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Volume Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Diverters, Partial Street Closures • Diagonal diverters create two unconnected streets- intersection • Partial closure for motorized traffic Source: Delaware DOT

  13. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Volume • Partial/ Full closures and diverters are used to retrofit neighborhoods for traffic calming • Full closures- reroute the traffic Full Street Closures Source: PCRD / Kumar

  14. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Volume/Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Michael Cynecki Source: PCRD / Kumar • Lane reduction is also known as road diets; lane narrowing- visual traffic calming • Gateways- visual traffic calming Gateways, Lane Reduction

  15. Applications: Traffic Calming to Control Volume/Speed Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden • Roundabouts are popular techniques • Comprehensive traffic management plan / retrofit Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Refuge Islands, Roundabouts / Traffic Circles

  16. A grassroots effort for narrow street standards is happening Source: FHWA Source: www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden Applications: Traffic Calming • Congress for the New Urbanism • Wider street standards are giving way to narrower streets, particularly in residential areas • More asphalt = More vehicles Traditional Neighborhood / Narrow Streets

  17. Applications: Traffic Calming- Streets for Living • Streets designed to be shared by pedestrians, motorists, and the community • Sidewalks, planters, benches are merged into the street • Physical constraints • Speed < 10 miles per hour • Public realm • Higher costs • Emergency vehicles ? Source: Maricopa County Government Woonerf

  18. Traffic Calming Impacts- Benefits and Costs • Advocates- • Traffic Calming protects residents, bicyclists, and pedestrians • Multiple and safe use of the street • Critics- • Waste of resources • Shifts the traffic problems from one to another street Source: Todd Litman; Traffic Calming: Benefits, Costs, and Equity Impacts; www.VTPI.org; Calgary health region • Travel Impacts- • Pre and post Traffic Calming travel impacts- motorized / non motorized travel • Assumption- 10-20 % increase in non motorized travel- half of that substitute motorized travel

  19. Traffic Calming Impacts- Benefits • Increased Safety • # Significant reduction in accidents • # Payback through lives, injuries, and insurance savings Fatal • Increased non motorized and decreased motorized travel • # Less noise and air pollution; health benefits; parking & gas savings, etc. Source: Todd Litman; Traffic Calming: Benefits, Costs, and Equity Impacts; www.VTPI.org

  20. Traffic Calming Impacts- Benefits and Costs • Costs • Project expenses • Liability claims • Vehicle delays • Traffic spill to other roads • Problems for emergency and service vehicles • Driver frustration • Problems for bicyclists and visually impaired • Benefits….. • Increased public realm, interaction and crime prevention- Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) • Defensible Space by Oscar Newman • Increased property values Source: Todd Litman; Traffic Calming: Benefits, Costs, and Equity Impacts; www.VTPI.org

  21. Equity is important in Transportation Planning • Horizontal equity is distribution of benefits and costs within groups similar in income, wealth, and ability • Vertical equity is distribution of benefits and costs within groups dissimilar in income, wealth, and ability • A better balancing of different uses of the street- motorists, cyclists, pedestrians, residents • Increased safety for pedestrians, cyclists, residents, and transit users Source: Todd Litman; Traffic Calming: Benefits, Costs, and Equity Impacts; www.VTPI.org Traffic Calming Impacts- Horizontal vs. Vertical Equity

  22. Traffic Calming – Planning Process • Public / residents must be involved from the beginning (neighborhood-wide traffic management) • Residents petition for traffic calming (street-wide) • Public Works or Engineering Department propose- traffic calming strategies and devices • Community acceptance is essential • Traffic calming device is put on place • Project evaluation • Traffic calming device is made permanent Safe & Calm Streets

  23. Traffic Calming- Sources www.VTPI.org www.ITE.org (Traffic Calming: State of the Practice) www.PBIC.org www.PPS.org www.TrafficCalming.org http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/tcalm/index.htm www.planning.org (Traffic Calming: PAS 456) http://www.io.com/~bumper/ada.htm

  24. Thank you!!! ikumar@purdue.edu

More Related