Skip to main content

Reading the road ahead with markings & signs for safety

Traffic signs and pavement markings have been in use for over 100 years to provide essential guidance and delineation of the travel path. In the ensuing years, the performance of these systems has been greatly expanded with the introduction of retroreflective optics to increase visibility at night and in wet night-time conditions.
January 16, 2020 Read time: 2 mins

Today, well designed and maintained traffic signs and pavement markings have proven safety benefits. Drivers able to understand the road environment and make informed decisions are less prone to run-off road accidents. However, design standards were developed with young drivers' performance data and slower speeds. Highways are now designed for older drivers and higher speeds

In the future, however, human-led vehicles will slowly give way to partial-to-fully automated vehicles operating in expanding conditions. How can agencies prepare for this trend while continuing to provide safe and efficient travel for today’s drivers?

To answer these essential questions, IRF together with the University of Zagreb’s newly-established European Road & Traffic Institute organised a two-day international symposium taking stock of international experience in the design and maintenance of traffic signs and pavement markings. This event also covered global efforts to roll out new guidelines for connected and autonomous driving, through a cross-sector panel of road agencies, research institutions and industry stakeholders.

The symposium saw leading specialists benchmark existing practices and new research in Europe and North America. There was general consensus that for the foreseeable future, systems will need to work for humans and vehicles – a case in point being the trend towards wider (150mm) lane markings. These increase the detection of horizontal curves for human drivers whilst improving the performance of automated driving technologies. The variety of marking systems and traffic control devices in use present a formidable challenge which will only be successfully addressed through regular cooperation and data exchange between the highway and automotive industries.

Opening the event, IRF executive vice-president Michael G Dreznes noted: “The UN Decade of Action for Road Safety has been marked by an incredible surge in the public awareness of the road traffic injury problem. Our roads have been made more self-explaining and forgiving of human errors, leading to better engineering practices being mainstreamed in the design of new road infrastructure. The road safety industry itself is constantly innovating, and symposiums such as these provide an invaluable opportunity to connect these innovations with Vision Zero objectives.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road safety: time for results on reducing crashes
    May 8, 2019
    The World Health Organization’s 2018 Global Road Safety Status Report – the definitive international road safety performance benchmark – paints an alarming picture, just two years from the United Nations’ target to cut fatal traffic injuries by 2020, and confirms that road fatalities represent one of the worst public health epidemics in history. “Think about it. In the Plague of Justinian in 541 and 542 AD, approximately 100,000,000 people died, making this event recognised as the worst epidemic in hist
  • IRF joins forces to reduce road deaths
    February 29, 2012
    The UN Road Safety Collaboration has used support from the World Health Organisation in its development of a Global Plan for the Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020 (DARS).
  • Safety has no alternative
    January 30, 2023
    The speed control project is recognized as a strategic road safety project of the Republic of Croatia and is included in one of the main documents of the Republic of Croatia, specifically in the National Road Safety Plan of the Republic of Croatia for the 2021 to 2030 period as adopted by the Government of the Republic of Croatia.
  • Australia’s road safety problems are a cause for concern
    January 23, 2019
    The Australian Road Research Board (ARRB) has highlighted key problems with road safety. According to the ARRB, these issues must be addressed if Australia’s road casualty rate is to be reduced. Road death tolls are being reduced as he latest results show, but more work needs to be done. According to the ARRB, the road death tolls in Victoria dropped 20% for 2018 when compared with the previous year. This is a major improvement, showing the gains made by Victoria’s road agency VicRoads and the state’s Tr